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https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell
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aa65856ee0
Before: * hand write arg parse * only accepts one suffix After: * use `arg_parse` to parse args * accepts multi suffixes Closes #9611.
83 lines
3.8 KiB
Fish
83 lines
3.8 KiB
Fish
# Find files ending in any of the non-switch arguments and output them as completions.
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# * --description provides the description that should be part of each generated completion,
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# * --prefix=DIR makes __fish_complete_suffix behave as if it were called in DIR rather than $PWD
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# * --complete=PREFIX only lists files that begin with PREFIX
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#
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# Files matching the above preconditions are printed first then other, non-matching files
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# are printed for fallback purposes. As such, it is imperative that `complete` calls that
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# shell out to `__fish_complete_suffix` are made with a `-k` switch to ensure sort order
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# is preserved.
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function __fish_complete_suffix -d "Complete using files"
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set -l _flag_prefix ""
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set -l _flag_complete (commandline -ct)
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argparse 'prefix=' 'description=' 'complete=' -- $argv
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set -l suff (string escape --style=regex -- $argv)
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# Simple and common case: no prefix, just complete normally and sort matching files first.
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if test -z $_flag_prefix
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# Use normal file completions.
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set files (complete -C "__fish_command_without_completions $_flag_complete")
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set -l files_with_suffix (string match -r -- (string join "|" "^.*"$suff\$) $files)
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set -l directories (string match -r -- '^.*/$' $files)
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set files $files_with_suffix $directories $files
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else
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# Only directories are supported as prefixes, and to use the same logic
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# for both absolute prefixed paths and relative non-prefixed paths, $_flag_prefix
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# must terminate in a `/` if it is present, so it can be unconditionally
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# prefixed to any path to get the desired result.
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if not string match -qr '/$' $_flag_prefix
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set _flag_prefix $_flag_prefix/
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end
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# Strip leading ./ as it confuses the detection of base and suffix
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# It is conditionally re-added below.
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set base $_flag_prefix(string replace -r '^("\')?\\./' '' -- $_flag_complete | string trim -c '\'"') # " make emacs syntax highlighting happy
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set -l all
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set -l files_with_suffix
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set -l dirs
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# If $_flag_complete is "./ma" and the file is "main.py", we'll catch that case here,
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# but complete.cpp will not consider it a match, so we have to output the
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# correct form.
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# Also do directory completion, since there might be files with the correct
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# suffix in a subdirectory.
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set all $base*
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set files_with_suffix (string match -r -- (string join "|" ".*"$suff) $all)
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if not string match -qr '/$' -- $argv
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set dirs $base*/
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# The problem is that we now have each directory included twice in the output,
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# once as `dir` and once as `dir/`. The runtime here is O(n) for n directories
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# in the output, but hopefully since we have only one level (no nested results)
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# it should be fast. The alternative is to shell out to `sort` and remove any
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# duplicate results, but it would have to be a huge `n` to make up for the fork
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# overhead.
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for dir in $dirs
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set all (string match -v (string match -r '(.*)/$' -- $dir)[2] -- $all)
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end
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end
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set files $files_with_suffix $dirs $all
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if string match -qr '^\\./' -- $_flag_complete
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set files ./$files
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else
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# "Escape" files starting with a literal dash `-` with a `./`
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set files (string replace -r -- "^-" "./-" $files)
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end
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end
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if set -q files[1]
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if string match -qr -- . "$_flag_description"
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set _flag_description "\t$_flag_description"
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end
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if string match -qr -- . "$_flag_prefix"
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set prefix (string escape --style=regex -- $_flag_prefix)
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set files (string replace -r -- "^$prefix" "" $files)
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end
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printf "%s$_flag_description\n" $files
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end
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end
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