c0bcd817ba removed some key bindings, including the bindings of
ESC ESC [ C for Alt-Right. the commit claimed that
"Sequences like \e\eOC are Escape followed by an SS3 arrow key which we
can already decode separately." but for whatever reason this doesn't work:
Alt-Right is broken in iTerm2 by default.
Restore the default ESC ESC [ X bindings for iTerm2 compatibility.
Don't unconditionally execute the plumbing to get `rustc -C` completions (use it
only when trying to complete `rustc -C`), filter out deprecated options, and use
fewer calls to the `string` builtin to optimize further.
Need to do the same thing for the `-Z` completions next, those hang the shell
for a good 1.5+ seconds.
I've been needing this for some time to generate completions for functions that
we can dynamically generate completions for that take one or more
comma-separated values in any order.
Try not to let `cargo asm` build a large project and hang the terminal (and make
the fans go crazy) if we try to generate a list of functions/paths and the
project is in a dirty state. Also support dynamic completion of --target.
If rustup is installed, use the existing `__rustup_installed_targets` to get a
list of installed targets to compile for. If it's not, print a list of all
targets known to rustc.
It sucks that the completions file is currently architected in a way where we
have to manually specify the arguments for each subcommand. 🤷
- Remove duplicated options - we had `-type` 9 times!
- Remove deprecated options and synonyms
- Make descriptions shorter, even removing some - when they're inscrutable they might as well not be there.
Really, 99.8% of these options are of interest to nobody except possibly (a subset of) gcc developers, so it pays to have *less* on your screen that you don't use anyway.
We ignore typed control characters 33a7172ee (Revert to not inserting control
characters from keyboard input, 2024-03-02).
We used to do the same for bracketed paste but that changed in 8bf8b10f6
(Extended & human-friendly keys, 2024-03-30) which made bracketed paste
behave like fish_clipboard_paste; it inserts the exact input (minus leading
whitespace etc). At that time it wasn't clear to me which behavior was the
right one (because of the inconsistency between terminal and bracketed paste).
As reported in
https://matrix.to/#/!YLTeaulxSDauOOxBoR:matrix.org/$PEEOAoyJY-644amIio0CWmq1TkpEDdSy2QnfJdK-dco
trailing tabs in pasted text can be confusing.
There seems to be not real need to insert raw control characters into the
command line, so let's strip them when pasting.
Now the only way to insert a raw control character into the command line is
to recall it from command history. Not sure what the behavior should be for
that case, we can revisit that later. If we get rid of raw control characters
entirely, then we can also delete the new "control pictures" rendering :)
Given "abbr foo something", the input sequence
foo<space><ctrl-z><space>
would re-expand the abbreviation on the second space which is surprising
because the cursor is not at or inside the command token. This looks to be
a regression from 00432df42 (Trigger abbreviations after inserting process
separators, 2024-04-13)
Happily, 69583f303 (Allow restricting abbreviations to specific commands
(#10452), 2024-04-24) made some changes that mean the bad commit seems no
longer necessary. Not sure why it works but I'll take it.
In addition to the native Emacs undo binding, we also support ctrl-z.
On Linux, ctrl-shift-z alias ctrl-Z is the redo binding according to
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_of_keyboard_shortcuts Let's bind allow
that.
Unfortunately ctrl-shift and ctrl-alt modified shortcuts on Linux may be
intercepted by the windowing system or the terminal. Only alt-shift seems to be
available reliably (but the shift bit should mean "extend selection" in Emacs).
iTerm2 supports CSI u so the custom bindings are no longer needed. Sequences
like \e\eOC are Escape followed by an SS3 arrow key which we can already
decode separately.
In ImageMagick 7 or later, legacy commands have been replaced with
magick. Here a new functions, defines these completions and it is
called for `magick` and `magick convert`.
fixes#7172. Closes#10307.
Co-authored-by: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
We were inconsistent about this for no apparent reason.
Also cleaning up in ~/.config/fish/completions is
irrelevant by now since we moved to ~/.local/share/fish 8 years ago.
Now that the parent commit moved it again, cleaning up that one seems
reasonable.
wl-copy is a daemon process that serves its stdin to any wl-paste processes.
On Wayland, we launch it from fish_clipboard_copy. It then lives in the
same process group as fish (see `ps -o pid,pgid,comm`).
For some reason pressing ctrl-c inside the VSCode integrated terminal with
fish as the default shell kills the wl-copy process, thus clearing the
clipboard. On other terminals it works fine.
This is also reproducible by running "echo foo | wl-copy" ctrl-v ctrl-c ctrl-v
(the second ctrl-v does not paste because wl-copy was killed).
Work around this for now by running wl-copy asynchronously, and disowning it.
This seems to fix it though I really don't know why. Alternatively we could
"setsid" but that's technically not available on BSD.
For some reason this works in Bash. We should strace it to figure out why.