fish-shell/share/functions/man.fish

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if not command -qs man
# see #5329 and discussion at https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/commit/13e025bdb01cc4dd08463ec497a0a3495873702f
exit
end
function man --description "Format and display the on-line manual pages"
# Work around the "builtin" manpage that everything symlinks to,
# by prepending our fish datadir to man. This also ensures that man gives fish's
# man pages priority, without having to put fish's bin directories first in $PATH.
# Preserve the existing MANPATH, and default to the system path (the empty string).
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set -l manpath
if set -q MANPATH
set manpath $MANPATH
else if set -l p (command man -p 2>/dev/null)
# NetBSD's man uses "-p" to print the path.
# FreeBSD's man also has a "-p" option, but that requires an argument.
# Other mans (men?) don't seem to have it.
#
# Unfortunately NetBSD prints things like "/usr/share/man/man1",
# while not allowing them as $MANPATH components.
# What it needs is just "/usr/share/man".
#
# So we strip the last component.
# This leaves a few wrong directories, but that should be harmless.
set manpath (string replace -r '[^/]+$' '' $p)
else
set manpath ''
end
# Notice the shadowing local exported copy of the variable.
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set -lx MANPATH $manpath
# Prepend fish's man directory if available.
set -l fish_manpath $__fish_data_dir/man
if test -d $fish_manpath
set MANPATH $fish_manpath $MANPATH
end
if test (count $argv) -eq 1
# Some of these don't have their own page,
# and adding one would be awkward given that the filename
# isn't guaranteed to be allowed.
# So we override them with the good name.
switch $argv
case :
set argv true
case '['
set argv test
case .
set argv source
end
end
command man $argv
end