This just makes more sense, as people don't want to enter exact
matches if they delete interactively.
It also brings it in line with "search".
Fixes#6142
Rejects #6070
MacOS Catalina apparently ships a stripped down svn that doesn't have
`svnversion`, which we use to print the revision.
For now skip the entire step to remove error spam.
Fixes#6267.
[ci skip]
Every builtin or function shipped with fish supports flag -h or --help to
print a slightly condensed version of its manpage.
Some of those help messages are longer than a typical screen;
this commit pipes the help to a pager to make it easier to read.
As in other places in fish we assume that either $PAGER or "less" is a
valid pager and use that.
In three places (error messages for bg, break and continue) the help is
printed to stderr instead of stdout. To make sure the error message is
visible in the pager, we pass it to builtin_print_help, every call of which
needs to be updated.
Fixes#6227
Some distros (Arch) use python command for Python 3, so we need to update the scripts to work with it. We cannot just switch to python3 command because MacOS does not ship it.
* functions/__fish_print_hostnames: Fix ssh_configs no values return
`string replace` not working with mutlilines variable.
So split per line first.
* functions/__fish_print_hostnames: remove quotes at `split '\n'`
"\n with quotes" will cause `string split` weird issues.
* functions/__fish_print_hostnames: using `read -alz -d \n`
Fix `$contents` issues together
Since the url is inside a AngularJS markup {{url}}, it's better to use **ng-href**.
From [AngularJS Documentation](https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/directive/ngHref):
<br>
"Using AngularJS markup like {{hash}} in an href attribute will make the link go to the wrong URL if the user clicks it before AngularJS has a chance to replace the {{hash}} markup with its value. Until AngularJS replaces the markup the link will be broken and will most likely return a 404 error. The ngHref directive solves this problem."
We used to just check for the presence of "--" on the command line to
make judgements about which completions to suggest. Now, even if "--" is
present, we can still make different suggestions by taking the cursor's
position into account.
If "--" is present in the command line, it's usually safe to assume that
the user is going to want to complete a file tracked by git so let's
only suggest branches if "--" isn't present.
When there is already a "src:", we assume that it is a valid ref and
just complete "dst". This allows completion of dest if src is e.g. a
commit SHA (completing all possible refs would probably impact
performance).
See issue #3035.
Corrects #6110
BSD `seq` produces a down-counting sequence when the second argument is
smaller than the first, e.g.:
$ seq 2 1
2
1
$
While GNU `seq` produces no output at all:
$ seq 2 1
$
To accommodate for this behavior, only run `seq` when we are sure that
the second argument is greater than or equal to the first (in this case,
the second argument `line_count` should be greater than 1).
* Add completions/sfdx.fish
* completions/sfdx.fish: add completion for options
* completions/sfdx.fish: add a completion for --manifest(-x) option which need package.json
* completions/sfdx.fish: replace redundant function with already existing one
Revert "gut gpg.fish/gpg1.fish/gpg2.fish; migrate functionality to __fish_complete_gpg.fish"
This reverts commit d558218d03.
Revert "break version-specific completions out into independent function;"
This reverts commit 9160e77b01.
Revert "split gpg2- and gpg1-specific completions to conditional block"
This reverts commit a069b95f63.
* Fix default Alt+W keybinding
The old keybinding would chop off the last line of the `whatis` output
when using a multi-line prompt. This fix corrects that.
* Make variable local and remove unneeded if statement
* Test that token is non-empty
1. Added missing commands and arguments.
2. Removed alternative spelling of some commands (e.g. clear-cache|clearcache) since a choice of spelling is not really useful for completion.
3. Fixed a typo: np-ansi → no-ansi.
4. Removed redundant backslash in front of $COMPOSER_HOME.
The updated completion was initially generated using the bamarni/symfony-console-autocomplete package and then incorporated into the existing code.
Reproducer: type `: \<RET><M-p>`. This used to print an error due to builtin test receiving
too many arguments.
It looks like (commandline -j) can return multiple items, because a job can be broken up in multiple
lines terminated by backslashes.
With the new support for self-insert inserting a bound sequence,
the default binding for space as expanding abbreviations can be simplified
to just `self-insert expand-abbr`. This also fixes the bug where space
would cancel pager search.
This commit makes git completions aware of files that are both staged as renamed, and have unstaged
modifications/are deleted.
__fish_git_files now potentially prints these files twice:
$ __fish_git_files renamed modified
foo Renamed file
foo Modified file
Fixes#6031
By not manipulating each line or even each file at a time, we can go
back to `string` and piece together a pipeline that will execute
significantly faster than shelling out to `awk` will. This also removes
one of the few dependencies on `awk` in the codebase.
With this change, `__fish_print_hostnames` now finishes ~80% faster than
it used to a few commits back.
Reordering the `getent hosts` and read from `/etc/hosts` combined with
minimizing shelling and job invocations for parsing the output results
in a profiled and benchmarked ~42% decrease in the time it takes to run,
and that's on a machine with a very small hosts list in the first place.
This update also fixes the hadling of IPv6 addresses in the hosts
output, which were previously ignored, and ignores 127.* loopback
addresses in addition to the 0.0.0.0 address (plus adds support for
shorter IPv4 notations).
See for example: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-cherry
git cherry is quite helpful when trying to findout if merges between
branches are complete, when there were cherry-picks in addition to
merges.
Previously, elements already existing in the path variable would keep their position when the path was being constructed from the config files. This caused issues given that $PATH typically already contains "/usr/bin:/bin" when fish initializes within a macOS terminal app. In this case, these would keep their position at the front of the $PATH, even though the system path_helper configs explicitly place them _after_ other paths, like "/usr/local/bin". This would render binaries in "/usr/local/bin" as effectively "invisible" if they also happen to live in "/usr/bin" as well. This is not the intended
This change makes the __fish_macos_set_env config function emulate the macOS standard path_helper behavior more faithfully, with:
1. The path list being constructed *from scratch* based on the paths specified in the config files
2. Any distinct entries in the exist path environment variable being appended to this list
3. And then this list being used to *replace* the existing path environment variable
The result, for a vanilla fish shell on macOS, is that the $PATH is now set to:
/usr/local/bin /usr/local/sbin /usr/bin /bin /usr/sbin /sbin
Where previously it was set to:
/usr/bin /bin /usr/local/bin /usr/sbin /sbin
This new $PATH exactly matches the order of paths specified in `/etc/paths`.
$__fish_git_prompt_use_informative_chars will use the informative
chars without requiring informative mode (which is really frickin'
slow!).
See #5726.
[ci skip]
This previously effectively checked `string split ' '`s return status,
which was false if it didn't split anything. And while that should be
true if getent fails (because it should produce no output), it's also
true if it doesn't print a line with multiple aliases. Which should be
fairly typical.
Instead we use our new-found $pipestatus to check what getent returns,
in the assumption that it'll fail if it doesn't support hosts.
Follow up to 8f7a47547e.
[ci skip]
`getent hosts` is expensive-ish - ~50ms, so we don't want to run it
twice just to figure out it works.
Apparently this works everywhere but CYGWIN and possibly older
OpenBSD, but we don't want to explicitly blacklist those.
[ci skip]
Instead of requiring a flag to enable newline trimming, invert it so the
flag (now `--no-trim-newlines`) disables newline trimming. This way our
default behavior matches that of sh's `"$(cmd)"`.
Also change newline trimming to trim all newlines instead of just one,
again to match sh's behavior.
The `string collect` subcommand behaves quite similarly in practice to
`string split0 -m 0` in that it doesn't split its output, but it also
takes an optional `--trim-newline` flag to trim a single trailing
newline off of the output.
See issue #159.