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167 lines
5.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
167 lines
5.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _cmd-commandline:
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commandline - set or get the current command line buffer
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========================================================
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Synopsis
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--------
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.. synopsis::
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commandline [OPTIONS] [CMD]
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Description
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-----------
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``commandline`` can be used to set or get the current contents of the command line buffer.
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With no parameters, ``commandline`` returns the current value of the command line.
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With **CMD** specified, the command line buffer is erased and replaced with the contents of **CMD**.
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The following options are available:
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**-C** or **--cursor**
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Set or get the current cursor position, not the contents of the buffer.
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If no argument is given, the current cursor position is printed, otherwise the argument is interpreted as the new cursor position.
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If one of the options **-j**, **-p** or **-t** is given, the position is relative to the respective substring instead of the entire command line buffer.
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**-B** or **--selection-start**
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Get current position of the selection start in the buffer.
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**-E** or **--selection-end**
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Get current position of the selection end in the buffer.
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**-f** or **--function**
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Causes any additional arguments to be interpreted as input functions, and puts them into the queue, so that they will be read before any additional actual key presses are.
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This option cannot be combined with any other option.
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See :doc:`bind <bind>` for a list of input functions.
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**-h** or **--help**
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Displays help about using this command.
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The following options change the way ``commandline`` updates the command line buffer:
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**-a** or **--append**
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Do not remove the current commandline, append the specified string at the end of it.
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**-i** or **--insert**
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Do not remove the current commandline, insert the specified string at the current cursor position
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**-r** or **--replace**
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Remove the current commandline and replace it with the specified string (default)
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The following options change what part of the commandline is printed or updated:
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**-b** or **--current-buffer**
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Select the entire commandline, not including any displayed autosuggestion (default).
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**-j** or **--current-job**
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Select the current job - a **job** here is one pipeline.
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Stops at logical operators or terminators (**;**, **&**, and newlines).
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**-p** or **--current-process**
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Select the current process - a **process** here is one command.
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Stops at logical operators, terminators, and pipes.
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**-s** or **--current-selection**
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Selects the current selection
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**-t** or **--current-token**
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Selects the current token
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**--search-field**
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Use the pager search field instead of the command line. Returns false is the search field is not shown.
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The following options change the way ``commandline`` prints the current commandline buffer:
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**-c** or **--cut-at-cursor**
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Only print selection up until the current cursor position.
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If combined with ``--tokens-expanded``, this will print up until the last completed token - excluding the token the cursor is in.
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This is typically what you would want for instance in completions.
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To get both, use both ``commandline --cut-at-cursor --tokens-expanded; commandline --cut-at-cursor --current-token``,
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or ``commandline -cx; commandline -ct`` for short.
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**-x** or **--tokens-expanded**
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Perform argument expansion on the selection and print one argument per line.
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Command substituions are not expanded but forwarded as-is.
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**--tokens-raw**
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Print arguments in the selection as they appear on the command line, one per line.
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**-o** or **tokenize**
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Deprecated, do not use.
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If ``commandline`` is called during a call to complete a given string using ``complete -C STRING``, ``commandline`` will consider the specified string to be the current contents of the command line.
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The following options output metadata about the commandline state:
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**-L** or **--line**
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Print the line that the cursor is on, with the topmost line starting at 1.
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**-S** or **--search-mode**
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Evaluates to true if the commandline is performing a history search.
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**-P** or **--paging-mode**
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Evaluates to true if the commandline is showing pager contents, such as tab completions.
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**--paging-full-mode**
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Evaluates to true if the commandline is showing pager contents, such as tab completions and all lines are shown (no "<n> more rows" message).
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**--is-valid**
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Returns true when the commandline is syntactically valid and complete.
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If it is, it would be executed when the ``execute`` bind function is called.
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If the commandline is incomplete, return 2, if erroneus, return 1.
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Example
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-------
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``commandline -j $history[3]`` replaces the job under the cursor with the third item from the command line history.
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If the commandline contains
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::
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>_ echo $flounder >&2 | less; and echo $catfish
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(with the cursor on the "o" of "flounder")
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The ``echo $flounder >&`` is the first process, ``less`` the second and ``and echo $catfish`` the third.
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``echo $flounder >&2 | less`` is the first job, ``and echo $catfish`` the second.
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**$flounder** is the current token.
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The most common use for something like completions is
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::
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set -l tokens (commandline -xpc)
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which gives the current *process* (what is being completed), tokenized into separate entries, up to but excluding the currently being completed token
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If you are then also interested in the in-progress token, add
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::
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set -l current (commandline -ct)
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Note that this makes it easy to render fish's infix matching moot - if possible it's best if the completions just print all possibilities and leave the matching to the current token up to fish's logic.
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More examples:
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::
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>_ commandline -t
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$flounder
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>_ commandline -ct
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$fl
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>_ commandline -b # or just commandline
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echo $flounder >&2 | less; and echo $catfish
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>_ commandline -p
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echo $flounder >&2
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>_ commandline -j
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echo $flounder >&2 | less
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