Update user documentation - add section on internal completion functions, update todo list, minor documentation tweaks

darcs-hash:20061206000810-ac50b-08f12efdb74224abe46301d3722cd8180d8ba37d.gz
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axel 2006-12-06 10:08:10 +10:00
parent 4b9dcf1cf2
commit d9ec65da4d
2 changed files with 88 additions and 11 deletions

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@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
\section alias alias - create a function
\subsection alias-synopsis Synopsis
<tt>alias NAME DEFINITION</tt><br/>
<tt>alias NAME=DEFINITION</tt>
<pre>alias NAME DEFINITION
alias NAME=DEFINITION</pre>
\subsection alias-description Description
@ -11,5 +11,8 @@ It exists for backwards compatibility with Posix
shells. For other uses, it is recommended to define a <a
href='#function'>function</a>.
Alias does not keep track of which functions have been defined using
alias, nor does it allow erasing of aliases.
- NAME is the name of the function to define
- DEFINITION is the body of the function. The string " $argv" will be appended to the body.

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@ -438,6 +438,65 @@ For examples of how to write your own complex completions, study the
completions in /usr/share/fish/completions. (The exact path depends on
your chosen installation prefix and may be slightly different)
\subsection completion-func Useful functions for writing completions
Fish ships with several functions that are very useful when writing
command specific completions. Most of these functions name begins with
the string '__fish_'. Such functions are internal to fish and their
name and interface may change in future fish versions. Still, some of
them may be very useful when writing completions. A few of these
functions are described here. Be aware that they may be removed or
changed in future versions of fish.
Functions begining with the string '__fish_print_' print a
newline-separated list of strings. For example,
__fish_print_filesystems prints a list of all known filesystems. Functions
beginning with '__fish_complete_' print out a newline separated list of
completions with descriptions. The description is separated from the
completion by a tab character.
<pre>__fish_complete_directories STRING DESCIPTION</pre>
performs path completion on STRING, allowing only directories, and giving them the description DESCRIPTION.
<pre>__fish_complete_groups</pre>
prints a list of all user groups with the groups members as description.
<pre>__fish_complete_pids</pre>
prints a list of all procceses IDs with the command name as description.
<pre>__fish_complete_suffix STRING SUFFIX DESCIPTION</pre>
performs path completion on STRING, allowing only files ending in SUFFIX, and giving them the description DESCRIPTION.
<pre>__fish_complete_users</pre>
prints a list of all users with their full name as description.
<pre>__fish_print_filesystems</pre>
prints a list of all known filesystems. Currently, this is a static
list, and not dependent on what filesystems the host operating system
actually understands.
<pre>__fish_print_hostnames</pre>
prints a list of all known hostnames. This functions searches the
fstab for nfs servers, ssh for known hosts and checks the /etc/hosts file.
<pre>__fish_print_interfaces</pre>
prints a list of all known network interfaces.
<pre>__fish_print_packages</pre>
prints a list of all installed packages. This function currently handles
debian, rpm and gentoo packages.
\subsection completion-path Where to put completions
Completions can be defined on the commandline or in a configuration
@ -466,8 +525,11 @@ href='mailto: fish-users@lists.sf.net'>the fish mailinglist</a>.
When an argument for a program is given on the commandline, it
undergoes the process of parameter expansion before it is sent on to
the command. There are many ways in which the user can specify a
parameter to be expanded. These include:
the command. Parameter expansion is a powerful set of mechamisms that
allow you to expand the parameter in various ways, including
performing wildcard matching on files, inserting the value of
environment variables into the parameter or even using the output of
another command as a parameter list.
\subsection expand-wildcard Wildcards
@ -479,6 +541,10 @@ way that:
- '*' can match any string of characters not containing '/'. This includes matching an empty string.
- '**' matches any string of characters. This includes matching an empty string. The string may include the '/' character but does not need to.
Wildcard matches are sorted case insensitively. When sorting matches
containing numbers, the entire numbers are considered, so that the
strings '1' '5' and '12' would be sorted in the order given.
File names beginning with a dot are not considered when wildcarding
unless a dot is specifically given as the first character of the file
name.
@ -500,7 +566,7 @@ warning will also be printed.
\subsection expand-command-substitution Command substitution
If a parameter contains a set of parenthesis, the text enclosed by the
parenthesis will be interpreted as a list of commands. Om expansion,
parenthesis will be interpreted as a list of commands. On expansion,
this list is executed, and substituted by the output. If the output is
more than one line long, each line will be expanded to a new
parameter.
@ -595,7 +661,7 @@ end
</pre>
The above code demonstrates how to use multiple '$' symbols to expand
the value of a variable as a variable name. One can simply think of
the value of a variable as a variable name. One can think of
the $-symbol as a variable dereference operator. When using this
feature together with array brackets, the brackets will always match
the innermost $ dereference. Thus, $$foo[5] will always mean the fift
@ -642,6 +708,17 @@ All of the above expansions can be combined. If several expansions
result in more than one parameter, all possible combinations are
created.
When combining multiple parameter expansions, expansions are performed in the following order:
- Command substitutions
- Variable expansions
- Bracket expansion
- Pid expansion
- Wildcard expansion
Expansions are performed from right to left, nested bracket expansions
are performed from the inside and out.
Example:
If the current directory contains the files 'foo' and 'bar', the command
@ -1298,15 +1375,14 @@ href='fish-users@lists.sf.net'>fish-users@lists.sf.net</a>.
- Complete vi-mode key bindings
- More completions (for example xterm, vim,
konsole, gnome-terminal, dcop, cron,
rlogin, rsync, arch, finger, nice, locate,
rlogin, rsync, arch, finger,
bibtex, aspell, xpdf,
compress, wine, xmms, dig, batch, cron,
g++, javac, java, gcj, lpr, doxygen, whois, find)
g++, javac, java, gcj, lpr, doxygen, whois)
- Undo support
- Check keybinding commands for output - if nothing has happened, don't repaint to reduce flicker
- wait shellscript
- Support for the screen clipboard
- Files begining with '-' should not be colored red if a '--' argument has been given
\subsection todo-possible Possible features
@ -1348,9 +1424,7 @@ g++, javac, java, gcj, lpr, doxygen, whois, find)
- Completion for gcc -\#\#\# option doesn't work.
- Suspending and then resuming pipelines containing a builtin is broken. How should this be handled?
- The completion pager doesn't work if stderr is redirected.
- ls should use dircolors
- delete-word is broken on the commandline 'sudo update-alternatives --config x-'
- kill highlights signal numbers as errors
If you think you have found a bug not described here, please send a
report to <a href="mailto:fish-users@lists.sf.net">fish-users@lists.sf.net</a>.