Multi-dot paths in zsh, like `cd …`

☆樱花仙子☆ 提交于 2020-01-01 03:17:19

问题


All shells understand these commands:

$ cd .
$ cd ..

And zsh will also understand:

$ cd ...
$ cd ....

Provided you say:

$ alias -g ...='../..'
$ alias -g ....='../../..'

Now, how can I make it do proper tab-completion when I've started typing cd ..../<TAB>? I recall it was implemented in oh-my-zsh but I've stopped using it now.

It would also be appreciated if it would work not only for cd, say I want to execute cat ..../a/b/..../c/d | less.


回答1:


I wasn't happy with the other answers so I spent a bit of time getting something more to my liking. The following will expand the dots when you hit (return) or (tab), not as you type the dots.

function expand-dots() {
    local MATCH
    if [[ $LBUFFER =~ '\.\.\.+' ]]; then
        LBUFFER=$LBUFFER:fs%\.\.\.%../..%
    fi
}

function expand-dots-then-expand-or-complete() {
    zle expand-dots
    zle expand-or-complete
}

function expand-dots-then-accept-line() {
    zle expand-dots
    zle accept-line
}

zle -N expand-dots
zle -N expand-dots-then-expand-or-complete
zle -N expand-dots-then-accept-line
bindkey '^I' expand-dots-then-expand-or-complete
bindkey '^M' expand-dots-then-accept-line



回答2:


What I did to to deal with the same problem is to just let zsh fill in ../.. when I type ... and it makes sense to expand it in that way. It may suit you (or not :-P):

if is-at-least 5.0.0 && [[ ! $UID -eq 0 ]]; then                                                                                                                             
  ## http://www.zsh.org/mla/users/2010/msg00769.html                                                                                                                       
  function rationalise-dot() {                                                                                                                                             
    local MATCH # keep the regex match from leaking to the environment                                                                                                   
    if [[ $LBUFFER =~ '(^|/| |      |'$'\n''|\||;|&)\.\.$' && ! $LBUFFER = p4* ]]; then                                                                                  
        #if [[ ! $LBUFFER = p4* && $LBUFFER = *.. ]]; then                                                                                                               
        LBUFFER+=/..                                                                                                                                                     
    else                                                                                                                                                                 
        zle self-insert                                                                                                                                                  
    fi                                                                                                                                                                   
}                                                                                                                                                                        
zle -N rationalise-dot                                                                                                                                                   
bindkey . rationalise-dot                                                                                                                                                
bindkey -M isearch . self-insert                                                                                                                                         
fi

I also have an alias for ..., but it is not global.

Notice I check if the command line starts with p4 (the Perforce command line tool) and do not mess with it in that case, as Perforce arguments often involve literal .... If you do not use p4 you can obviously remove that check.




回答3:


A good option is manydots-magic, which expands ... into ../.., etc. but does it intelligently. See the link above for more details, but briefly:

  • It allows you to revert the expansion with a single Backspace (if it were the last thing you typed).
    • But it won't revert explicitly typed ../..
  • You can use it inline, e.g. cd a/b/..../y/z.
  • Nevertheless, it won't expand when it doesn't make sense, e.g. git log branch...
  • It will expand when it might make sense, but revert when you type more. e.g.
    • git diff ... -> git diff ../..
    • git diff ...b -> git diff ...b (for git diff ...branch)



回答4:


You have to use compinit and use _expand_alias as completer. Here is an example:

zstyle ':completion:*' completer _complete _ignored _expand_alias
autoload -Uz compinit
compinit

_complete _ignored is the default setting for completer, you could set it to only _expand_alias but then completion would only work for aliases.

If compinit is already configured in your ~/.zshrc, then you just need to add _expand_alias into the list for completer, for example:

zstyle ':completion:*' completer _expand _complete _ignored _approximate _expand_alias

By default _expand_alias expands global and and regular aliases, if you do not want to expand regular aliases, set:

zstyle ':completion:*' regular false

Note: This of course works only, where global aliases would work. So they would not be expanded as part of an entire path like a/b/..../c/d



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23456873/multi-dot-paths-in-zsh-like-cd

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