1
0
mirror of git://git.code.sf.net/p/zsh/code synced 2024-11-18 21:14:11 +01:00
zsh/Misc/lete2ctl
1999-04-15 18:05:35 +00:00

302 lines
9.0 KiB
Perl
Executable File

#!/usr/local/bin/perl -w
#
# ``Wee have also Shelles, thee Lyke of whych you knowe not, wherein
# thee User may with thee merest Presse of thee Tabbe-Keye expande
# or compleat al Maner of Wordes and such-like Diversities.''
# - Francis Bacon, `New Atlantis' (or not).
#
# Convert tcsh "complete" statements to zsh "compctl" statements.
# Runs as a filter. Should ignore anything which isn't a "complete".
# It expects each "complete" statement to be the first thing on a line.
# All the examples in the tcsh manual give sensible results.
#
# Option:
# -x (exact): only applies in the case of command disambiguation (is
# that really a word?) If you have lines like
# complete '-co*' 'p/0/(compress)'
# (which makes co<TAB> always complete to `compress') then the
# resulting "compctl" statements will produce one of two behaviours:
# (1) By default (like tcsh), com<TAB> etc. will also complete to
# "compress" and nothing else.
# (2) With -x, com<TAB> does ordinary command completion: this is
# more flexible.
# I don't understand what the hyphen in complete does and I've ignored it.
#
# Notes:
# (1) The -s option is the way to do backquote expansion. In zsh,
# "compctl -s '`users`' talk" works (duplicates are removed).
# (2) Complicated backquote completions should definitely be rewritten as
# shell functions (compctl's "-K func" option). Although most of
# these will be translated correctly, differences in shell syntax
# are not handled.
# (3) Replacement of $:n with the n'th word on the current line with
# backquote expansion now works; it is not necessarily the most
# efficient way of doing it in any given case, however.
# (4) I have made use of zsh's more sophisticated globbing to change
# things like ^foo.{a,b,c,d} to ^foo.(a|b|c|d), which works better.
# It's just possible in some cases you may want to change it back.
# (5) Make sure all command names with wildcards are processed together --
# they need to be lumped into one "compctl -C" or "compctl -D"
# statement for zsh.
# Handle options
if (@ARGV) {
($ARGV[0] eq '-x') && shift && ($opt_x = 1);
($ARGV[0] =~ /^-+$/) && shift;
}
# Function names used (via magic autoincrement) when cmdline words are needed
$funcnam = 'compfn001';
# Read next word on command line
sub getword {
local($word, $word2, $ret);
($_) = /^\s*(.*)$/;
while ($_ =~ /^\S/) {
if (/^[\']/) {
($word, $_) = /^\'([^\']*).(.*)$/;
} elsif (/^[\"]/) {
($word, $_) = /^\"([^\"]*).(.*)$/;
while ($word =~ /\\$/) {
chop($word);
($word2, $_) = /^([^\"]*).(.*)$/;
$word .= '"' . $word2;
}
} elsif (/\S/) {
($word, $_) = /^([^\s\\\'\"\#;]*)(.*)$/;
# Backslash: literal next character
/^\\(.)/ && (($word .= substr($_,1,1)),
($_ = substr($_,2)));
# Rest of line quoted or end of command
/^[\#;]/ && ($_ = '');
} else {
return undef;
}
length($word) && ($ret = defined($ret) ? $ret . $word : $word);
}
$ret;
}
# Interpret the x and arg in 'x/arg/type/'
sub getpat {
local($pat,$arg) = @_;
local($ret,$i);
if ($pat eq 'p') {
$ret = "p[$arg]";
} elsif ($pat eq 'n' || $pat eq 'N') {
$let = ($arg =~ /[*?|]/) ? 'C' : 'c';
$num = ($pat eq 'N') ? 2 : 1;
$ret = "${let}[-${num},$arg]";
} elsif ($pat eq 'c' || $pat eq 'C') {
# A few tricks to get zsh to ignore up to the end of
# any matched pattern.
if (($pat eq 'c' && $arg =~ /^\*([^*?]*)$/)) {
$ret = "n[-1,$1]";
} elsif ($arg =~ /[*?]([^*?]*)$/) {
length($1) && ($ret = " n[-1,$1]");
$ret = "C[0,$arg] $ret";
} else {
$let = ($pat eq 'c') ? 's' : 'S';
$ret = "${let}[$arg]";
}
}
$ret =~ s/'/'\\''/g;
$ret;
}
# Interpret the type in 'x/arg/type/'
sub gettype {
local ($_) = @_;
local($qual,$c,$glob,$ret,$b,$m,$e,@m);
$c = substr($_,0,1);
($c =~ /\w/) && (substr($_,1,1) eq ':') && ($glob = substr($_,2));
# Nothing (n) can be handled by returning nothing. (C.f. King Lear, I.i.)
if ($c =~ /[abcjuv]/) {
$ret = "-$c";
} elsif ($c eq 'S') {
$ret = '-k signals';
} elsif ($c eq 'd') {
if (defined($glob)) {
$qual = '-/';
} else {
$ret = '-/';
}
} elsif ($c eq 'e') {
$ret = '-E';
} elsif ($c eq 'f' && !$glob) {
$ret = '-f';
} elsif ($c eq 'l') {
$ret = q!-k "(`limit | awk '{print $1}'`)"!;
} elsif ($c eq 'p') {
$ret = "-W $glob -f", undef($glob) if defined($glob);
} elsif ($c eq 's') {
$ret = '-p';
} elsif ($c eq 't') {
$qual = '.';
} elsif ($c eq 'x') {
$glob =~ s/'/'\\''/g;
$ret = "-X '$glob'";
undef($glob);
} elsif ($c eq '$') { # '){
$ret = "-k " . substr($_,1);
} elsif ($c eq '(') {
s/'/'\\''/g;
$ret = "-k '$_'";
} elsif ($c eq '`') {
# this took some working out...
if (s/\$:(\d+)/$foo=$1+1,"\${word[$foo]}"/ge) {
$ret = "-K $funcnam";
$genfunc .= <<"HERE";
function $funcnam {
local word
read -cA word
reply=($_)
}
HERE
$funcnam++;
} else {
s/'/'\\''/g;
$ret = "-s '$_'";
}
}
# foo{bar,ba,blak,sheap} -> foo(bar|ba|blak|sheap).
# This saves a lot of mess, since in zsh brace expansion occurs
# before globbing. I'm sorry, but I don't trust $` and $'.
while (defined($glob) && (($b,$m,$e) = ($glob =~ /^(.*)\{(.*)\}(.*)$/))
&& $m =~ /,/) {
@m = split(/,/, $m);
for ($i = 0; $i < @m; $i++) {
while ($m[$i] =~ /\\$/) {
substr($m[$i],-1,1) = "";
splice(@m,$i,2,"$m[$i]\\,$m[$i+1]");
}
}
$glob = $b . "(" . join('|',@m) . ")" . $e;
}
if ($qual) {
$glob || ($glob = '*');
$glob .= "($qual)";
}
$glob && (($glob =~ s/'/'\\''/g),($glob = "-g '$glob'"));
defined($ret) && defined($glob) && ($ret .= " $glob");
defined($ret) ? $ret : $glob;
}
# Quoted array separator for extended completions
$" = " - ";
while (<>) {
if (/^\s*complete\s/) {
undef(@stuff);
$default = '';
$_ = $';
while (/\\$/) {
# Remove backslashed newlines: in principle these should become
# real newlines inside quotes, but what the hell.
($_) = /^(.*)\\$/;
$_ .= <>;
}
$command = &getword;
if ($command =~ /^-/ || $command =~ /[*?]/) {
# E.g. complete -co* ...
$defmatch = $command;
($defmatch =~ /^-/) && ($defmatch = substr($defmatch,1));
} else {
undef($defmatch);
}
while (defined($word = &getword)) {
# Loop over remaining arguments to "complete".
$sep = substr($word,1,1);
$sep =~ s/(\W)/\\$1/g;
@split = split(/$sep/,$word);
for ($i = 0; $i < 3; $i++) {
while ($split[$i] =~ /\\$/) {
substr($split[$i],-1,1) = "";
splice(@split,$i,2,"$split[$i]\\$sep$split[$i+1]");
}
}
($pat,$arg,$type,$suffix) = @split;
defined($suffix) && ($suffix =~ /^\s*$/) && undef($suffix);
if (($word =~ /^n$sep\*$sep/) &&
(!defined($defmatch))) {
# The "complete" catch-all: treat this as compctl\'s
# default (requiring no pattern matching).
$default .= &gettype($type) . ' ';
defined($suffix) && ($defsuf .= $suffix);
} else {
$pat = &getpat($pat,$arg);
$type = &gettype($type);
if (defined($defmatch)) {
# The command is a pattern: use either -C or -D option.
if ($pat eq 'p[0]') {
# Command word (-C): 'p[0]' is redundant.
if ($defmatch eq '*') {
$defcommand = $type;
} else {
($defmatch =~ /\*$/) && chop($defmatch);
if ($opt_x) {
$c = ($defmatch =~ /[*?]/) ? 'C' : 'c';
$pat = $c . "[0,${defmatch}]";
} else {
$pat = ($defmatch =~ /[*?]/) ?
"C[0,${defmatch}]" : "S[${defmatch}]";
}
push(@commandword,defined($suffix) ?
"'$pat' $type -S '$suffix'" : "'$pat' $type");
}
} elsif ($pat eq "C[-1,*]") {
# Not command word completion, but match
# command word (only)
if ($defmatch eq "*") {
# any word of any command
$defaultdefault .= " $type";
} else {
$pat = "W[0,$defmatch]";
push(@defaultword,defined($suffix) ?
"'$pat' $type -S '$suffix'" : "'$pat' $type");
}
} else {
# Not command word completion, but still command
# word with pattern
($defmatch eq '*') || ($pat = "W[0,$defmatch] $pat");
push(@defaultword,defined($suffix) ?
"'$pat' $type -S '$suffix'" : "'$pat' $type");
}
} else {
# Ordinary command
push(@stuff,defined($suffix) ?
"'$pat' $type -S '$suffix'" : "'$pat' $type");
}
}
}
if (!defined($defmatch)) {
# Ordinary commands with no pattern
print("compctl $default");
defined($defsuf) && print("-S '$defsuf' ") && undef($defsuf);
defined(@stuff) && print("-x @stuff -- ");
print("$command\n");
}
if (defined($genfunc)) {
print $genfunc;
undef($genfunc);
}
}
}
(defined(@commandword) || defined($defcommand)) &&
print("compctl -C ",
defined($defcommand) ? $defcommand : '-c',
defined(@commandword) ? " -x @commandword\n" : "\n");
if (defined($defaultdefault) || defined(@defaultword)) {
defined($defaultdefault) || ($defaultdefault = "-f");
print "compctl -D $defaultdefault";
defined(@defaultword) && print(" -x @defaultword");
print "\n";
}
__END__