Add completions for trash-cli commands:
trash, trash-empty, trash-list, trash-put and trash-restore.
``trash --help`` are used to identify the executable in trash cli completion.
Rewrite completions for meson to expose meson commands with their
options and subcommands. New completions are based on the meson 1.0.
Subcommands were introduced in meson 0.42.0 (August 2017), so new
completions will only work for versions after 0.42.0. At this moment,
even oldstable Debian (buster) has meson 0.49.2 -- which means it is
unlikely someone will be affected.
---------
Co-authored-by: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
This wanted to get the default priority, and it ran a thing *at source
time*.
This can lead to a variety of errors and I don't believe it's all that
useful, so we remove it.
Separate the neovim completions from the vim ones, as their supported
options have diverged considerably.
Some documented options are not yet implemented, these are added but
commented out.
Closes#9535.
---------
Co-authored-by: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
This is an easy win for `git add ` completion time if we have multiple descriptions.
What happened was we did things once per description string, but the
things included a bunch of computation (including multiple `string`
calls and even a `realpath`!). Because these don't change, we can
simply do them once.
And it turns out we can just use a cartesian product:
for d in $desc
printf '%s\t%s\n' $file $d
end
becomes
printf '%s\n' $file\t$desc
I have no idea why `apt-cache --no-generate show` is so slow since it basically
dumps the contents of the cache file located at `/var/lib/dpkg/status`. We are
technically bypassing any waits on the cache lock file so this may produce
incorrect results if the cache is being regenerated in the moment, but that's a
small price to pay and the results are likely confined to simply not generating
comprehensive results.
With this change, we no longer need to truncate results to the first n matches
and we no longer only print packages beginning with the commandline argument
enabling fish's partial completions logic to offer less-perfect suggestions when
no better options are available.
Even though we are generating more usable completions, we still trounce the old
performance by leaps and bounds:
```
Benchmark #1: fish -c "complete -C\"apt install ac\""
Time (mean ± σ): 2.165 s ± 0.033 s [User: 267.0 ms, System: 1932.2 ms]
Range (min … max): 2.136 s … 2.256 s 10 runs
Benchmark #2: build/fish -c "complete -C\"apt install ac\""
Time (mean ± σ): 111.1 ms ± 1.8 ms [User: 38.9 ms, System: 72.9 ms]
Range (min … max): 108.2 ms … 114.9 ms 26 runs
Summary
'build/fish -c "complete -C\"apt install ac\""' ran
19.49 ± 0.44 times faster than 'fish -c "complete -C\"apt install ac\""'
```
I think this should be preferred for all subcommand completions because it
handles typos or subcommands we don't recognize better (`apt foo <TAB>` no
longer suggests subcommands since the subcommand position has been taken).
- Added phx completions. These are very common completions for the Elixir Phoenix Framework.
Documentation can be found here: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/1.7.0-rc.2/Mix.Tasks.Local.Phx.html#content
- Added argument completions
- Made all descriptions start with an uppercase for better consistency
- Update CHANGELOG.rst
That commit did way too many things, making it hard to see the 5 regressions
it introduced. Let's revert it and its stragglers. In future, we could redo
some of the changes.
Reverts changes to share/completions/git.fish from
- 3548aae55 (completions/git: Don't leak submodule subcommands, 2023-01-23)
- 905f788b3 (completions/git: Remove awkward newline symbol, 2023-01-10)
- 2da1a4ae7 (completions/git: Fix git-foo commands, 2023-01-09)
- e9bf8b9a4 (Run fish_indent on share/completions/*.fish, 2022-12-08)
- d31847b1d (Fix apparent dyslexia, 2022-11-12)
- 054d0ac0e (git completions: undo mistaken `set -f` usage, 2022-10-28)
- f5711ad5e (git.fish: collapse repeat complete cmds, set -f, rm unneeded funcs, 2022-10-27)
As pointed out by faho, the completions will be deduplicated by the completion
mechanics. We don't use this list directly except to pass it up the chain to the
shell, so there's no benefit to shelling out to eagerly deduplicate the list.
Plus, as of 3.6.0, even manual `complete -C"..."` invocations now deduplicate
results the same as if completions were triggered.
`fail2ban-client` uses nested subcommand syntax and intermixes fixed/enumerable
values with dynamically detected ones. If you know exactly what your overall
command structure looks like, these completions will work great. Unfortunately
their discoverability is a bit lacking, but that's not really fish's fault.
e.g.
* `f2b-c get/set` take certain known values but also accepts a dynamic jail name
* `f2b-c get/set <jail>` take certain fixed options but...
* `f2b-c get/set <jail> action` require enumerating an entirely different set
of values to generate the list of completions, bringing us to...
* `f2b-c get <jail> action <action>` has a fixed number of options but
* `f2b-c set <jail> action <action> <property>` can be any valid command and its
arguments
The intermixing of fixed, enumerable, and free-form inputs in a single command
line is enough to make one's head spin!
macOS 11+ (possibly 12+) has an additional place where certain
applications will be installed, `/System/Applications`. This is a sealed
system volume and includes the following applications:
- `App Store.app`
- `Automator.app`
- `Books.app`
- `Calculator.app`
- `Calendar.app`
- `Chess.app`
- `Clock.app`
- `Contacts.app`
- `Dictionary.app`
- `FaceTime.app`
- `FindMy.app`
- `Font Book.app`
- `Freeform.app`
- `Home.app`
- `Image Capture.app`
- `Launchpad.app`
- `Mail.app`
- `Maps.app`
- `Messages.app`
- `Mission Control.app`
- `Music.app`
- `News.app`
- `Notes.app`
- `Photo Booth.app`
- `Photos.app`
- `Podcasts.app`
- `Preview.app`
- `QuickTime Player.app`
- `Reminders.app`
- `Shortcuts.app`
- `Siri.app`
- `Stickies.app`
- `Stocks.app`
- `System Settings.app`
- `TextEdit.app`
- `Time Machine.app`
- `TV.app`
- `Utilities`
- `VoiceMemos.app`
- `Weather.app`
The change here adds `/System/Applications` to the search locations for
`-a` and `-b` options on the macOS completions for `open`. There are
possibly other locations that may be considered (I’m not using `mdls` or
`mdfind` in my functions for "reasons"), but this is partially based on
https://github.com/halostatue/fish-macos/blob/main/functions/__macos_app_find.fish
Konsole draws ⏎ with a width of 2, but widechar_width says it's 1.
That leads to awkward display.
It's also a surprising and distracting symbol in this use.
So just use spaces.
This used the naive `__fish_seen_subcommand_from`, which isn't
powerful enough once you allow for `conda create` and `conda env
create`.
Hattip to jvanheugten for the env completions.
Fixes#9452
These four completions all have a strange pattern (that doesn't
work.)
set -l subcommands cmd1 cmd2 cmd3 ...
complete -n "__fish_use_subcommand $subcommands" -c foo -a cmd1
complete -n "__fish_use_subcommand $subcommands" -c foo -a cmd2
complete -n "__fish_use_subcommand $subcommands" -c foo -a cmd3
Remove the redundant lists of subcommands and the unused argument
passed to __fish_use_subcommand for bosh, cf, mariner, and port.
- fix complete condition
- add short flag
the conditions are not include short flags currently.
and conditions are not right, causing the complete to not work as expected.
Went by the docs at https://yarnpkg.com/cli/install.
Anything not in the sidebar was removed.
(also rename "upgrade" to "up" because that's a great idea)
See #9375.
Enhances abbreviations with extra features
- global abbreviations
- trigger on regex match as alternative to literal match
- the ability to expand abbreviations with a user-defined function
- the ability to set cursor position after expansion
scp completions use "ls" to list files on the remote host. If a user aliases
them (in noninteractive shells) this will break. In general, this is the
users fault but also kind of ours because we shouldn't really use "ls" here.
Let's work around this problem by skipping functions.
Fixes#9363
Implement completion for vim tags from any place within the source tree.
To prevent freezes on a huge tags file (e.g., on one from the Linux
kernel source tree), amount of completion lines is limited to 10000.
Note that the TAGS file (EMACS-compatible tags file) is not searched
here as it would not be used by vim anyway.
flatpak completions gate some features behind checks like
test $flatpakversion -gt 1.2
which does a floating point comparison, which is different
from version comparison.
Most of these version checks are irrelevant anyway because they check for
a version that's not even in Debian oldstable. The only one that might be
relevant is a check for version 1.5 but that only gates some extra subcommands;
there's little harm in providing them too.
So let's just remove the version check.
Hopefully fixes#9341 (untested)
Note that flatpak upstream provides a completion file too - but it's shadowed
by ours on my system. This is a tricky issue for another day.
Previously an environment variable to redefine would only be suggested if you
had not yet started typing one out. This makes it so that `env C<TAB>` will also
complete to, for example, [ `CC=`, `CXXFLAGS=`, ... ].
It also is smarter when suggesting variable names to complete: if a variable has
already been completed, it isn't suggested again. Additionally, it only suggests
names for variables that are exported, not all variables (the previous list was
insanely long and including things like all our `fish_...` variables).
Update completions for the tree command. There are a lot of new options
were added since the 1.6.0 release (which apparently was used to create
current completions).
Options are also reordered to follow the "tree" help.