function __fish_print_help --description "Print help message for the specified fish function or builtin" --argument item # special support for builtin_help_get() set -l tty_width if test "$item" = "--tty-width" set tty_width $argv[2] set item $argv[3] end if test "$item" = '.' set item source end # Do nothing if the file does not exist if not test -e "$__fish_datadir/man/man1/$item.1" return end set -l IFS \n\ \t # Render help output, save output into the variable 'help' set -l help set -l cols set -l rLL if test "$tty_width" -gt 0 set cols $tty_width else if command test -t 1 # We want to simulate `man`'s dynamic line length, because # defaulting to 80 kind of sucks. # Note: using `command test` instead of `test` because `test -t 1` # doesn't seem to work right. # Note: grab the size from the stdout terminal in case it's somehow # different than the stdin of fish. # use fd 3 to copy our stdout because we need to pipe the output of stty begin stty size 0<&3 | read _ cols end 3<&1 end if test -n "$cols" set cols (expr $cols - 4) # leave a bit of space on the right set rLL -rLL=$cols[1]n end set help (nroff -man -t $rLL "$__fish_datadir/man/man1/$item.1" ^/dev/null) # The original implementation trimmed off the top 5 lines and bottom 3 lines # from the nroff output. Perhaps that's reliable, but the magic numbers make # me extremely nervous. Instead, let's just strip out any lines that start # in the first column. "normal" manpages put all section headers in the first # column, but fish manpages only leave NAME like that, which we want to trim # away anyway. # # While we're at it, let's compress sequences of blank lines down to a single # blank line, to duplicate the default behavior of `man`, or more accurately, # the `-s` flag to `less` that `man` passes. set -l state blank for line in $help # categorize the line set -l line_type switch $line case ' *' \t\* # starts with whitespace, check if it has non-whitespace printf "%s\n" $line | read -l word _ if test -n $word set line_type normal else # lines with just spaces probably shouldn't happen # but let's consider them to be blank set line_type blank end case '' set line_type blank case '*' # not leading space, and not empty, so must contain a non-space # in the first column. That makes it a header/footer. set line_type meta end switch $state case normal switch $line_type case normal printf "%s\n" $line case blank set state blank case meta # skip it end case blank switch $line_type case normal echo # print the blank line printf "%s\n" $line set state normal case blank meta # skip it end end end | ul # post-process with `ul`, to interpret the old-style grotty escapes echo # print a trailing blank line end