Add BSD specific arguments for tr command completion

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buo 2015-10-12 04:09:25 +09:00 committed by Fabian Homborg
parent 9865a8c807
commit 3472a39d07

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@ -1,20 +1,52 @@
complete -c tr -x #
complete -c tr -s c -s C -l complement -d 'use the complement of SET1' # Completions for tr
complete -c tr -s d -l delete -d 'delete characters in SET1, do not translate' #
complete -c tr -s s -l squeeze-repeats -d 'replace each input sequence of a repeated character that is listed in SET1 with a single occurrence of that character'
complete -c tr -s t -l truncate-set1 -d 'first truncate SET1 to length of SET2'
complete -c tr -l help -d 'display this help and exit'
complete -c tr -l version -d 'output version information and exit'
complete -c tr -a '[:alnum:]' -d 'all letters and digits' # Test if we are using GNU tr
complete -c tr -a '[:alpha:]' -d 'all letters' if command tr --version >/dev/null ^/dev/null
complete -c tr -a '[:blank:]' -d 'all horizontal whitespace' complete -c tr -x
complete -c tr -a '[:cntrl:]' -d 'all control characters' complete -c tr -s c -s C -l complement -d 'use the complement of SET1'
complete -c tr -a '[:digit:]' -d 'all digits' complete -c tr -s d -l delete -d 'delete characters in SET1, do not translate'
complete -c tr -a '[:graph:]' -d 'all printable characters, not including space' complete -c tr -s s -l squeeze-repeats -d 'replace each input sequence of a repeated character that is listed in SET1 with a single occurrence of that character'
complete -c tr -a '[:lower:]' -d 'all lower case letters' complete -c tr -s t -l truncate-set1 -d 'first truncate SET1 to length of SET2'
complete -c tr -a '[:print:]' -d 'all printable characters, including space' complete -c tr -l help -d 'display this help and exit'
complete -c tr -a '[:punct:]' -d 'all punctuation characters' complete -c tr -l version -d 'output version information and exit'
complete -c tr -a '[:space:]' -d 'all horizontal or vertical whitespace'
complete -c tr -a '[:upper:]' -d 'all upper case letters' complete -c tr -a '[:alnum:]' -d 'all letters and digits'
complete -c tr -a '[:xdigit:]' -d 'all hexadecimal digits' complete -c tr -a '[:alpha:]' -d 'all letters'
complete -c tr -a '[:blank:]' -d 'all horizontal whitespace'
complete -c tr -a '[:cntrl:]' -d 'all control characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:digit:]' -d 'all digits'
complete -c tr -a '[:graph:]' -d 'all printable characters, not including space'
complete -c tr -a '[:lower:]' -d 'all lower case letters'
complete -c tr -a '[:print:]' -d 'all printable characters, including space'
complete -c tr -a '[:punct:]' -d 'all punctuation characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:space:]' -d 'all horizontal or vertical whitespace'
complete -c tr -a '[:upper:]' -d 'all upper case letters'
complete -c tr -a '[:xdigit:]' -d 'all hexadecimal digits'
else
# If not a GNU system, assume we have standard BSD tr features instead
complete -c tr -x
complete -c tr -s C -d 'Complement the set of characters in string1.'
complete -c tr -s c -d 'Same as -C but complement the set of values in string1.'
complete -c tr -s d -d 'Delete characters in string1 from the input.'
complete -c tr -s s -d 'Squeeze multiple occurrences of the characters listed in the last operand (either string1 or string2) in the input into a single instance of the character.'
complete -c tr -l u -d 'Guarantee that any output is unbuffered.'
complete -c tr -a '[:alnum:]' -d 'alphanumeric characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:alpha:]' -d 'alphabetic characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:blank:]' -d 'whitespace characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:cntrl:]' -d 'control characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:digit:]' -d 'numeric characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:graph:]' -d 'graphic characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:ideogram:]' -d 'ideographic characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:lower:]' -d 'lower-case alphabetic characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:phonogram:]' -d 'phonographic characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:print:]' -d 'printable characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:punct:]' -d 'punctuation characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:rune:]' -d 'valid characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:space:]' -d 'space characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:special:]' -d 'special characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:upper:]' -d 'upper-case characters'
complete -c tr -a '[:xdigit:]' -d 'hexadecimal characters'
end