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When the user clicks somewhere in the prompt, kitty asks the shell to move the cursor there (since there is not much else to do). This is currently implemented by sending an array of forward-char-passive commands. This has problems, for example it is really slow on large command lines (probably because we repaint everytime). Implement kitty's `click_events=1` flag to set the position directly. To convert from terminal-coordinates to fish-coordinates, query [CSI 6 n Report Cursor Position](https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html) and use it to compute the left prompt's terminal-coordinates (which are (0, 0) in fish-coordinates). Unfortunately this doesn't work correctly while the terminal is scrolled. This is probably because the cursor position is wrong if off-screen. To fix that we could probably record the cursor position while not scrolled, but it doesn't seem terribly important (the existing implementation also doesn't get it right). Also add parsing for some unused mouse events; I'll probably remove them again unless we can use them now. Future work: 1. Knowledge of the position of the prompt will also enable us to make [ctrl-l scroll instead of erasing] (https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot/wiki#how-do-i-make-ctrl-l-scroll-the-content-instead-of-erasing-it) (as of wiki commit b57489e298f95d037fdf34da00ea60a5e8eafd6d) which might be a better default. 2. We still turn off mouse reporting. If we turned it on, it would be harder to select text in the terminal itself (not fish). This would typically mean that mouse-drag will alter fish's selection and shift+mouse-drag or alt+mouse-drag can be used. To improve this, we could try to synchronize the selection: if parts of the fish commandline are selected in the terminal's selection, copy that to fish's selection and vice versa. Or maybe there is an intuitive criteria, like: whenever we receive a mouse event outside fish, turn off mouse reporting, and turn it back on whenver we receive new keyboard input. One problem is that we lose one event (though we could send it back to the terminal). Another problem is we would turn it back on too late in some scenarios. |
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benchmarks | ||
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cmake | ||
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doc_internal | ||
doc_src | ||
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etc | ||
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po | ||
printf | ||
share | ||
src | ||
tests | ||
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build.rs | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
CHANGELOG.rst | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.rst | ||
COPYING | ||
deny.toml | ||
Dockerfile | ||
fish.desktop | ||
fish.pc.in | ||
fish.png | ||
fish.spec.in | ||
GNUmakefile | ||
README.rst |
.. |Cirrus CI| image:: https://api.cirrus-ci.com/github/fish-shell/fish-shell.svg?branch=master :target: https://cirrus-ci.com/github/fish-shell/fish-shell :alt: Cirrus CI Build Status `fish <https://fishshell.com/>`__ - the friendly interactive shell |Build Status| |Cirrus CI| ============================================================================================= fish is a smart and user-friendly command line shell for macOS, Linux, and the rest of the family. fish includes features like syntax highlighting, autosuggest-as-you-type, and fancy tab completions that just work, with no configuration required. For downloads, screenshots and more, go to https://fishshell.com/. Quick Start ----------- fish generally works like other shells, like bash or zsh. A few important differences can be found at https://fishshell.com/docs/current/tutorial.html by searching for the magic phrase “unlike other shells”. Detailed user documentation is available by running ``help`` within fish, and also at https://fishshell.com/docs/current/index.html Getting fish ------------ macOS ~~~~~ fish can be installed: - using `Homebrew <http://brew.sh/>`__: ``brew install fish`` - using `MacPorts <https://www.macports.org/>`__: ``sudo port install fish`` - using the `installer from fishshell.com <https://fishshell.com/>`__ - as a `standalone app from fishshell.com <https://fishshell.com/>`__ Note: The minimum supported macOS version is 10.10 "Yosemite". Packages for Linux ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Packages for Debian, Fedora, openSUSE, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux/CentOS are available from the `openSUSE Build Service <https://software.opensuse.org/download.html?project=shells%3Afish&package=fish>`__. Packages for Ubuntu are available from the `fish PPA <https://launchpad.net/~fish-shell/+archive/ubuntu/release-3>`__, and can be installed using the following commands: :: sudo apt-add-repository ppa:fish-shell/release-3 sudo apt update sudo apt install fish Instructions for other distributions may be found at `fishshell.com <https://fishshell.com>`__. Windows ~~~~~~~ - On Windows 10/11, fish can be installed under the WSL Windows Subsystem for Linux with the instructions for the appropriate distribution listed above under “Packages for Linux”, or from source with the instructions below. - fish (4.0 on and onwards) cannot be installed in Cygwin, due to a lack of Rust support. Building from source ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If packages are not available for your platform, GPG-signed tarballs are available from `fishshell.com <https://fishshell.com/>`__ and `fish-shell on GitHub <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/releases>`__. See the `Building <#building>`__ section for instructions. Running fish ------------ Once installed, run ``fish`` from your current shell to try fish out! Dependencies ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Running fish requires: - A terminfo database, typically from curses or ncurses (preinstalled on most \*nix systems) - this needs to be the directory tree format, not the "hashed" database. If this is unavailable, fish uses an included xterm-256color definition. - some common \*nix system utilities (currently ``mktemp``), in addition to the basic POSIX utilities (``cat``, ``cut``, ``dirname``, ``file``, ``ls``, ``mkdir``, ``mkfifo``, ``rm``, ``sort``, ``tee``, ``tr``, ``uname`` and ``sed`` at least, but the full coreutils plus ``find`` and ``awk`` is preferred) - The gettext library, if compiled with translation support The following optional features also have specific requirements: - builtin commands that have the ``--help`` option or print usage messages require ``nroff`` or ``mandoc`` for display - automated completion generation from manual pages requires Python 3.5+ - the ``fish_config`` web configuration tool requires Python 3.5+ and a web browser - system clipboard integration (with the default Ctrl-V and Ctrl-X bindings) require either the ``xsel``, ``xclip``, ``wl-copy``/``wl-paste`` or ``pbcopy``/``pbpaste`` utilities - full completions for ``yarn`` and ``npm`` require the ``all-the-package-names`` NPM module - ``colorls`` is used, if installed, to add color when running ``ls`` on platforms that do not have color support (such as OpenBSD) Building -------- .. _dependencies-1: Dependencies ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Compiling fish requires: - Rust (version 1.70 or later) - CMake (version 3.5 or later) - a C compiler (for system feature detection and the test helper binary) - PCRE2 (headers and libraries) - optional, this will be downloaded if missing - gettext (headers and libraries) - optional, for translation support - an Internet connection, as other dependencies will be downloaded automatically Sphinx is also optionally required to build the documentation from a cloned git repository. Additionally, running the full test suite requires Python 3, tmux, and the pexpect package. Building from source with CMake ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rather than building from source, consider using a packaged build for your platform. Using the steps below makes fish difficult to uninstall or upgrade. Release packages are available from the links above, and up-to-date `development builds of fish are available for many platforms <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/wiki/Development-builds>`__ To install into ``/usr/local``, run: .. code:: bash mkdir build; cd build cmake .. cmake --build . sudo cmake --install . The install directory can be changed using the ``-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX`` parameter for ``cmake``. CMake Build options ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In addition to the normal CMake build options (like ``CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX``), fish's CMake build has some other options available to customize it. - BUILD_DOCS=ON|OFF - whether to build the documentation. This is automatically set to OFF when Sphinx isn't installed. - INSTALL_DOCS=ON|OFF - whether to install the docs. This is automatically set to on when BUILD_DOCS is or prebuilt documentation is available (like when building in-tree from a tarball). - FISH_USE_SYSTEM_PCRE2=ON|OFF - whether to use an installed pcre2. This is normally autodetected. - MAC_CODESIGN_ID=String|OFF - the codesign ID to use on Mac, or "OFF" to disable codesigning. - WITH_GETTEXT=ON|OFF - whether to build with gettext support for translations. - extra_functionsdir, extra_completionsdir and extra_confdir - to compile in an additional directory to be searched for functions, completions and configuration snippets Building fish as self-installable (experimental) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You can also build fish as a self-installing binary. This will include all the datafiles like the included functions or web configuration tool in the main ``fish`` binary. On the first interactive run, and whenever it notices they are out of date, it will extract the datafiles to ~/.local/share/fish/install/ (currently, subject to change). You can do this manually by running ``fish --install``. To install fish as self-installable, just use ``cargo``, like:: cargo install --path /path/to/fish # if you have a git clone cargo install --git https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell --tag 4.0 # to build from git once 4.0 is released cargo install --git https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell # to build the current development snapshot without cloning This will place the binaries in ``~/.cargo/bin/``, but you can place them wherever you want. This build won't have the HTML docs (``help`` will open the online version) or translations. It will try to build the man pages with sphinx-build. If that is not available and you would like to include man pages, you need to install it and retrigger the build script, e.g. by setting FISH_BUILD_DOCS=1:: FISH_BUILD_DOCS=1 cargo install --path . Setting it to "0" disables the inclusion of man pages. You can also link this build statically (but not against glibc) and move it to other computers. Contributing Changes to the Code -------------------------------- See the `Guide for Developers <CONTRIBUTING.rst>`__. Contact Us ---------- Questions, comments, rants and raves can be posted to the official fish mailing list at https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fish-users or join us on our `matrix channel <https://matrix.to/#/#fish-shell:matrix.org>`__. Or use the `fish tag on Unix & Linux Stackexchange <https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/fish>`__. There is also a fish tag on Stackoverflow, but it is typically a poor fit. Found a bug? Have an awesome idea? Please `open an issue <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/new>`__. .. |Build Status| image:: https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/workflows/make%20test/badge.svg :target: https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/actions