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Close all buffers besides the current one in Emacs

How do I close all but the current buffer in Emacs? Similar to "Close other tabs" feature in modern web browsers?


p
phils

For a more manual approach, you can list all buffers with C-x C-b, mark buffers in the list for deletion with d, and then use x to remove them.

I also recommend replacing list-buffers with the more advanced ibuffer: (global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-b") 'ibuffer). The above will work with ibuffer, but you could also do this:

m (mark the buffer you want to keep) t (toggle marks) D (kill all marked buffers)

I also use this snippet from the Emacs Wiki, which would further streamline this manual approach:

;; Ensure ibuffer opens with point at the current buffer's entry.
(defadvice ibuffer
  (around ibuffer-point-to-most-recent) ()
  "Open ibuffer with cursor pointed to most recent buffer name."
  (let ((recent-buffer-name (buffer-name)))
    ad-do-it
    (ibuffer-jump-to-buffer recent-buffer-name)))
(ad-activate 'ibuffer)

How can I return from ibuffer? @phils
I'm not sure what you're asking, but maybe q? Use C-h m to learn keybindings, just as with any other mode.
S
Sridhar Ratnakumar

From EmacsWiki: Killing Buffers:

(defun kill-other-buffers ()
    "Kill all other buffers."
    (interactive)
    (mapc 'kill-buffer 
          (delq (current-buffer) 
                (remove-if-not 'buffer-file-name (buffer-list)))))

Edit: updated with feedback from Gilles


Why do the dired buffer not being killed? I like to remove that also
dired buffers don't set buffer-file-name and thus the call to remove-if-not in the above example will preserve dired buffers (as well as scratch buffer, term buffers, help buffers, etc, anything not visiting a file). I can't think of an easy test that would close both file buffers and dired buffers, you'd need basically a whole second invocation of mapc with a different test for dired buffers.
a simple modification to kill also dired buffers (defun kill-other-buffers () "Kill all other buffers." (interactive) (mapc 'kill-buffer (delq (current-buffer) (remove-if-not '(lambda (x) (or (buffer-file-name x) (eq 'dired-mode (buffer-local-value 'major-mode x)))) (buffer-list)))))
It looks like in this video the man is able to do that. He opens a new Slime buffer whilst closing the GNU buffers and others. Do you have any idea how he does that? youtube.com/watch?v=BKFcznZ28BE&t=310s
Replacing cl-remove-if-not with remove-if-not works but this does not kill *helm.. buffers
S
Starkey

There isn't a way directly in emacs to do this.

You could write a function to do this. The following will close all the buffers:

(defun close-all-buffers ()
  (interactive)
  (mapc 'kill-buffer (buffer-list)))

Ah, but this will close all buffers.
(delete (current-buffer) (buffer-list)) should give you a buffer list that you can map kill-buffer across and avoid killing the current buffer.
@NickD: Yep, works fine. Thank you!
p
pjammer

There is a built in command m-x kill-some-buffers (I'm using 24.3.50) In my nextstep gui (not tried in a terminal but sure it's similar) you can then approve which buffers to kill.


This is especially useful when you have 1000+ buffers loaded.
@ocodo Did you mean this literally or figuratively
w
wenjun.yan
 (defun only-current-buffer () 
   (interactive)
   (let ((tobe-killed (cdr (buffer-list (current-buffer)))))
     (while tobe-killed
       (kill-buffer (car tobe-killed))
       (setq tobe-killed (cdr tobe-killed)))))

It works as you expected.

And after reading @Starkey's answer, I think this will be better:

(defun only-current-buffer () 
  (interactive)                                                                   
    (mapc 'kill-buffer (cdr (buffer-list (current-buffer)))))

(buffer-list (current-buffer)) will return a list that contains all the existing buffers, with the current buffer at the head of the list.

This is my first answer on StackOverflow. Hope it helps :)


And this my friends is how elegant solutions arise from people sharing their ideas
I don;t know if the spec for buffer-list changed over the years, but (buffer-list (current-buffer)) to work as the answer above indicates will NOT work. Do C-h f buffer-list RET for the current spec.
E
Euge

I found this solution to be the simplest one. This deletes every buffer except the current one. You have to add this code to your .emacs file

(defun kill-other-buffers ()
      "Kill all other buffers."
      (interactive)
      (mapc 'kill-buffer (delq (current-buffer) (buffer-list))))

Of course, then you use it with M-x kill-other-buffers RET or you paste the following code in the .emacs file too and then just press C-xC-b

(global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-b") 'kill-other-buffers)

N
Navidot

You can like this one as well - kill all buffers except current one, *Messages* and *scratch* (which are handy to have, I call them "toolkit"), close redundant windows as well, living you which one window which current buffer.

(defun my/kill-all-buffers-except-toolbox ()
  "Kill all buffers except current one and toolkit (*Messages*, *scratch*). Close other windows."
  (interactive)
  (mapc 'kill-buffer (remove-if
                       (lambda (x)
                         (or
                           (eq x (current-buffer))
                           (member (buffer-name x) '("*Messages*" "*scratch*"))))
                       (buffer-list)))
  (delete-other-windows))

(string-equal (buffer-name) (buffer-name x)) is the same as (eq x (current-buffer)), just less efficient. The remaining or can be simplified to (member (buffer-name x) '("*Messages*" "*scratch*"))
a
azzamsa

I've use crux-kill-other-buffers for some months.

But I want dired buffers get deleted too. @Euge's and @wenjun.yan's answers solve this. But it will delete special buffers (e.g *git-credential-cache--daemon*, *scratch*, helm operation, and etc). So I came up with this (current) solution.

(defun aza-kill-other-buffers ()
  "Kill all buffers but current buffer and special buffers"
  (interactive)
  (dolist (buffer (delq (current-buffer) (buffer-list)))
    (let ((name (buffer-name buffer)))
      (when (and name (not (string-equal name ""))
             (/= (aref name 0) ?\s)
             (string-match "^[^\*]" name))
        (funcall 'kill-buffer buffer)))))

Inspired from kill-matching-buffers. You can add more condition on other buffer-name to exclude, if you want to.

Hope it helps :)


See this for my improved solution.
R
RealityMonster

I've used one of the solutions in this list for years, but now I have a new one of my own.

(defun kill-all-file-buffers ()
  "Kills all buffers that are open to files. Does not kill
modified buffers or special buffers."
  (interactive)
  (mapc 'kill-buffer (cl-loop for buffer being the buffers
                              when (and (buffer-file-name buffer)
                                        (not (buffer-modified-p buffer)))
                              unless (eq buffer (current-buffer))
                              collect buffer)))

cl-loop has buffers built in as a collection that you can iterate over. It gives you a chance to parse out anything you don't want to close. Here, I've made sure that it doesn't close anything you've modified, and it uses buffer-file-name instead of just buffer-name so it doesn't kill special buffers. I also added an 'unless' to take out the current buffer (though you could obviously add it to the 'when', I just thought this was clearer).

But for an even more generic solution, we can define this as a macro, and pass in a function that will apply to all these buffers.

(defmacro operate-on-file-buffers (func)
  "Takes any function that takes a single buffer as an argument
and applies that to all open file buffers that haven't been
modified, and aren't the current one."
  `(mapc ,func (cl-loop for buffer being the buffers
                            when (and (buffer-file-name buffer)
                                      (not (buffer-modified-p buffer)))
                            unless (eq buffer (current-buffer))
                            collect buffer)))

Now if you want to kill all buffers that match this, you can call it like this

(operate-on-file-buffers 'kill-buffer)

s
sivi

This is what you want:

C-x 1

source: https://blasphemousbits.wordpress.com/2007/05/04/learning-emacs-part-4-buffers-windows-and-frames/


I think the reason you got down-voted was that OP is asking to close other buffers, not windows. Emacs terminology can be a bit confusing.