The abbr function doesn't have the possiblity to rename abbreviations.
You have to delete the old one and create a new one. This commit adds
this functionality and uses the syntax:
abbr -r OLD_KEY NEW_KEY
Fixes#2155.
I hate doing this but I am tired of touching a fish script as part of
some change and having `make style` radically change it. Which makes
editing fish scripts more painful than it needs to be. It is time to do
a wholesale reformatting of these scripts to conform to the documented
style as implemented by the `fish_indent` program.
We silently upgrade existing abbreviations and change the separator when
saving.
This does not yet warn when the user is using the old syntax.
Resolves#2051
This fails on e.g. an abbr that uses `env a=b`, like the included test demonstrates.
Unfortunately it decreases the speed again (2s vs 2.2s vs 4s original),
but correctness is more important.
- Replace __fish_abbr_escape with `string escape`
- Don't double-parse the key
- Replace IFS magic with string
Together, this seems to speed it up by a factor of about 2.
1. When run with no arguments, make abbr do the equivalent
of `abbr --show`
2. Enable "implicit add", e.g. `abbr gco git checkout`
3. Teach `abbr --show` to not use quotes for simple cases
4. Teach abbr to output -- when the abbreviation has
leading dashes
Add some basic tests to abbr too.
Support for space-delimited abbreviations was added to the expansion
parser in fbade198; this commit extends that support to the user-facing
tools, and documents the space-separated behaviour. Equals-delimited
abbreviations are expected to be removed before the next release.
Work on #731.
The usage is still the same, but it's a lot more robust, and also no
longer assumes $fish_user_abbreviations must be a universal variable.
This also fixes the unexpected error output when calling `abbr -a` with
no existing abbreviations.
Calling `abbr -a` with an abbreviation that already exists now silently
overwrites the abbreviation, just like `function` and `bind` do, instead
of complaining.