fish-shell/doc_src/functions.txt
David Adam (zanchey) 1287b9d823 Help cleanup
Large list of changes, including formatting and typos for most commands.

More substantive changes have been made to alias, bind, block, break,
builtin, case, cd, commandline, count, else, emit, fish_config, funced,
function, functions, history, math, mimedb, nextd, not, popd, prevd,
pushd, pwd, random, read, set, set_color, switch, test, trap, type,
ulimit, umask, and while.
2013-05-13 01:48:20 -07:00

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\section functions functions - print or erase functions
\subsection function-synopsis Synopsis
<pre>functions [-n]
functions -c OLDNAME NEWNAME
functions -d DESCRIPTION FUNCTION
functions [-eq] FUNCTIONS...</pre>
\subsection functions-description Description
\c functions prints or erases functions.
The following options are available:
- <code>-a</code> or <code>--all</code> lists all functions, even those whose name start with an underscore.
- <code>-c OLDNAME NEWNAME</code> or <code>--copy OLDNAME NEWNAME</code> creates a new function named NEWNAME, using the definition of the OLDNAME function.
- <code>-d DESCRIPTION</code> or <code>--description=DESCRIPTION</code> changes the description of this function.
- <code>-e</code> or <code>--erase</code> causes the specified functions to be erased.
- <code>-h</code> or <code>--help</code> displays a help message and exits.
- <code>-n</code> or <code>--names</code> lists the names of all defined functions.
- <code>-q</code> or <code>--query</code> tests if the specified functions exist.
The default behavior of <code>functions</code>, when called with no arguments,
is to print the names of all defined functions. Unless the \c -a option is
given, no functions starting with underscores are not included in the output.
If any non-option parameters are given, the definition of the specified
functions are printed.
Automatically loaded functions cannot be removed using <code>functions
-e</code>. Either remove the definition file or change the
$fish_function_path variable to remove autoloaded functions.
Copying a function using \c -c copies only the body of the function, and
does not attach any event notifications from the original function.
Only one function's description can be changed in a single invocation
of <code>functions -d</code>.
The exit status of \c functions is the number of functions
specified in the argument list that do not exist, which can be used in
concert with the \c -q option.
\subsection functions-example Examples
<code>functions -n</code> displays a list of currently-defined functions.
<code>functions -c foo bar</code> copies the \c foo function to a new function called
<code>bar</code>.
<code>functions -e bar</code> erases the function <code>bar</code>.