Utilized the `--install` flag added in commit #8c09d6e.
Limit `eopkg remove/autoremove/check ...` completions to installed packages.
Limit `eopkg install/upgrade/info ...` completions to available packages.
Prior to this fix, __fish_describe_command would error if the
input contained any special characters, because it would be interpolated
into a regex. Hack in a guard to do nothing if the input contains
anything other than [a-zA-Z0-9_ ]
* update nim.fish sample prompt
- Use an helper function to wrap informations
- Add VIRTUAL_ENV infos, if any
- Add __fish_git_prompt, wrapped for the theme
- Add comments
- Remove ASCII failback symbols for tty
(no more useful for me, but if someone really needs it, just ask)
* fish.nim: test -n __fish_git_prompt
Added a new flag `--installed` via `argparse` to `__fish_print_packages`
which indicates that only installed packages should be listed.
TODO: Other non-debian/apt platforms should take advantage of this flag/
behavior as well.
It was only introduced in 2.16, which was released in January 2018.
Instead, we just use a bare "--ignored", which is equivalent to "--ignored=traditional".
The difference to "--ignored=matching" mode shouldn't matter to us here.
Fixes#5074.
Executes `whatis` safely, returns at most one line, and strips the name
of the command from the start of line, returning a value fit for use as
the description parameter for a completion argument value.
Fixes
- Use the actual path when skipping unusable paths to fix all Include
directives being skipped when there is no ~/.ssh directory
- Prevent "No matches for wildcard" message
Improvements
- Skip paths that are directories since we only want files
- Remove `cd` as it is not needed
__fish_complete_suffix assumed that the only literal . in a path
would be the . before an extension, and stripped accordingly. This
behavior has been there for a long time, but broke many things
including completion of relative paths and completion of paths with
a literal . in a directory name.
__fish_complete_suffix does not just complete extensions (or at the
very least, it no longer does just that) but rather any suffix, so
isolating the path name without the extension was unnecessary in all
cases.
I'm not sure what was wrong with the old syntax, but I needed to switch
the outer quotes to ' and the inner quotes to " in order for the
completions to work when they weren't explicitly sourced.
Additionally, realized that the overload for __fish_complete_suffix can
be used to get the filtered list of kernel modules from /boot/kernel in
the initial run.
Allows the most painful of curl's arguments to be completed by fish by
restoring file-based completions for paths prefixed with `@` (which are
typically used after parameters like --data).
With a blank $suff (i.e. complete all files), __fish_complete_suffix
returned directories twice, once with the trailing `/` and once without.
This fixes that, and additionally speeds up the code by no longer
shelling out to `sort -u` as we no longer rely on brace expansion to
enumerate directories and files simultaneously.
In general, this behavior would occur when a directory exists that
matches the suffix search pattern (so a dir named 'foo.bar' with a
search pattern '.bar' would return 'foo.bar' twice).
Runtime has dropped from ~22ms to ~8ms on my machine, while also
returning more correct results.
This allows snippets to use everything that is defined in config.fish,
which is our _base_ initialization.
Among other things, it enables snippets to use $PATH as it will appear
in the user's config.fish, or even to change $PATH.
Also, this is how it was in 2.7.1 and before (with the small change
that abbrs were upgraded after).
As defined in the `go help packages`:
Many commands apply to a set of packages:
go action [packages]
Usually, [packages] is a list of import paths.
This patch introduces automatic lookup of said packages from GOPATH
using `go list`, and provides them as options go subcmds.
I'm not sure what was up with the old completions,
`$__fish_service_commands` is not set anywhere and completions for the
command (not the service) were not being generated on my machine.
macOS and (AFAICT) most Linux distributions ship with the Info-ZIP
version of unzip, which has the `unzip -h` flag; but other
implementations of unzip do not necessarily have it (i.e. FreeBSD).
`unzip` under FreeBSD does not support `unzip -h`. Under both Linux and
FreeBSD, `unzip -v` presents the list of options, though. Using this
instead of `unzip -h` to detect the Debian-patched version of the
Info-ZIP unzip program.
This prints an escape sequence, so it can break scp or similar when
someone has an unqualified
fish_vi_key_bindings
in config.fish and happens to run a terminal that can set the cursor.
These completions are apparently based on an auto-generated version,
so there's a whole bunch of rewording to be done here.
Also for some reason some of the options are mentioned more than once?
Under FreeBSD, as annoying as it is, switches must directly follow the
command or subcommand in question, and cannot come after actual payload
argument. Calling `zpool get all -H` instead of `zpool get -H all`
caused error messages to be spewed to the console under FreeBSD when
simply completing `zfs <TAB>`, this should fix that. The change should
also be compatible with other operating systems (namely Linux) that
don't have this requirement, as they (generally) allow arguments to come
before _or_ after the primary non-switch argument (though I do not have
access to a zfs-enabled Linux machine to test this).
Previously, trying to complete a token with any of these
expansion-related characters would cause the completion to return no
results, as it would emit expanded values which weren't matched by the
autocompleter.
Only the first non-switch parameter to python must be a .py file, but
everything thereafter is "just another argument". This enables file
completions for 2nd+ arguments.
Akin to __fish_complete_suffix, __fish_complete_directories now attempts
to complete the current commandline token if no token is explicitly
passed in as an argument.
The prompt is a fallback that is overridden via a function file
anyway.
Do that with the title as well, so we can use just builtins.
This removes error messages when $fish_function_path is borked.
Turns out that `make -pn` actually takes a while - about 300ms on
fish's makefile.
That's quite a bit of time just to throw away the output and use the
exit code.
So we just check for "GNU" in the version string.
It would be nice to just _do_ the completion and fall back on the
BSD-style if it doesn't work, but that is tricky to do with the pipe
to `awk` - the awk expression actually does not fail if `make` does
not print output.
And I don't know enough about awk to change that.
While this is a bit faster (mostly because it needs less processing on fish's side),
it lacks the neat description bit and the ":/" stuff doesn't work.
The boost is also not large in absolute terms (a few milliseconds).
This reverts commit 1f8e4dad9f.
This uses the same logic that git uses to determine the satus of files
and doesn't require any parsing on our end. Brings in support for
relative paths (such as `git add ../f<TAB>`). Should be faster and more
reliable than manually parsing porcelain status.
This doesn't support as many cases as the old `__git_ls_files` function
did (e.g. `renamed` is not supported, nor is `added`), both of which
_can_ be implemented on top of the new logic - but neither of which were
actually being used, anyway.
Usefulness is decreased by #4970, speed still bottlenecked by #4969.
cc @faho
This is based on what the official git completions do, and it's quite
fast.
Also only complete files after a "--" separator for `checkout`.
Fixes#4858.
This is much quicker - on the order of 100ms vs 50ms.
We shorten to 10 characters, which is statistically suitable - 3 out
of 600k commits in the linux kernel need 11 characters.
For usage in completion scripts.
Unlike `__fish_is_first_token` (which is probably not correctly named),
`__fish_is_first_arg` returns true regardless of whether existing tokens start with `-`
or not, to be used when an arg cannot be used with any other argument.
`__fish_prev_arg_in` is similar to `__fish_seen_...` but it explicitly
tests the preceding token only, for arguments that take only a single
parameter.
As it turns out, for some terminals backspace is \b but only when
preceded by \e.
All this makes about as much sense as the english language.
Fixes#4955.
The previous completion generation was broken for several reasons:
* ./foo would break detection of suffix due to the leading . being
interpreted an extension marker,
* ./foo would be completed as foo, which would be excluded from
matching inrcomplete.cpp