Various additions and fixes

This commit is contained in:
Mark Griffiths 2014-08-27 00:30:08 +01:00
parent d6c5a1e0c4
commit 3d29cc8636
24 changed files with 138 additions and 118 deletions

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@ -242,9 +242,9 @@ ALIASES += "endfish=</pre>\n"
ALIASES += "asis{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "outp{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "blah{1}=#\1"
ALIASES += "cmnd{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "bltn{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "func{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "sbin{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "cmnd{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "args{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "opts{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "vars{1}=\1"

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@ -242,9 +242,9 @@ ALIASES += "endfish=</pre>"
ALIASES += "asis{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "outp{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "blah{1}= \1"
ALIASES += "cmnd{1}=<b>\1</b>"
ALIASES += "bltn{1}=<b>\1</b>"
ALIASES += "func{1}=<b>\1</b>"
ALIASES += "sbin{1}=<b>\1</b>"
ALIASES += "cmnd{1}=<b>\1</b>"
ALIASES += "args{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "opts{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "vars{1}=\1"

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@ -242,9 +242,9 @@ ALIASES += "endfish=</pre>\endhtmlonly \n"
ALIASES += "asis{1}=\1"
ALIASES += "outp{1}=<span class=\"output\">\1</span>"
ALIASES += "blah{1}=<span class=\"comment\">#\1</span>"
ALIASES += "cmnd{1}=<span class=\"command\">\1</span>"
ALIASES += "bltn{1}=<span class=\"command\">\1</span>"
ALIASES += "func{1}=<span class=\"function\">\1</span>"
ALIASES += "sbin{1}=<span class=\"binary\">\1</span>"
ALIASES += "cmnd{1}=<span class=\"binary\">\1</span>"
ALIASES += "args{1}=<span class=\"argument\">\1</span>"
ALIASES += "opts{1}=<span class=\"argument\">\1</span>"
ALIASES += "vars{1}=<span class=\"variable\">\1</span>"

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@ -349,11 +349,11 @@ lexicon.txt: doc_src/commands.hdr $(FUNCTIONS_DIR_FILES) $(COMPLETIONS_DIR_FILES
# Scan sources for commands/functions/binaries/colours. If GNU sed was portable, this could be much smarter.
sed <command_list_toc.txt >>lexicon.tmp -n \
-e "s|^.*>\([a-z][a-z_]*\)</a>|'\1'|w lexicon_catalog.tmp" \
-e "s|'\(.*\)'|cmnd \1|p"; mv lexicon_catalog.tmp lexicon_catalog.txt; \
-e "s|'\(.*\)'|bltn \1|p"; mv lexicon_catalog.tmp lexicon_catalog.txt; \
printf "%s\n" $(COMPLETIONS_DIR_FILES) | sed -n \
-e "s|[^ ]*/\([a-z][a-z_-]*\).fish|'\1'|p" | fgrep -vx -f lexicon_catalog.txt | sed >>lexicon.tmp -n \
-e 'w lexicon_catalog.tmp' \
-e "s|'\(.*\)'|sbin \1|p"; cat lexicon_catalog.tmp >> lexicon_catalog.txt; \
-e "s|'\(.*\)'|cmnd \1|p"; cat lexicon_catalog.tmp >> lexicon_catalog.txt; \
printf "%s\n" $(FUNCTIONS_DIR_FILES) | sed -n \
-e "s|[^ ]*/\([a-z][a-z_-]*\).fish|'\1'|p" | fgrep -vx -f lexicon_catalog.txt | sed >>lexicon.tmp -n \
-e 'w lexicon_catalog.tmp' \

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@ -102,4 +102,8 @@ Some useful Unicode/HTML5 entities:
### Lists
### Synopsis rules
### Prompts and cursor
#### Author: Mark Griffiths [@GitHub](https://github.com/MarkGriffiths)

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@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ command [OPTIONS] COMMANDNAME [ARGS...]
`command` forces the shell to execute the program `COMMANDNAME` and ignore any functions or builtins with the same name.
The following options are available:
- `-h` or `--help` prints help and then exits.
- `-s` or `--search` returns the name of the disk file that would be executed, or nothing if no file with the specified name could be found in the `$PATH`.
With the `-s` option, `command` treats every argument as a separate command to look up and sets the exit status to 0 if any of the specified commands were found, or 1 if no commands could be found.

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@ -14,6 +14,21 @@
\endhtmlonly
`fish` ships with a large number of builtin commands, shellscript functions and external commands. These are all described below.
Almost all fish commands respond to the `-h` or `--help` options to display their relevant help, also accessible using the `help` and `man` commands, like so:
\fish
echo -h
echo --help
# Prints help to the terminal window
man echo
# Displays the man page in the system pager
# (normally 'less', 'more' or 'most').
help echo
# Open a web browser to show the relevant documentation
\endfish
@command_list@
\htmlonly[block]

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@ -12,7 +12,6 @@ contains [OPTIONS] KEY [VALUES...]
The following options are available:
- `-i` or `--index` print the word index
- `-h` or `--help` display this message
\subsection contains-example Example

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@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ count $VARIABLE
`count` prints the number of arguments that were passed to it. This is usually used to find out how many elements an environment variable array contains.
`count` does not accept any options, including '`-h`'.
`count` does not accept any options, including `-h` or `--help`.
`count` exits with a non-zero exit status if no arguments were passed to it, and with zero if at least one argument was passed.

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@ -19,8 +19,6 @@ The following options are available:
- `-e`, Enable interpretation of backslash escapes
- `-h`, `--help` Display this help
\subsection echo-escapes Escape Sequences
If `-e` is used, the following sequences are recognized:

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@ -15,8 +15,6 @@ The following options are available:
- `-d` or `--debug-level=DEBUG_LEVEL` specify the verbosity level of fish. A higher number means higher verbosity. The default level is 1.
- `-h` or `--help` display help and exit
- `-i` or `--interactive` specify that fish is to run in interactive mode
- `-l` or `--login` specify that fish is to run as a login shell

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@ -11,8 +11,6 @@ fish_indent [OPTIONS]
The following options are available:
- `-h` or `--help` displays this help message and then exits
- `-i` or `--no-indent` do not indent commands
- `-v` or `--version` displays the current fish version and then exits

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@ -22,8 +22,6 @@ The following options are available:
- `-e` or `--erase` causes the specified functions to be erased.
- `-h` or `--help` displays a help message and exits.
- `-n` or `--names` lists the names of all defined functions.
- `-q` or `--query` tests if the specified functions exist.
@ -42,9 +40,13 @@ The exit status of `functions` is the number of functions specified in the argum
\subsection functions-example Examples
\fish
functions -n
# Displays a list of currently-defined functions
`functions -n` displays a list of currently-defined functions.
functions -c foo bar
# Copies the 'foo' function to a new function called 'bar'
`functions -c foo bar` copies the `foo` function to a new function called `bar`.
`functions -e bar` erases the function `bar`.
functions -e bar
# Erases the function `bar`
\endfish

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@ -430,11 +430,12 @@ echo (basename image.jpg .jpg).png
for i in *.jpg; convert $i (basename $i .jpg).png; end
# Convert all JPEG files in the current directory to the
# PNG format using the 'convert' program.
begin; set -l IFS; set data (cat data.txt); end
# Set the `data` variable to the contents of 'data.txt'
# without splitting it into an array.
\endfish
The command `begin; set -l IFS; set data (cat data.txt); end`
will set the `data` variable to the contents of 'data.txt' without
splitting it into an array.
\subsection expand-brace Brace expansion
@ -1036,8 +1037,11 @@ When the cursor is over a parenthesis or a quote, `fish` also highlights its mat
To customize the syntax highlighting, you can set the environment variables `fish_color_normal`, `fish_color_command`, `fish_color_substitution`, `fish_color_redirection`, `fish_color_end`, `fish_color_error`, `fish_color_param`, `fish_color_comment`, `fish_color_match`, `fish_color_search_match`, `fish_color_cwd`, `fish_pager_color_prefix`, `fish_pager_color_completion`, `fish_pager_color_description`, `fish_pager_color_progress` and `fish_pager_color_secondary`. Usually, the value of these variables will be one of `black`, `red`, `green`, `brown`, `yellow`, `blue`, `magenta`, `purple`, `cyan`, `white` or `normal`, but they can be an array containing any color options for the `set_color` command.
Issuing `set fish_color_error black --background=red --bold` will make all commandline errors be written in a black, bold font, with a red background.
\fish
set fish_color_error black --background=red --bold
# Make all commandline errors be written in a black,
# bold font, with a red background.
\endfish
\subsection title Programmable title

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@ -15,8 +15,6 @@ jobs accepts the following switches:
- `-g` or `--group` only prints the group ID of each job.
- `-h` or `--help` displays a help message and exits.
- `-l` or `--last` prints only the last job to be started.
- `-p` or `--pid` prints the process ID for each process in all jobs.

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@ -25,6 +25,4 @@ The following options are available:
- `-l`, `--launch` launches the default action for the specified files.
- `-h`, `--help` displays a help message and exit.
- `-v`, `--version` displays the version number and exits.

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@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ The following options are available:
- `-m NAME` or `--mode-name=NAME` specifies that the name NAME should be used to save/load the history file. If NAME is fish, the regular fish history will be available.
- `-p PROMPT_CMD` or `--prompt=PROMPT_CMD` uses the output of the shell command `PROMPT_CMD` as the prompt for the interactive mode. The default prompt command is `set_color green; echo read; set_color normal; echo "> "`.
- `-p PROMPT_CMD` or `--prompt=PROMPT_CMD` uses the output of the shell command `PROMPT_CMD` as the prompt for the interactive mode. The default prompt command is <code>set_color green; echo read; set_color normal; echo "> "</code>.
- `-s` or `--shell` enables syntax highlighting, tab completions and command termination suitable for entering shellscript code in the interactive mode.

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@ -17,8 +17,6 @@ The following options are available:
- `-c`, `--print-colors` prints a list of all valid color names.
- `-h`, `--help` displays a help message and exit.
- `-o`, `--bold` sets bold or extra bright mode.
- `-u`, `--underline` sets underlined mode.
@ -38,6 +36,6 @@ Not all terminal emulators support all these features.
\fish
set_color red; echo "Roses are red"
set_color blue; echo "Violets are blue"
set_color 62A ; echo "Eggplants are dark purple"
set_color 62A; echo "Eggplants are dark purple"
set_color normal; echo "Normal is nice too"
\endfish

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@ -32,5 +32,3 @@ The following options are available:
- `-j CONTROLTYPE` or `--job-control=CONTROLTYPE` sets the job control type, which can be `none`, `full`, or `interactive`.
- `-t` or `--print-stack-trace` prints a stack trace of all function calls on the call stack.
- `-h` or `--help` displays a help message and exit.

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@ -15,8 +15,6 @@ The following parameters are available:
- `SIGSPEC` is the name of the signal to trap.
- `-h` or `--help` displays help and exits.
- `-l` or `--list-signals` prints a list of signal names.
- `-p` or `--print` prints all defined signal handlers.

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@ -581,7 +581,7 @@ vim
\section tut-more Ready for more?
If you want to learn more about fish, there is <a href="index.html">lots of detailed documentation</a>, an <a href="https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fish-users">official mailing list</a>, the IRC channel \#fish on `irc.oftc.net`, and the <a href="http://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/">github page</a>.
If you want to learn more about fish, there is <a href="index.html">lots of detailed documentation</a>, an <a href="https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fish-users">official mailing list</a>, the IRC channel \#fish on `irc.oftc.net`, and the <a href="https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/">github page</a>.
\htmlonly[block]
</div>

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@ -11,8 +11,6 @@ With no options, `type` indicates how each `NAME` would be interpreted if used a
The following options are available:
- `-h` or `--help` prints help and then exits.
- `-a` or `--all` prints all of possible definitions of the specified names.
- `-f` or `--no-functions` suppresses function and builtin lookup.

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@ -49,8 +49,6 @@ The following additional options are also understood by `ulimit`:
- `-a` or `--all` prints all current limits
- `-h` or `--help` displays help and exits.
The `fish` implementation of `ulimit` should behave identically to the implementation in bash, except for these differences:
- Fish `ulimit` supports GNU-style long options for all switches

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@ -16,7 +16,7 @@
# ALIASES += "endfish=</pre>\endhtmlonly \n"
#.
# ALIASES += "blah{1}=<span class=\"comment\">\1</span>"
# ALIASES += "cmnd{1}=<span class=\"command\">\1</span>" and so on...
# ALIASES += "bltn{1}=<span class=\"command\">\1</span>" and so on...
#.
# And simplify for man pages (Doxyfile.help)…
# ALIASES = "fish=<pre>"
@ -24,7 +24,7 @@
# ALIASES += "endfish=</pre>"
#.
# ALIASES += "blah{1}=\1"
# ALIASES += "cmnd{1}=<em>\1</em>"...
# ALIASES += "bltn{1}=<em>\1</em>"...
#.
# It's meant to only ever be run once, during make, as Doxygen's 'INPUT
# FILTER', though can be run interactively by passing a file in via stdin. It
@ -301,17 +301,17 @@ s/^PreClean: //
}
/@vars/{
:cleanvars
s/\(vars{@optr{$}[^@}]*\)@cmnd{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(vars{@optr{$}[^@}]*\)@bltn{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(vars{@optr{$}[^@}]*\)@func{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(vars{@optr{$}[^@}]*\)@sbin{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(vars{@optr{$}[^@}]*\)@cmnd{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(vars{@optr{$}[^@}]*\)@args{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
t cleanvars
}
/@redr/{
:cleanredr
s/\(redr{[^@}]*\)@cmnd{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(redr{[^@}]*\)@bltn{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(redr{[^@}]*\)@func{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(redr{[^@}]*\)@sbin{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(redr{[^@}]*\)@cmnd{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(redr{[^@}]*\)@fsfo{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(redr{[^}]*\)}\( *\)@path{\([^}]*\)/\1\2\3/
t cleanredr
@ -319,9 +319,9 @@ s/^PreClean: //
/@sgst/{
s/@sgst{<@/@sgst{@/
:cleansgst
s/\(sgst{@curs{.}[^@]*\)@cmnd{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(sgst{@curs{.}[^@]*\)@bltn{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(sgst{@curs{.}[^@]*\)@func{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(sgst{@curs{.}[^@]*\)@sbin{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(sgst{@curs{.}[^@]*\)@cmnd{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(sgst{@curs{.}[^@]*\)@opts{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(sgst{@curs{.}[^@]*\)@path{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(sgst{@curs{.}[^@]*\)@args{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
@ -330,9 +330,9 @@ s/^PreClean: //
}
/@fsfo/{
:cleanfsfo
s/\(fsfo{[^@}]*\)@cmnd{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(fsfo{[^@}]*\)@bltn{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(fsfo{[^@}]*\)@func{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(fsfo{[^@}]*\)@sbin{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
s/\(fsfo{[^@}]*\)@cmnd{\([^}]*\)}/\1\2/
t cleanfsfo
}
/@prmt{/{
@ -372,92 +372,94 @@ x
s/^@prmt *//
}
#.
# Special case for optional commands
s/@args{\[@bltn/@args{[@xbln/g
# Special case for one-line 'if' statements
/@cmnd{if}/ {
s//@xcmd{if}/
s/@cmnd{set}/@xcmd{set}/
s/@cmnd{not}/@xcmd{not}/
s/@cmnd{else}/@xcmd{else}/
s/@cmnd{contains}/@xcmd{contains}/
s/@cmnd{test}/@xcmd{test}/
s/@cmnd{end}/@xcmd{end}/
s/@sbin{grep}/@xbin{grep}/
/@bltn{if}/ {
s//@xbln{if}/
s/@bltn{set}/@xbln{set}/
s/@bltn{not}/@xbln{not}/
s/@bltn{else}/@xbln{else}/
s/@bltn{contains}/@xbln{contains}/
s/@bltn{test}/@xbln{test}/
s/@bltn{end}/@xbln{end}/
s/@cmnd{grep}/@xcmd{grep}/
}
# one-line 'for' statements
/@cmnd{for}/ {
s//@xcmd{for}/
s/@args{in}/@xcmd{in}/
/@bltn{for}/ {
s//@xbln{for}/
s/@args{in}/@xbln{in}/
}
# one-line 'begin' statements
/@cmnd{begin}/ {
s//@xcmd{begin}/
s/@cmnd{end}/@xcmd{end}/
/@bltn{begin}/ {
s//@xbln{begin}/
s/@bltn{end}/@xbln{end}/
}
# one-line 'break' statements
/@cmnd{break}/ {
s//@xcmd{break}/
s/@cmnd{end}/@xcmd{end}/
/@bltn{break}/ {
s//@xbln{break}/
s/@bltn{end}/@xbln{end}/
}
# one-line 'continue' statements
/@cmnd{continue}/ {
s//@xcmd{continue}/
s/@cmnd{end}/@xcmd{end}/
/@bltn{continue}/ {
s//@xbln{continue}/
s/@bltn{end}/@xbln{end}/
}
# one-line 'switch' statements
/@cmnd{switch}/ {
s//@xcmd{switch}/
s/@cmnd{case}/@xcmd{case}/
s/@cmnd{end}/@xcmd{end}/
/@bltn{switch}/ {
s//@xbln{switch}/
s/@bltn{case}/@xbln{case}/
s/@bltn{end}/@xbln{end}/
}
# one-line 'function' statements
/@cmnd{function}/ {
s//@xcmd{function}/
s/@cmnd{return}/@xcmd{return}/
s/@cmnd{end}/@xcmd{end}/
/@bltn{function}/ {
s//@xbln{function}/
s/@bltn{return}/@xbln{return}/
s/@bltn{end}/@xbln{end}/
}
# one-line 'bind' statements - special input functions
/@cmnd{bind}/ {
s//@xcmd{bind}/
/@bltn{bind}/ {
s//@xbln{bind}/
s/@....{\([a-z]*\)}\(-[a-z-]*\)/@args{\1\2}/
}
# one-line 'builtin' statements
s/@cmnd{builtin} @cmnd/@xcmd{builtin} @xcmd/g
s/@cmnd{builtin} @sbin/@xcmd{builtin} @xbin/g
s/@cmnd{builtin} @func/@xcmd{builtin} @xfnc/g
s/@bltn{builtin} @bltn/@xbln{builtin} @xbln/g
s/@bltn{builtin} @cmnd/@xbln{builtin} @xcmd/g
s/@bltn{builtin} @func/@xbln{builtin} @xfnc/g
#.
# one-line 'command' statements
s/@cmnd{command} @cmnd/@xcmd{command} @xcmd/g
s/@cmnd{command} @sbin/@xcmd{command} @xbin/g
s/@cmnd{command} @func/@xcmd{command} @xfnc/g
s/@bltn{command} @bltn/@xbln{command} @xbln/g
s/@bltn{command} @cmnd/@xbln{command} @xcmd/g
s/@bltn{command} @func/@xbln{command} @xfnc/g
#.
# one-line 'and/or' statements
s/@cmnd{and} @cmnd/@xcmd{and} @xcmd/g
s/@cmnd{and} @sbin/@xcmd{and} @xbin/g
s/@cmnd{and} @func/@xcmd{and} @xfnc/g
s/@cmnd{or} @cmnd/@xcmd{or} @xcmd/g
s/@cmnd{or} @sbin/@xcmd{or} @xbin/g
s/@cmnd{or} @func/@xcmd{or} @xfnc/g
s/@bltn{and} @bltn/@xbln{and} @xbln/g
s/@bltn{and} @cmnd/@xbln{and} @xcmd/g
s/@bltn{and} @func/@xbln{and} @xfnc/g
s/@bltn{or} @bltn/@xbln{or} @xbln/g
s/@bltn{or} @cmnd/@xbln{or} @xcmd/g
s/@bltn{or} @func/@xbln{or} @xfnc/g
#.
s/^\( *\)@sbin/\1@xbin/
s/\( *[;()] *\)@sbin/\1@xbin/g
s/\( *@redr{|} *\)@sbin/\1@xbin/g
s/^\( *\)@cmnd/\1@xcmd/
s/\( *[;()] *\)@cmnd/\1@xcmd/g
s/\( *@redr{|} *\)@cmnd/\1@xcmd/g
s/^\( *\)@bltn/\1@xbln/
s/\( *[;()] *\)@bltn/\1@xbln/g
s/\( *@redr{|} *\)@bltn/\1@xbln/g
s/^\( *\)@func/\1@xfnc/
s/\( *[;()] *\)@func/\1@xfnc/g
s/\( *@redr{|} *\)@func/\1@xfnc/g
s/\\@cmnd{\([^}]*\)/@args{@bksl{\1}/g
s/@cmnd/@args/g
s/\\@bltn{\([^}]*\)/@args{@bksl{\1}/g
s/@bltn/@args/g
s/@func/@args/g
s/@sbin/@args/g
s/@cmnd/@args/g
#.
s/^.*$/PostArgs: &/w lexicon.log
s/^PostArgs: //
#.
s/xcmd/cmnd/g
s/xbln/bltn/g
s/xfnc/func/g
s/xbin/sbin/g
s/xcmd/cmnd/g
x
/^@prmt/ {
G
@ -473,9 +475,23 @@ x
s/</\&lt;/g
s/>/\&gt;/g
s/((d))/@/g
#.
# Final post processing
s/};\([^]]\)/}@redr{;}\1/g
s/};$/}@redr{;}/
s/ \[\([@(]\)/ @args{[}\1/g
s/ \[\([A-Z]*\) / @args{[\1} /g
s/@args{\([a-zA-Z0-9_.]*\)}\]/@args{\1]}/g
s/@args{\([a-zA-Z0-9_.]*\)}: /@args{\1:} /g
s/@bltn{echo} @fsfo/@bltn{echo} @args/g
s/@bltn{echo}\([a-zA-Z0-9.@{} _-]*\)@fsfo/@bltn{echo}\1@args/g
s/ \] / @args{]} /g
s/ \]$/ @args{]}/g
s/\]}\]$/]]}/
s/\\\([()]\)/@optr{@bksl{\1}}/g
s/\([()]\)/@optr{\1}/g
s/\\n/@bksl{n}/
s/ \\$//
#.
# Uncomment the folowing two lines (ss) to log the final output, sent to Doxygen.
s/^.*$/Output : &\
@ -562,25 +578,25 @@ s/\(@path{[^}]*\)}@fsfo/\1}@fsfo/
#.
#### This section is built in the Makefile. Just some formatting examples. #####
#.
# fish commands (cmnd) <- 4 character code that has a Doxygen alias counterpart
# template : s/[[:<:]]function[[:>:]]/@cmnd{&}/
# Fish builtin (bltn) <- 4 character code that has a Doxygen alias counterpart
# template : s/[[:<:]]function[[:>:]]/@bltn{&}/
#.
# s,[[:<:]]function[[:>:]],@cmnd{function},g
# s,[[:<:]]begin[[:>:]],@cmnd{begin},g
# s,[[:<:]]function[[:>:]],@bltn{function},g
# s,[[:<:]]begin[[:>:]],@bltn{begin},g
# ...
#.
# fish functions (func)
# Fish functions (func)
# Populated by 'public' functions' filename.
#.
# s,[[:<:]]fish_pwd[[:>:]],@func{fish_pwd},g
# s,[[:<:]]fish_prompt[[:>:]],@func{fish_prompt},g
# ...
#.
# Shell Binary (sbin)
# Shell Command (cmnd)
# Populated from completion filenames
#.
# s,[[:<:]]seq[[:>:]],@sbin{seq},g
# s,[[:<:]]rm[[:>:]],@sbin{rm},g
# s,[[:<:]]seq[[:>:]],@cmnd{seq},g
# s,[[:<:]]rm[[:>:]],@cmnd{rm},g
# ...
#.
# Color Variable (clrv)
@ -601,8 +617,8 @@ s/\(@path{[^}]*\)}@fsfo/\1}@fsfo/
# As the lexicon is written into the output lexicon_filter, portability is
# automatically handled.
#.
#!# sbin whoami
#!# sbin mkdir
#!# sbin basename
#!# cmnd sleep
#!# cmnd whoami
#!# cmnd mkdir
#!# cmnd basename
#!# bltn sleep
#!# args in