mirror of
git://git.code.sf.net/p/zsh/code
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2722 lines
84 KiB
Plaintext
2722 lines
84 KiB
Plaintext
.nr PI 0
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.nr LL 6.5i
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.if \n(.g \{\
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.if "\*(.T"ascii" .ftr C R
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.if "\*(.T"latin1" .ftr C R
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.nr De \n[.ss]
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.\}
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.de Ds
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.DS I .5i
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.ft C
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.ps 9
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.vs 11
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.ss 11
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..
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.de De
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.DE
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.ft R
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.ps
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.vs
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.ie \n(.g .ss \n(De
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.el .ss
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..
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.de Sh
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.SH
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\\$1
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.XS
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\\$1
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.XE
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..
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.nr HM 4i
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.ce 99
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.ps 18
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.vs 20
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.ss 20
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\f3An Introduction to the Z Shell\fP
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.ps 14
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.vs 16
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.ss 16
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\f2Paul Falstad
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pf@software.com
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Bas de Bakker
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bas@phys.uva.nl\fP
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.ce 0
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.nr HM 1i
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.pn 1
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.bp
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.\" This blank page on the reverse of the cover.
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.sv |1i
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.pn 1
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.bp
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.TL
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An Introduction to the Z Shell
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.AU
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Paul Falstad
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pf@software.com
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.AU
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Bas de Bakker
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bas@phys.uva.nl
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.PP
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.Sh "Introduction"
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.PP
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\fBzsh\fP is a shell designed for interactive use, although it is also
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a powerful scripting language. Many of the useful features of bash,
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ksh, and tcsh were incorporated into \fBzsh\fP; many original features were
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added. This document details some of the unique features of \fBzsh\fP. It
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assumes basic knowledge of the standard UNIX shells; the intent is to
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show a reader already familiar with one of the other major shells what
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makes \fBzsh\fP more useful or more powerful. This document is not at all
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comprehensive; read the manual entry for a description of the shell
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that is complete and concise, although somewhat overwhelming and
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devoid of examples.
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.PP
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The text will frequently mention options that you can set to change
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the behaviour of \fBzsh\fP. You can set these options with the
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command
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.Ds
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%\0setopt\0\fIoptionname\fC
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.De
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and unset them again with
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.Ds
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%\0unsetopt\0\fIoptionname\fC
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.De
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Case is ignored in option names, as are embedded underscores.
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.Sh "Filename Generation"
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.PP
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Otherwise known as \fIglobbing\fP, filename generation
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is quite extensive in \fBzsh\fP. Of course, it has all the
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basics:
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.Ds
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%\0ls
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Makefile\0\0\0file.pro\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0\0q.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0\0stuff
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0foo\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff\0\0run123\0\0\0\0\0run240\0\0\0\0\0sub
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file.h\0\0\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run303
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%\0ls\0*.c
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foo.c\0\0q.c
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%\0ls\0*.[co]
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bar.o\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0main.o\0\0q.c
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%\0ls\0foo.?
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foo.c\0\0foo.o
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%\0ls\0*.[^c]
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bar.o\0\0\0file.h\0\0foo.o\0\0\0main.h\0\0main.o
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%\0ls\0*.[^oh]
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foo.c\0\0q.c
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.De
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Also, if the \fIEXTENDEDGLOB\fP option is set,
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some new features are activated.
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For example, the \fC^\fP character negates the pattern following it:
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.Ds
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%\0setopt\0extendedglob
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%\0ls\0-d\0^*.c
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Makefile\0\0\0file.pro\0\0\0link\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run303
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0foo\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0\0stuff
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file.h\0\0\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0\0run123\0\0\0\0\0run240\0\0\0\0\0sub
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%\0ls\0-d\0^*.*
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Makefile\0\0\0link\0\0\0\0\0\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run240\0\0\0\0\0stuff
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foo\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff\0\0run123\0\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0\0run303\0\0\0\0\0sub
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%\0ls\0-d\0^Makefile
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0foo\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff\0\0run123\0\0\0\0\0run240\0\0\0\0\0sub
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file.h\0\0\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run303
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file.pro\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0\0q.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0\0stuff
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%\0ls\0-d\0*.^c
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\&.rhosts\0\0\0bar.o\0\0\0\0\0file.h\0\0\0\0file.pro\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0main.o
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.De
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An expression of the form
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\fC<\fIx\fR\-\fIy\fC>\fR
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matches a range of integers:
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.Ds
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%\0ls\0run<200-300>
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run234\0\0run240
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%\0ls\0run<300-400>
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run303
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%\0ls\0run<-200>
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run123\0\0run2
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%\0ls\0run<300->
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run303
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%\0ls\0run<->
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run123\0\0run2\0\0\0\0run234\0\0run240\0\0run303
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.De
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The \fINUMERICGLOBSORT\fP option will sort files with numbers
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according to the number. This will not work with \fCls\fP as it
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resorts its arguments:
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.Ds
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%\0setopt\0numericglobsort
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%\0echo\0run<->
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run2\0run123\0run234\0run240\0run303
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.De
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Grouping is possible:
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.Ds
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%\0ls\0(foo|bar).*
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bar.o\0\0foo.c\0\0foo.o
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%\0ls\0*.(c|o|pro)
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0file.pro\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0q.c
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.De
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Also, the string \fC**/\fP forces a recursive search of
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subdirectories:
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.Ds
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%\0ls\0-R
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Makefile\0\0\0file.pro\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0\0q.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0\0stuff
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0foo\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff\0\0run123\0\0\0\0\0run240\0\0\0\0\0sub
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file.h\0\0\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run303
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morestuff:
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stuff:
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file\0\0xxx\0\0\0yyy
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stuff/xxx:
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foobar
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stuff/yyy:
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frobar
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%\0ls\0**/*bar
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stuff/xxx/foobar\0\0stuff/yyy/frobar
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%\0ls\0**/f*
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file.h\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0foo\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/xxx/foobar
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file.pro\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/file\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/yyy/frobar
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%\0ls\0*bar*
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bar.o
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%\0ls\0**/*bar*
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/xxx/foobar\0\0stuff/yyy/frobar
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%\0ls\0stuff/**/*bar*
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stuff/xxx/foobar\0\0stuff/yyy/frobar
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.De
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.PP
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It is possible to exclude certain files from the patterns using
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the ~ character. A pattern of the form \fC*.c~bar.c\fP lists all
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files matching \fC*.c\fP, except for the file \fCbar.c\fP.
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.Ds
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%\0ls\0*.c
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foo.c\0\0\0\0foob.c\0\0\0\0bar.c
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%\0ls\0*.c~bar.c
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foo.c\0\0\0\0foob.c
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%\0ls\0*.c~f*
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bar.c
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.De
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.PP
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One can add a number of \fIqualifiers\fP to the end of
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any of these patterns, to restrict matches to certain
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file types. A qualified pattern is of the form
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.DS
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\fIpattern\fC(\fR...\fC)\fR
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.De
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|
with single-character qualifiers inside the parentheses.
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.Ds
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%\0alias\0l='ls\0-dF'
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%\0l\0*
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Makefile\0\0\0\0foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0\0\0q.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run240
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0\0\0run123\0\0\0\0\0\0run303
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file.h\0\0\0\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/
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file.pro\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0\0\0sub
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%\0l\0*(/)
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morestuff/\0\0stuff/
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%\0l\0*(@)
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link@
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%\0l\0*(*)
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foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0stuff/
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%\0l\0*(x)
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foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0stuff/
|
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%\0l\0*(X)
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foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0stuff/
|
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%\0l\0*(R)
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0run123\0\0\0\0\0\0run240
|
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file.h\0\0\0\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run303
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file.pro\0\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0\0\0q.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/
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.De
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Note that \fC*(x)\fP and \fC*(*)\fP both match executables.
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\fC*(X)\fP matches files executable by others, as opposed to
|
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\fC*(x)\fP, which matches files executable by the owner.
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\fC*(R)\fP and \fC*(r)\fP match readable files;
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\fC*(W)\fP and \fC*(w)\fP, which checks for writable files.
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\fC*(W)\fP is especially important, since it checks for world-writable
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files:
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.Ds
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|
%\0l\0*(w)
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|
bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0run123\0\0\0\0\0\0run240
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file.h\0\0\0\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run303
|
|
file.pro\0\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0\0\0q.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/
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%\0l\0*(W)
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link@\0\0\0run240
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%\0l\0-l\0link\0run240
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lrwxrwxrwx\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\010\0May\023\018:12\0link\0->\0/usr/bin/
|
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-rw-rw-rw-\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\00\0May\023\018:12\0run240
|
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.De
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|
If you want to have all the files of a certain type as well as all
|
|
symbolic links pointing to files of that type, prefix the qualifier
|
|
with a \fC-\fP:
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.Ds
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|
%\0l\0*(-/)
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|
link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0stuff/
|
|
.De
|
|
You can filter out the symbolic links with the \fC^\fP character:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0l\0*(W^@)
|
|
run240
|
|
%\0l\0*(x)
|
|
foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0stuff/
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|
%\0l\0*(x^@/)
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|
foo*
|
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.De
|
|
To find all plain files, you can use \fC.\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0l\0*(.)
|
|
Makefile\0\0file.h\0\0\0\0foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0\0main.o\0\0\0\0run123\0\0\0\0run234\0\0\0\0run303
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bar.o\0\0\0\0\0file.pro\0\0foo.c\0\0\0\0\0main.h\0\0\0\0q.c\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0run240\0\0\0\0sub
|
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%\0l\0*(^.)
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|
link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/
|
|
%\0l\0s*(.)
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|
stuff/\0\0\0sub
|
|
%\0l\0*(p)
|
|
pipe
|
|
%\0l\0-l\0*(p)
|
|
prw-r--r--\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\00\0May\023\018:12\0pipe
|
|
.De
|
|
\fC*(U)\fP matches all files owned by you.
|
|
To search for all files not owned by you, use \fC*(^U)\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0l\0-l\0*(^U)
|
|
-rw-------\0\01\0subbarao\0\0\0\0\0\0\029\0May\023\018:13\0sub
|
|
.De
|
|
This searches for setuid files:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0l\0-l\0*(s)
|
|
-rwsr-xr-x\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\016\0May\023\018:12\0foo*
|
|
.De
|
|
This checks for a certain user's files:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0l\0-l\0*(u[subbarao])
|
|
-rw-------\0\01\0subbarao\0\0\0\0\0\0\029\0May\023\018:13\0sub
|
|
.De
|
|
.Sh "Startup Files"
|
|
.PP
|
|
There are five startup files that \fBzsh\fP will read commands from:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
$ZDOTDIR/.zshenv
|
|
$ZDOTDIR/.zprofile
|
|
$ZDOTDIR/.zshrc
|
|
$ZDOTDIR/.zlogin
|
|
$ZDOTDIR/.zlogout
|
|
.De
|
|
If \fBZDOTDIR\fP is not set, then the value of \fBHOME\fP is used;
|
|
this is the usual case.
|
|
.\".KE <--- missing .KS or .KF above
|
|
.PP
|
|
\&\fC.zshenv\fP is sourced on all invocations of the shell,
|
|
unless the \fC-f\fP option is set. It should contain commands to set
|
|
the command search path, plus other important environment
|
|
variables.
|
|
\&\fC.zshenv\fP should not contain commands that produce output
|
|
or assume the shell is attached to a tty.
|
|
.PP
|
|
\&\fC.zshrc\fP is sourced in interactive shells. It should contain
|
|
commands to set up aliases, functions, options, key bindings, etc.
|
|
.PP
|
|
\&\fC.zlogin\fP is sourced in login shells. It should contain
|
|
commands that should be executed only in login shells.
|
|
\&\fC.zlogout\fP is sourced when login shells exit.
|
|
\&\fC.zprofile\fP is similar to \fC.zlogin\fP, except that it is sourced before
|
|
\&\fC.zshrc\fP.
|
|
\&\fC.zprofile\fP is meant as an alternative to \fC.zlogin\fP for
|
|
ksh fans;
|
|
the two are not intended to be used together, although this
|
|
could certainly be done if desired.
|
|
\&\fC.zlogin\fP is not the place for alias definitions, options, environment
|
|
variable settings, etc.;
|
|
as a general rule, it should not change the shell environment
|
|
at all. Rather, it should be used to set the terminal type
|
|
and run a series of external commands (\fCfortune\fP, \fCmsgs\fP, etc).
|
|
.Sh "Shell Functions"
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fBzsh\fP also allows you to create your own commands by defining shell
|
|
functions. For example:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0yp\0()\0{
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ypmatch\0$1\0passwd.byname
|
|
>\0}
|
|
%\0yp\0pfalstad
|
|
pfalstad:*:3564:35:Paul\0John\0Falstad:/u/pfalstad:/usr/princeton/bin/zsh
|
|
.De
|
|
This function looks up a user in the NIS password map.
|
|
The \fC$1\fP expands to the first argument to \fCyp\fP.
|
|
The function could have been equivalently defined in one of the following
|
|
ways:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0function\0yp\0{
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ypmatch\0$1\0passwd.byname
|
|
>\0}
|
|
%\0function\0yp\0()\0{
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ypmatch\0$1\0passwd.byname
|
|
>\0}
|
|
%\0function\0yp\0()\0ypmatch\0$1\0passwd.byname
|
|
.De
|
|
Note that aliases are expanded when the function definition is
|
|
parsed, not when the function is executed. For example:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0ypmatch=echo
|
|
%\0yp\0pfalstad
|
|
pfalstad:*:3564:35:Paul\0John\0Falstad:/u/pfalstad:/usr/princeton/bin/zsh
|
|
.De
|
|
Since the alias was defined after the function was parsed, it has
|
|
no effect on the function's execution.
|
|
However, if we define the function again with the alias in place:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0function\0yp\0()\0{\0ypmatch\0$1\0passwd.byname\0}
|
|
%\0yp\0pfalstad
|
|
pfalstad\0passwd.byname
|
|
.De
|
|
it is parsed with the new alias definition in place.
|
|
Therefore, in general you must define aliases before functions.
|
|
.\".KE <--- missing .KS or .KF above
|
|
.PP
|
|
We can make the function take multiple arguments:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0unalias\0ypmatch
|
|
%\0yp\0()\0{
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0for\0i
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0do\0ypmatch\0$i\0passwd.byname
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0done
|
|
>\0}
|
|
%\0yp\0pfalstad\0subbarao\0sukthnkr
|
|
pfalstad:*:3564:35:Paul\0John\0Falstad:/u/pfalstad:/usr/princeton/bin/zsh
|
|
subbarao:*:3338:35:Kartik\0Subbarao:/u/subbarao:/usr/princeton/bin/zsh
|
|
sukthnkr:*:1267:35:Rahul\0Sukthankar:/u/sukthnkr:/usr/princeton/bin/tcsh
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fCfor i\fP loops through each of the function's arguments,
|
|
setting \fCi\fP equal to each of them in turn.
|
|
We can also make the function do something sensible
|
|
if no arguments are given:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0yp\0()\0{
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0if\0((\0$#\0==\00\0))
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0then\0echo\0usage:\0yp\0name\0...;\0fi
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0for\0i;\0do\0ypmatch\0$i\0passwd.byname;\0done
|
|
>\0}
|
|
%\0yp
|
|
usage:\0yp\0name\0...
|
|
%\0yp\0pfalstad\0sukthnkr
|
|
pfalstad:*:3564:35:Paul\0John\0Falstad:/u/pfalstad:/usr/princeton/bin/zsh
|
|
sukthnkr:*:1267:35:Rahul\0Sukthankar:/u/sukthnkr:/usr/princeton/bin/tcsh
|
|
.De
|
|
\fC$#\fP is the number of arguments supplied to the function.
|
|
If it is equal to zero, we print a usage message; otherwise,
|
|
we loop through the arguments, and \fCypmatch\fP all of them.
|
|
.\".KE <--- missing .KS or .KF above
|
|
.PP
|
|
Here's a function that selects a random line from a file:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0randline\0()\0{
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0integer\0z=$(wc\0-l\0<$1)
|
|
>\0\0\0\0\0\0\0sed\0-n\0$[RANDOM\0%\0z\0+\01]p\0$1
|
|
>\0}
|
|
%\0randline\0/etc/motd
|
|
PHOENIX\0WILL\0BE\0DOWN\0briefly\0Friday\0morning,\05/24/91\0from\08\0AM\0to
|
|
%\0randline\0/etc/motd
|
|
SunOS\0Release\04.1.1\0(PHOENIX)\0#19:\0Tue\0May\014\019:03:15\0EDT\01991
|
|
%\0randline\0/etc/motd
|
|
|\0Please\0use\0the\0"msgs"\0command\0to\0read\0announcements.\0\0Refer\0to\0the\0\0\0|
|
|
%\0echo\0$z
|
|
|
|
%
|
|
.De
|
|
\fCrandline\fP has a local variable, \fCz\fP, that holds the number of
|
|
lines in the file. \fC$[RANDOM % z + 1]\fP expands to a random number
|
|
between 1 and \fCz\fP. An expression of the form \fC$[\fR...\fC]\fR
|
|
expands to the value of the arithmetic expression within the brackets,
|
|
and the \fBRANDOM\fP variable returns a random number each time it
|
|
is referenced. \fC%\fP is the modulus operator, as in C.
|
|
Therefore, \fCsed -n $[RANDOM%z+1]p\fP picks a random line from its
|
|
input, from 1 to \fCz\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Function definitions can be viewed with the \fCfunctions\fP builtin:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0functions\0randline
|
|
randline\0()\0{
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0integer\0z=$(wc\0-l\0<$1)
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0sed\0-n\0$[RANDOM\0%\0z\0+\01]p\0$1
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
%\0functions
|
|
yp\0()\0{
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0if\0let\0$#\0==\00\0
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0then
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0echo\0usage:\0yp\0name\0...
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0fi
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0for\0i
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0do
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ypmatch\0$i\0passwd.byname
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0done
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
randline\0()\0{
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0integer\0z=$(wc\0-l\0<$1)
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0sed\0-n\0$[RANDOM\0%\0z\0+\01]p\0$1
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
.De
|
|
Here's another one:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0cx\0()\0{\0chmod\0+x\0$*\0}
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0foo\0bar
|
|
-rw-r--r--\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\029\0May\024\004:38\0bar
|
|
-rw-r--r--\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\029\0May\024\004:38\0foo
|
|
%\0cx\0foo\0bar
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0foo\0bar
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\029\0May\024\004:38\0bar
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\029\0May\024\004:38\0foo
|
|
.De
|
|
Note that this could also have been implemented as an alias:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0chmod\0644\0foo\0bar
|
|
%\0alias\0cx='chmod\0+x'
|
|
%\0cx\0foo\0bar
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0foo\0bar
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\029\0May\024\004:38\0bar
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\029\0May\024\004:38\0foo
|
|
.De
|
|
.PP
|
|
Instead of defining a lot of functions in your \fC.zshrc\fP,
|
|
all of which you may not use,
|
|
it is often better to use the \fCautoload\fP builtin.
|
|
The idea is, you create a directory where function
|
|
definitions are stored, declare the names in
|
|
your \fC.zshrc\fP, and tell the shell where to look for them.
|
|
Whenever you reference a function, the shell
|
|
will automatically load it into memory.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0mkdir\0/tmp/funs
|
|
%\0cat\0>/tmp/funs/yp
|
|
ypmatch\0$1\0passwd.byname
|
|
^D
|
|
%\0cat\0>/tmp/funs/cx
|
|
chmod\0+x\0$*
|
|
^D
|
|
%\0FPATH=/tmp/funs
|
|
%\0autoload\0cx\0yp
|
|
%\0functions\0cx\0yp
|
|
undefined\0cx\0()
|
|
undefined\0yp\0()
|
|
%\0chmod\0755\0/tmp/funs/{cx,yp}
|
|
%\0yp\0egsirer
|
|
egsirer:*:3214:35:Emin\0Gun\0Sirer:/u/egsirer:/bin/sh
|
|
%\0functions\0yp
|
|
yp\0()\0{
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ypmatch\0$1\0passwd.byname
|
|
}
|
|
.De
|
|
This idea has other benefits. By adding a \fC#!\fP header
|
|
to the files, you can make them double as shell scripts.
|
|
(Although it is faster to use them as functions, since a
|
|
separate process is not created.)
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ed\0/tmp/funs/yp
|
|
25
|
|
i
|
|
#!\0/usr/local/bin/zsh
|
|
.
|
|
w
|
|
42
|
|
q
|
|
%\0</tmp/funs/yp
|
|
#!\0/usr/local/bin/zsh
|
|
ypmatch\0$1\0passwd.byname
|
|
%\0/tmp/funs/yp\0sukthnkr
|
|
sukthnkr:*:1267:35:Rahul\0Sukthankar:/u/sukthnkr:/usr/princeton/bin/tcsh
|
|
.De
|
|
Now other people, who may not use \fBzsh\fP, or who don't want to
|
|
copy all of your \fC.zshrc\fP, may use these functions as shell
|
|
scripts.
|
|
.Sh "Directories"
|
|
.PP
|
|
One nice feature of \fBzsh\fP is the way it prints directories.
|
|
For example, if we set the prompt like this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
phoenix%\0PROMPT='%~>\0'
|
|
~>\0cd\0src
|
|
~/src>
|
|
.De
|
|
the shell will print the current directory in the prompt,
|
|
using the \fC~\fP character.
|
|
However, \fBzsh\fP is smarter than most other shells in this respect:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
~/src>\0cd\0~subbarao
|
|
~subbarao>\0cd\0~maruchck
|
|
~maruchck>\0cd\0lib
|
|
~maruchck/lib>\0cd\0fun
|
|
~maruchck/lib/fun>\0foo=/usr/princeton/common/src
|
|
~maruchck/lib/fun>\0cd\0~foo
|
|
~foo>\0cd\0..
|
|
/usr/princeton/common>\0cd\0src
|
|
~foo>\0cd\0news/nntp
|
|
~foo/news/nntp>\0cd\0inews
|
|
~foo/news/nntp/inews>
|
|
.De
|
|
Note that \fBzsh\fP prints \fIother\fP users' directories
|
|
in the form \fC~user\fP. Also note that you can
|
|
set a parameter and use it as a directory name;
|
|
\fBzsh\fP will act as if \fCfoo\fP is a user
|
|
with the login directory \fC/usr/princeton/common/src\fP.
|
|
This is convenient, especially if you're sick of seeing
|
|
prompts like this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
phoenix:/usr/princeton/common/src/X.V11R4/contrib/clients/xv/docs>
|
|
.De
|
|
If you get stuck in this position, you can give the current
|
|
directory a short name, like this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
/usr/princeton/common/src/news/nntp/inews>\0inews=$PWD
|
|
/usr/princeton/common/src/news/nntp/inews>\0echo\0~inews
|
|
/usr/princeton/common/src/news/nntp/inews
|
|
~inews>
|
|
.De
|
|
When you reference a directory in the form \fC~inews\fP,
|
|
the shell assumes that you want the directory displayed
|
|
in this form; thus simply typing \fCecho ~inews\fP or
|
|
\fCcd ~inews\fP causes the prompt to be shortened.
|
|
You can define a shell function for this purpose:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
~inews>\0namedir\0()\0{\0$1=$PWD\0;\0\0:\0~$1\0}
|
|
~inews>\0cd\0/usr/princeton/bin
|
|
/usr/princeton/bin>\0namedir\0pbin
|
|
~pbin>\0cd\0/var/spool/mail
|
|
/var/spool/mail>\0namedir\0spool
|
|
~spool>\0cd\0.msgs
|
|
~spool/.msgs>
|
|
.De
|
|
You may want to add this one-line function to your \fC.zshrc\fP.
|
|
|
|
\fBzsh\fP can also put the current directory in your title bar,
|
|
if you are using a windowing system.
|
|
One way to do this is with the \fCchpwd\fP function, which is
|
|
automatically executed by the shell whenever you change
|
|
directory. If you are using xterm, this will work:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
chpwd\0()\0{\0print\0-Pn\0'^[]2;%~^G'\0}
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fC-P\fP option tells \fCprint\fP to treat its arguments like a prompt
|
|
string; otherwise the \fC%~\fP would not be expanded.
|
|
The \fC-n\fP option suppresses the terminating newline, as with \fCecho\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
If you are using an IRIS \fCwsh\fP, do this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
chpwd\0()\0{\0print\0-Pn\0'\e2201.y%~\e234'\0}
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fCprint -D\fP command has other uses. For example, to
|
|
print the current directory to standard output in short form,
|
|
you can do this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0print\0-D\0$PWD
|
|
~subbarao/src
|
|
.De
|
|
and to print each component of the path in short form:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0print\0-D\0$path
|
|
/bin\0/usr/bin\0~locbin\0~locbin/X11\0~/bin
|
|
.De
|
|
.Sh "Directory Stacks"
|
|
.PP
|
|
If you use csh, you may know about directory stacks.
|
|
The \fCpushd\fP command puts the current directory on the
|
|
stack, and changes to a new directory; the \fCpopd\fP command
|
|
pops a directory off the stack and changes to it.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
phoenix%\0cd\0
|
|
phoenix%\0PROMPT='Z\0%~>\0'
|
|
Z\0~>\0pushd\0/tmp
|
|
/tmp\0~
|
|
Z\0/tmp>\0pushd\0/usr/etc
|
|
/usr/etc\0/tmp\0~
|
|
Z\0/usr/etc>\0pushd\0/usr/bin
|
|
/usr/bin\0/usr/etc\0/tmp\0~
|
|
Z\0/usr/bin>\0popd
|
|
/usr/etc\0/tmp\0~
|
|
Z\0/usr/etc>\0popd
|
|
/tmp\0~
|
|
Z\0/tmp>\0pushd\0/etc
|
|
/etc\0/tmp\0~
|
|
Z\0/etc>\0popd\0
|
|
/tmp\0~
|
|
.De
|
|
\fBzsh\fP's directory stack commands work similarly. One
|
|
difference is the way \fCpushd\fP is handled if no arguments
|
|
are given. As in csh, this exchanges the top two elements
|
|
of the directory stack:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
Z\0/tmp>\0dirs
|
|
/tmp\0~
|
|
Z\0/tmp>\0pushd
|
|
~\0/tmp
|
|
.De
|
|
unless the stack only has one entry:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
Z\0~>\0popd
|
|
/tmp
|
|
Z\0/tmp>\0dirs
|
|
/tmp
|
|
Z\0/tmp>\0pushd
|
|
~\0/tmp
|
|
Z\0~>
|
|
.De
|
|
or unless the \fIPUSHDTOHOME\fP option is set:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
Z\0~>\0setopt\0pushdtohome
|
|
Z\0~>\0pushd
|
|
~\0~\0/tmp
|
|
.De
|
|
.PP
|
|
As an alternative to using directory stacks in this manner,
|
|
we can get something like a \fIdirectory history\fP
|
|
by setting a few more options and parameters:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
~>\0DIRSTACKSIZE=8
|
|
~>\0setopt\0autopushd\0pushdminus\0pushdsilent\0pushdtohome
|
|
~>\0alias\0dh='dirs\0-v'
|
|
~>\0cd\0/tmp
|
|
/tmp>\0cd\0/usr
|
|
/usr>\0cd\0bin
|
|
/usr/bin>\0cd\0../pub
|
|
/usr/pub>\0dh
|
|
0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr/pub
|
|
1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr/bin
|
|
2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr
|
|
3\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/tmp
|
|
4\0\0\0\0\0\0\0~
|
|
/usr/pub>\0cd\0-3
|
|
/tmp>\0dh
|
|
0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/tmp
|
|
1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr/pub
|
|
2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr/bin
|
|
3\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr
|
|
4\0\0\0\0\0\0\0~
|
|
/tmp>\0ls\0~2/df
|
|
/usr/bin/df
|
|
/tmp>\0cd\0-4
|
|
~>
|
|
.De
|
|
Note that \fC~2\fP expanded to the second directory in the
|
|
history list, and that \fCcd -3\fP recalled the third
|
|
directory in the list.
|
|
.PP
|
|
You may be wondering what all those options do.
|
|
\fIAUTOPUSHD\fP made \fCcd\fP act like \fCpushd\fP.
|
|
(\fCalias cd=pushd\fP is not sufficient, for various reasons.)
|
|
\fIPUSHDMINUS\fP swapped the meaning of \fCcd +1\fP and
|
|
\fCcd -1\fP; we want them to mean the opposite of what they mean in csh,
|
|
because it makes more sense in this scheme, and it's easier to type:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
~>\0dh
|
|
0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0~
|
|
1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/tmp
|
|
2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr/pub
|
|
3\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr/bin
|
|
4\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr
|
|
~>\0unsetopt\0pushdminus
|
|
~>\0cd\0+1
|
|
/tmp>\0dh
|
|
0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/tmp
|
|
1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0~
|
|
2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr/pub
|
|
3\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr/bin
|
|
4\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/usr
|
|
/tmp>\0cd\0+2
|
|
/usr/pub>
|
|
.De
|
|
\fIPUSHDSILENT\fP keeps the shell from printing
|
|
the directory stack each time we do a \fCcd\fP,
|
|
and \fIPUSHDTOHOME\fP we mentioned earlier:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
/usr/pub>\0unsetopt\0pushdsilent
|
|
/usr/pub>\0cd\0/etc
|
|
/etc\0/usr/pub\0/tmp\0~\0/usr/bin\0/usr
|
|
/etc>\0cd
|
|
~\0/etc\0/usr/pub\0/tmp\0~\0/usr/bin\0/usr
|
|
~>\0unsetopt\0pushdtohome
|
|
~>\0cd
|
|
/etc\0~\0/usr/pub\0/tmp\0~\0/usr/bin\0/usr
|
|
/etc>
|
|
.De
|
|
\fBDIRSTACKSIZE\fP keeps the directory stack
|
|
from getting too large, much like \fIHISTSIZE\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
/etc>\0setopt\0pushdsilent
|
|
/etc>\0cd\0/
|
|
/>\0cd\0/
|
|
/>\0cd\0/
|
|
/>\0cd\0/
|
|
/>\0cd\0/
|
|
/>\0cd\0/
|
|
/>\0cd\0/
|
|
/>\0cd\0/
|
|
/>\0dh
|
|
0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/
|
|
1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/
|
|
2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/
|
|
3\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/
|
|
4\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/
|
|
5\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/
|
|
6\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/
|
|
7\0\0\0\0\0\0\0/
|
|
.De
|
|
.Sh "Command/Process Substitution"
|
|
.PP
|
|
Command substitution in \fBzsh\fP can take two forms.
|
|
In the traditional form, a command enclosed in
|
|
backquotes (\fC`\fP...\fC`\fP) is replaced on the command line with its output.
|
|
This is the form used by the older shells.
|
|
Newer shells (like \fBzsh\fP) also provide another form,
|
|
\fC$(\fR...\fC)\fR. This form is much easier to nest.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0`echo\0/vmunix`
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\01209702\0May\014\019:04\0/vmunix
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0$(echo\0/vmunix)
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\01209702\0May\014\019:04\0/vmunix
|
|
%\0who\0|\0grep\0mad
|
|
subbarao\0ttyt7\0\0\0May\023\015:02\0\0\0(mad55sx15.Prince)
|
|
pfalstad\0ttyu1\0\0\0May\023\016:25\0\0\0(mad55sx14.Prince)
|
|
subbarao\0ttyu6\0\0\0May\023\015:04\0\0\0(mad55sx15.Prince)
|
|
pfalstad\0ttyv3\0\0\0May\023\016:25\0\0\0(mad55sx14.Prince)
|
|
%\0who\0|\0grep\0mad\0|\0awk\0'{print\0$2}'
|
|
ttyt7
|
|
ttyu1
|
|
ttyu6
|
|
ttyv3
|
|
%\0cd\0/dev;\0ls\0-l\0$(who\0|
|
|
>\0grep\0$(echo\0mad)\0|
|
|
>\0awk\0'{\0print\0$2\0}')
|
|
crwx-w----\0\01\0subbarao\0\020,\0\071\0May\023\018:35\0ttyt7
|
|
crw--w----\0\01\0pfalstad\0\020,\0\081\0May\023\018:42\0ttyu1
|
|
crwx-w----\0\01\0subbarao\0\020,\0\086\0May\023\018:38\0ttyu6
|
|
crw--w----\0\01\0pfalstad\0\020,\0\099\0May\023\018:41\0ttyv3
|
|
.De
|
|
Many common uses of command substitution, however, are
|
|
superseded by other mechanisms of \fBzsh\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0`tty`
|
|
crw-rw-rw-\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\020,\0\028\0May\023\018:35\0/dev/ttyqc
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0$TTY
|
|
crw-rw-rw-\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\020,\0\028\0May\023\018:35\0/dev/ttyqc
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0`which\0rn`
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\0\0172032\0Mar\0\06\018:40\0/usr/princeton/bin/rn
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0=rn
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\0\0172032\0Mar\0\06\018:40\0/usr/princeton/bin/rn
|
|
.De
|
|
A command name with a \fC=\fP prepended is replaced with its full
|
|
pathname. This can be very convenient. If it's not convenient
|
|
for you, you can turn it off:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
=foo\0\0\0\0=bar
|
|
%\0ls\0=foo\0=bar
|
|
zsh:\0foo\0not\0found
|
|
%\0setopt\0noequals
|
|
%\0ls\0=foo\0=bar
|
|
=foo\0\0\0\0=bar
|
|
.De
|
|
.PP
|
|
Another nice feature is process substitution:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0who\0|\0fgrep\0-f\0=(print\0-l\0root\0lemke\0shgchan\0subbarao)
|
|
root\0\0\0\0\0console\0May\019\010:41
|
|
lemke\0\0\0\0ttyq0\0\0\0May\022\010:05\0\0\0(narnia:0.0)
|
|
lemke\0\0\0\0ttyr7\0\0\0May\022\010:05\0\0\0(narnia:0.0)
|
|
lemke\0\0\0\0ttyrd\0\0\0May\022\010:05\0\0\0(narnia:0.0)
|
|
shgchan\0\0ttys1\0\0\0May\023\016:52\0\0\0(gaudi.Princeton.)
|
|
subbarao\0ttyt7\0\0\0May\023\015:02\0\0\0(mad55sx15.Prince)
|
|
subbarao\0ttyu6\0\0\0May\023\015:04\0\0\0(mad55sx15.Prince)
|
|
shgchan\0\0ttyvb\0\0\0May\023\016:51\0\0\0(gaudi.Princeton.)
|
|
.De
|
|
A command of the form \fC=(\fR...\fC)\fR is replaced with the name of a \fIfile\fP
|
|
containing its output. (A command substitution, on the other
|
|
hand, is replaced with the output itself.)
|
|
\fCprint -l\fP is like \fCecho\fP, excepts that it prints its arguments
|
|
one per line, the way \fCfgrep\fP expects them:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0print\0-l\0foo\0bar
|
|
foo
|
|
bar
|
|
.De
|
|
We could also have written:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0who\0|\0fgrep\0-f\0=(echo\0'root
|
|
>\0lemke
|
|
>\0shgchan
|
|
>\0subbarao')
|
|
.De
|
|
Using\0process\0substitution,
|
|
you\0can\0edit\0the\0output\0of\0a\0command:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ed\0=(who\0|\0fgrep\0-f\0~/.friends)
|
|
355
|
|
g/lemke/d
|
|
w\0/tmp/filbar
|
|
226
|
|
q
|
|
%\0cat\0/tmp/filbar
|
|
root\0\0\0\0\0console\0May\019\010:41
|
|
shgchan\0\0ttys1\0\0\0May\023\016:52\0\0\0(gaudi.Princeton.)
|
|
subbarao\0ttyt7\0\0\0May\023\015:02\0\0\0(mad55sx15.Prince)
|
|
subbarao\0ttyu6\0\0\0May\023\015:04\0\0\0(mad55sx15.Prince)
|
|
shgchan\0\0ttyvb\0\0\0May\023\016:51\0\0\0(gaudi.Princeton.)
|
|
.De
|
|
or easily read archived mail:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0mail\0-f\0=(zcat\0~/mail/oldzshmail.Z)
|
|
"/tmp/zsha06024":\084\0messages,\00\0new,\043\0unread
|
|
>\0\01\0\0U\0\0TO:\0pfalstad,\0zsh\0(10)
|
|
\0\0\02\0\0U\0\0nytim!tim@uunet.uu.net,\0Re:\0Zsh\0on\0Sparc1\0/SunOS\04.0.3
|
|
\0\0\03\0\0U\0\0JAM%TPN@utrcgw.utc.com,\0zsh\0fix\0(15)
|
|
\0\0\04\0\0U\0\0djm@eng.umd.edu,\0way\0to\0find\0out\0if\0running\0zsh?\0(25)
|
|
\0\0\05\0\0U\0\0djm@eng.umd.edu,\0Re:\0way\0to\0find\0out\0if\0running\0zsh?\0(17)
|
|
\0\0\06\0\0\0r\0djm@eng.umd.edu,\0Meta\0.\0(18)
|
|
\0\0\07\0\0U\0\0jack@cs.glasgow.ac.uk,\0Re:\0problem\0building\0zsh\0(147)
|
|
\0\0\08\0\0U\0\0nytim!tim@uunet.uu.net,\0Re:\0Zsh\0on\0Sparc1\0/SunOS\04.0.3
|
|
\0\0\09\0\0\0\0\0ursa!jmd,\0Another\0fix...\0(61)
|
|
\0\010\0\0U\0\0pplacewa@bbn.com,\0Re:\0v18i084:\0Zsh\02.00\0-\0A\0small\0complaint\0(36)
|
|
\0\011\0\0U\0\0lubkin@cs.rochester.edu,\0POSIX\0job\0control\0(34)
|
|
\0\012\0\0U\0\0yale!bronson!tan@uunet.UU.NET
|
|
\0\013\0\0U\0\0brett@rpi.edu,\0zsh\0(36)
|
|
\0\014\0\0S\0\0subbarao,\0zsh\0sucks!!!!\0(286)
|
|
\0\015\0\0U\0\0snibru!d241s008!d241s013!ala@relay.EU.net,\0zsh\0(165)
|
|
\0\016\0\0U\0\0nytim!tim@uunet.UU.NET,\0Re:\0Zsh\0on\0Sparc1\0/SunOS\04.0.3
|
|
\0\017\0\0U\0\0subbarao,\0zsh\0is\0a\0junk\0shell\0(43)
|
|
\0\018\0\0U\0\0amaranth@vela.acs.oakland.edu,\0zsh\0(33)
|
|
43u/84\01:\0x
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0/tmp/zsha06024
|
|
/tmp/zsha06024\0not\0found
|
|
.De
|
|
Note that the shell creates a temporary file, and deletes it
|
|
when the command is finished.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0diff\0=(ls)\0=(ls\0-F)
|
|
3c3
|
|
<\0fortune
|
|
---
|
|
>\0fortune*
|
|
10c10
|
|
<\0strfile
|
|
---
|
|
>\0strfile*
|
|
.De
|
|
If you read \fBzsh\fP's man page, you may notice that \fC<(\fR...\fC)\fR
|
|
is another form of process substitution which is similar to
|
|
\fC=(\fR...\fC)\fR.
|
|
There is an important difference between the two.
|
|
In the \fC<(\fR...\fC)\fR case, the shell creates a named pipe (FIFO)
|
|
instead of a file. This is better, since it does not
|
|
fill up the file system; but it does not work in all cases.
|
|
In fact, if we had replaced \fC=(\fR...\fC)\fR with \fC<(\fR...\fC)\fR in
|
|
the examples above, all of them would have stopped working
|
|
except for \fCfgrep -f <(\fR...\fC)\fR.
|
|
You can not edit a pipe, or open it as a mail folder;
|
|
\fCfgrep\fP, however, has no problem with reading
|
|
a list of words from a pipe.
|
|
You may wonder why \fCdiff <(foo) bar\fP doesn't work, since
|
|
\fCfoo | diff - bar\fP works; this is because \fCdiff\fP creates
|
|
a temporary file if it notices that one of its arguments
|
|
is \fC-\fP, and then copies its standard input to the temporary
|
|
file.
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fC>(\fR...\fC)\fR is just like \fC<(\fR...\fC)\fR except that the
|
|
command between the parentheses will get its input from the named
|
|
pipe.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0dvips\0-o\0>(lpr)\0zsh.dvi
|
|
.De
|
|
.Sh "Redirection"
|
|
.PP
|
|
Apart from all the regular redirections like the Bourne shell has,
|
|
\fBzsh\fP can do more. You can send the output of a command to more
|
|
than one file, by specifying more redirections like
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0Hello\0World\0>file1\0>file2
|
|
.De
|
|
and the text will end up in both files. Similarly, you can send the
|
|
output to a file and into a pipe:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0make\0>\0make.log\0|\0grep\0Error
|
|
.De
|
|
The same goes for input. You can make the input of a command come
|
|
from more than one file.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0sort\0<file1\0<file2\0<file3
|
|
.De
|
|
The command will first get the contents of file1 as its standard
|
|
input, then those of file2 and finally the contents of file3. This,
|
|
too, works with pipes.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0cut\0-d:\0-f1\0/etc/passwd\0|\0sort\0<newnames
|
|
.De
|
|
The sort will get as its standard input first the output of \fCcut\fP
|
|
and then the contents of \fCnewnames\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Suppose you would like to watch the standard output of a command on
|
|
your terminal, but want to pipe the standard error to another command.
|
|
An easy way to do this in \fBzsh\fP is by redirecting the standard
|
|
error using \fC2> >(\fR...\fC)\fR.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0find\0/\0-name\0games\02>\0>(grep\0-v\0'Permission'\0>\0realerrors)
|
|
.De
|
|
The above redirection will actually be implemented with a regular
|
|
pipe, not a temporary named pipe.
|
|
.Sh "Aliasing"
|
|
.PP
|
|
Often-used commands can be abbreviated with an alias:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0uc=uncompress
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
hanoi.Z
|
|
%\0uc\0hanoi
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
hanoi
|
|
.De
|
|
or commands with certain desired options:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0fm='finger\0-m'
|
|
%\0fm\0root
|
|
Login\0name:\0root\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0In\0real\0life:\0Operator
|
|
Directory:\0/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0Shell:\0/bin/csh
|
|
On\0since\0May\019\010:41:15\0on\0console\0\0\0\0\03\0days\05\0hours\0Idle\0Time
|
|
No\0unread\0mail
|
|
No\0Plan.
|
|
|
|
%\0alias\0lock='lock\0-p\0-60000'
|
|
%\0lock
|
|
lock:\0/dev/ttyr4\0on\0phoenix.\0timeout\0in\060000\0minutes
|
|
time\0now\0is\0Fri\0May\024\004:23:18\0EDT\01991
|
|
Key:\0
|
|
|
|
%\0alias\0l='ls\0-AF'
|
|
%\0l\0/
|
|
\&.bash_history\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0kadb*
|
|
\&.bashrc\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0lib@
|
|
\&.cshrc\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0licensed/
|
|
\&.exrc\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0lost+found/
|
|
\&.login\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0macsyma
|
|
\&\fR...
|
|
.De
|
|
Aliases can also be used to replace old commands:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0grep=egrep\0ps=sps\0make=gmake
|
|
%\0alias\0whoami='echo\0root'
|
|
%\0whoami
|
|
root
|
|
.De
|
|
or to define new ones:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0cd\0/
|
|
%\0alias\0sz='ls\0-l\0|\0sort\0-n\0+3\0|\0tail\0-10'
|
|
%\0sz
|
|
drwxr-sr-x\0\07\0bin\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\03072\0May\023\011:59\0etc
|
|
drwxrwxrwx\026\0root\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\05120\0May\024\004:20\0tmp
|
|
drwxr-xr-x\0\02\0root\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\08192\0Dec\026\019:34\0lost+found
|
|
drwxr-sr-x\0\02\0bin\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\014848\0May\023\018:48\0dev
|
|
-r--r--r--\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\0\0140520\0Dec\026\020:08\0boot
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\0\0311172\0Dec\026\020:08\0kadb
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\01209695\0Apr\016\015:33\0vmunix.old
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\01209702\0May\014\019:04\0vmunix
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\01209758\0May\021\012:23\0vmunix.new.kernelmap.old
|
|
-rwxr-xr-x\0\01\0root\0\0\0\0\0\01711848\0Dec\026\020:08\0vmunix.org
|
|
%\0cd
|
|
%\0alias\0rable='ls\0-AFtrd\0*(R)'\0nrable='ls\0-AFtrd\0*(^R)'
|
|
%\0rable
|
|
README\0\0\0\0\0\0func/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0bin/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0pub/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0News/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0src/
|
|
nicecolors\0\0etc/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0scr/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0tmp/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0iris/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0zsh*
|
|
%\0nrable
|
|
Mailboxes/\0\0mail/\0\0\0\0\0\0\0notes
|
|
.De
|
|
(The pattern \fC*(R)\fP matches all readable files in the current
|
|
directory, and \fC*(^R)\fP matches all unreadable files.)
|
|
.PP
|
|
Most other shells have aliases of this kind (\fIcommand\fP aliases).
|
|
However, \fBzsh\fP also has \fIglobal\fP aliases, which are substituted
|
|
anywhere on a line.
|
|
Global aliases can be used to abbreviate frequently-typed
|
|
usernames, hostnames, etc.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0-g\0me=pfalstad\0gun=egsirer\0mjm=maruchck
|
|
%\0who\0|\0grep\0me
|
|
pfalstad\0ttyp0\0\0\0May\024\003:39\0\0\0(mickey.Princeton)
|
|
pfalstad\0ttyp5\0\0\0May\024\003:42\0\0\0(mickey.Princeton)
|
|
%\0fm\0gun
|
|
Login\0name:\0egsirer\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0In\0real\0life:\0Emin\0Gun\0Sirer
|
|
Directory:\0/u/egsirer\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0Shell:\0/bin/sh
|
|
Last\0login\0Thu\0May\023\019:05\0on\0ttyq3\0from\0bow.Princeton.ED
|
|
New\0mail\0received\0Fri\0May\024\002:30:28\01991;
|
|
\0\0unread\0since\0Fri\0May\024\002:30:27\01991
|
|
%\0alias\0-g\0phx=phoenix.princeton.edu\0warc=wuarchive.wustl.edu
|
|
%\0ftp\0warc
|
|
Connected\0to\0wuarchive.wustl.edu.
|
|
.De
|
|
Here are some more interesting uses.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0-g\0M='|\0more'\0GF='|\0fgrep\0-f\0~/.friends'
|
|
%\0who\0M\0\0\0#\0\fIpipes\0the\0output\0of\0\fCwho\fI\0through\0\fCmore
|
|
%\0who\0GF\0\0#\0\fIsee\0if\0your\0friends\0are\0on\fC
|
|
%\0w\0GF\0\0\0\0#\0\fIsee\0what\0your\0friends\0are\0doing
|
|
.De
|
|
Another example makes use of \fBzsh\fP's process substitution.
|
|
If you run NIS, and you miss being able to do this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0grep\0pfalstad\0/etc/passwd
|
|
.De
|
|
you can define an alias that will seem more natural
|
|
than \fCypmatch pfalstad passwd\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0-g\0PASS='<(ypcat\0passwd)'
|
|
%\0grep\0pfalstad\0PASS
|
|
pfalstad:*:3564:35:Paul\0John\0Falstad:/u/pfalstad:/usr/princeton/bin/zsh
|
|
.De
|
|
If you're really crazy, you can even call it \fC/etc/passwd\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0-g\0/etc/passwd='<(ypcat\0passwd)'
|
|
%\0grep\0pfalstad\0/etc/passwd
|
|
pfalstad:*:3564:35:Paul\0John\0Falstad:/u/pfalstad:/usr/princeton/bin/zsh
|
|
.De
|
|
The last example shows one of the perils of global aliases;
|
|
they have a lot of potential to cause confusion.
|
|
For example, if you defined a global alias called \fC|\fP (which is
|
|
possible), \fBzsh\fP would begin to act very strangely; every pipe
|
|
symbol would be replaced with the text of your alias.
|
|
To some extent, global aliases are like macros in C;
|
|
discretion is advised in using them and in choosing names for them.
|
|
Using names in all caps is not a bad idea, especially
|
|
for aliases which introduce shell metasyntax (like \fCM\fP and \fCGF\fP
|
|
above).
|
|
.PP
|
|
Note that \fBzsh\fP aliases are not like csh aliases. The syntax for
|
|
defining them is different, and they do not have arguments.
|
|
All your favorite csh aliases will probably not work under \fBzsh\fP.
|
|
For example, if you try:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
alias\0rm\0mv\0'\e!*\0/tmp/wastebasket'
|
|
.De
|
|
no aliases will be defined, but \fBzsh\fP will not report an error.
|
|
In csh, this line defines an alias that makes \fCrm\fP safe---files
|
|
that are \fCrm\fP'd will be moved to a temporary directory instead of
|
|
instantly destroyed. In \fBzsh\fP's syntax, however, this line asks
|
|
the shell to print any existing alias definitions for \fCrm\fP,
|
|
\fCmv\fP, or \fC!*\ /tmp/wastebasket\fP. Since there are none, most
|
|
likely, the shell will not print anything, although \fCalias\fP will
|
|
return a nonzero exit code. The proper syntax is this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
alias\0rm='mv\0\e!*\0/tmp/wastebasket'
|
|
.De
|
|
However, this won't work either:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0rm\0foo.dvi
|
|
zsh:\0no\0matches\0found:\0!*
|
|
.De
|
|
While this makes \fCrm\fP safe, it is certainly not what the user
|
|
intended. In \fBzsh\fP, you must use a shell function for this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0unalias\0rm
|
|
%\0rm\0()\0{\0mv\0$*\0/tmp/wastebasket\0}
|
|
%\0rm\0foo.dvi
|
|
%\0ls\0/tmp/wastebasket
|
|
foo.dvi
|
|
.De
|
|
While this is much cleaner and easier to read (I hope you will
|
|
agree), it is not csh-compatible. Therefore, a script to convert
|
|
csh aliases and variables has been provided. You should only need to use it
|
|
once, to convert all your csh aliases and parameters to \fBzsh\fP format:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0csh
|
|
csh>\0alias
|
|
l\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ls\0-AF
|
|
more\0\0\0\0less
|
|
on\0\0\0\0\0\0last\0-2\0!:1\0;\0who\0|\0grep\0!:1
|
|
csh>\0exit
|
|
%\0c2z\0>neat_zsh_aliases
|
|
%\0cat\0neat_zsh_aliases
|
|
alias\0l='ls\0-AF'
|
|
alias\0more='less'
|
|
on\0()\0{\0last\0-2\0$1\0;\0who\0|\0grep\0$1\0}
|
|
\&...
|
|
.De
|
|
The first two aliases were converted to regular \fBzsh\fP aliases, while
|
|
the third, since it needed to handle arguments, was converted to
|
|
a function. \fCc2z\fP can convert most aliases to \fBzsh\fP format without
|
|
any problems. However, if you're using some really arcane csh tricks,
|
|
or if you have an alias with a name like \fCdo\fP (which is reserved
|
|
in \fBzsh\fP), you may have to fix some of the aliases by hand.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fCc2z\fP script checks your csh setup, and produces a list
|
|
of \fBzsh\fP commands which replicate your aliases and parameter settings
|
|
as closely as possible. You could include its output in your
|
|
startup file, \fC.zshrc\fP.
|
|
.Sh "History"
|
|
.PP
|
|
There are several ways to manipulate history in \fBzsh\fP.
|
|
One way is to use csh-style \fC!\fP history:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0/usr/local/bin/!:0\0!-2*:s/foo/bar/\0>>!$
|
|
.De
|
|
If you don't want to use this, you can turn it off
|
|
by typing \fCsetopt nobanghist\fP. If you are afraid of accidentally
|
|
executing the wrong command you can set the \fIHISTVERIFY\fP option.
|
|
If this option is set, commands that result from history expansion
|
|
will not be executed immediately, but will be put back into the editor
|
|
buffer for further consideration.
|
|
.PP
|
|
If you're not familiar with \fC!\fP history, here follows some
|
|
explanation. History substitutions always start with a \fC!\fP,
|
|
commonly called \*Qbang\*U. After the \fC!\fP comes an (optional)
|
|
designation of which \*Qevent\*U (command) to use, then a colon, and
|
|
then a designation of what word of that command to use. For example,
|
|
\fC!-\fIn\fR refers to the command \fIn\fP commands ago.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
foo\0\0bar
|
|
%\0cd\0foo
|
|
%\0!-2
|
|
ls
|
|
baz\0\0bam
|
|
.De
|
|
No word designator was used, which means that the whole command
|
|
referred to was repeated. Note that the shell will echo the result of
|
|
the history substitution. The word designator can, among other
|
|
things, be a number indicating the argument to use, where \fC0\fP is
|
|
the command.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0/usr/bin/ls\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
%\0!:0\0bar
|
|
/usr/bin/ls\0bar
|
|
bar
|
|
.De
|
|
In this example, no event designator was used, which tells \fBzsh\fP
|
|
to use the previous command. A \fC$\fP specifies the last argument
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0mkdir\0/usr/local/lib/emacs/site-lisp/calc
|
|
%\0cd\0!:$
|
|
cd\0/usr/local/lib/emacs/site-lisp/calc
|
|
.De
|
|
If you use more words of the same command, only the first \fC!\fP
|
|
needs an event designator.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0make\0prig\0>>\0make.log
|
|
make:\0***\0No\0rule\0to\0make\0target\0`prig'.\0\0Stop.
|
|
%\0cd\0src
|
|
%\0!-2:0\0prog\0>>\0!:$
|
|
make\0prog\0>>\0make.log
|
|
.De
|
|
This is different from csh, where a bang with no event designator
|
|
always refers to the previous command. If you actually like this
|
|
behaviour, set the \fICSHJUNKIEHISTORY\fP option.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0cshjunkiehistory
|
|
%\0!-2:0\0prog2\0>>\0!:$
|
|
make\0prog2\0>>\0cshjunkiehistory
|
|
.De
|
|
Another way to use history is to use the \fCfc\fP command. For
|
|
example, if you type an erroneous command:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0for\0i\0in\0`cat\0/etc/clients`\0
|
|
\0do\0
|
|
\0rpu\0$i\0
|
|
\0done
|
|
zsh:\0command\0not\0found:\0rpu
|
|
zsh:\0command\0not\0found:\0rpu
|
|
zsh:\0command\0not\0found:\0rpu
|
|
\&\fR...
|
|
.De
|
|
typing \fCfc\fP will execute an editor on this command, allowing
|
|
you to fix it. (The default editor is \fCvi\fP, by the way,
|
|
not \fCed\fP).
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0fc
|
|
49
|
|
/rpu/s//rup/p
|
|
\0rup\0$i\0
|
|
w
|
|
49
|
|
q
|
|
for\0i\0in\0`cat\0/etc/clients`\0
|
|
\0do\0
|
|
\0rup\0$i\0
|
|
\0done
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0beam\0\0\0\0up\0\02\0days,\010:17,\0\0\0\0load\0average:\00.86,\00.80,\00.50
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0bow\0\0\0\0up\0\04\0days,\0\08:41,\0\0\0\0load\0average:\00.91,\00.80,\00.50
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0burn\0\0\0\0up\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\017:18,\0\0\0\0load\0average:\00.91,\00.80,\00.50
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0burst\0\0\0\0up\0\09\0days,\0\01:49,\0\0\0\0load\0average:\00.95,\00.80,\00.50
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0tan\0\0\0\0up\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\011:14,\0\0\0\0load\0average:\00.91,\00.80,\00.50
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0bathe\0\0\0\0up\0\03\0days,\017:49,\0\0\0\0load\0average:\01.84,\01.79,\01.50
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0bird\0\0\0\0up\0\01\0day,\0\0\09:13,\0\0\0\0load\0average:\01.95,\01.82,\01.51
|
|
\0\0\0\0\0\0bonnet\0\0\0\0up\0\02\0days,\021:18,\0\0\0\0load\0average:\00.93,\00.80,\00.50
|
|
\&\fR...
|
|
.De
|
|
A variant of the \fCfc\fP command is \fCr\fP, which redoes the last
|
|
command, with optional changes:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
%\0r
|
|
echo\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
|
|
%\0echo\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
%\0r\0foo=bar
|
|
echo\0bar
|
|
bar
|
|
.De
|
|
.Sh "Command Line Editing"
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fBzsh\fP's command line editor, \fBZLE\fP, is quite powerful.
|
|
It is designed to emulate either emacs or vi; the default
|
|
is emacs. To set the bindings for vi mode, type \fCbindkey -v\fP. If
|
|
your \fBEDITOR\fP or \fBVISUAL\fP environment variable is vi,
|
|
\fBzsh\fP will use vi emulation by default. You can then switch to
|
|
emacs mode with \fCbindkey -e\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
In addition to basic editing, the shell allows you to
|
|
recall previous lines in the history. In emacs mode,
|
|
this is done with \fI^P\fP (control-P) or (on many terminals) with the
|
|
cursor-up key:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0~
|
|
-\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0README\0\0\0\0\0\0file\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0mail\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0pub\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0tmp
|
|
Mailboxes\0\0\0bin\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0func\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0nicecolors\0\0scr\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0zsh
|
|
News\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0etc\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0iris\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0notes\0\0\0\0\0\0\0src
|
|
%\0echo\0foobar
|
|
foobar
|
|
%\0\fI^P\fC
|
|
%\0echo\0foobar\fI^P\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0~_
|
|
.De
|
|
Pressing \fI^P\fP once brings up the previous line (\fCecho foobar\fP);
|
|
pressing it again brings up the line before that (\fCls ~\fP).
|
|
The cursor is left at the end of the line, allowing you to
|
|
edit the line if desired before executing it.
|
|
In many cases, \fBZLE\fP eliminates the need for the \fCfc\fP command,
|
|
since it is powerful enough to handle even multiline commands:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0for\0i\0in\0a\0b\0c\0d\0e
|
|
>\0do
|
|
>\0echo\0$i
|
|
>\0done
|
|
a
|
|
b
|
|
c
|
|
d
|
|
e
|
|
%\0\fI^P\fC
|
|
%\0for\0i\0in\0a\0b\0c\0d\0e\0
|
|
\0do\0
|
|
\0echo\0$i\0
|
|
\0done_
|
|
.De
|
|
Now you can just move up to the part you want to change...
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0for\0i\0in\0\kxa\l'|\nxu\(ul'\0b\0c\0d\0e
|
|
\0do\0
|
|
\0echo\0$i\0
|
|
\0done
|
|
.De
|
|
change it, and execute the new command.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0for\0i\0in\0f\0g\0h\0i\0j
|
|
\0do\0
|
|
\0echo\0$i\0
|
|
\0done
|
|
f
|
|
g
|
|
h
|
|
i
|
|
j
|
|
.De
|
|
Also, you can search the history for a certain command using
|
|
\fIESC-P\fP, this will look for the last command that started with the
|
|
(part of the) word at the beginning of the current line. Hitting
|
|
\fIESC-P\fP another time gets you the command before that, etc.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0set\0\fIESC-P\fC
|
|
%\0setopt\0autolist\0\fIESC-P\fC
|
|
%\0setopt\0nocorrect_
|
|
.De
|
|
Another way is to do an incremental search, emacs-style:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0\fI^R\fC
|
|
%\0_
|
|
i-search:
|
|
|
|
%\0l\kxs\l'|\nxu\(ul'\0/usr/bin
|
|
i-search:\0l
|
|
|
|
%\0date\0>\0foofile\kx.\l'|\nxu\(ul'c
|
|
i-search:\0le
|
|
.De
|
|
Suppose you have retrieved an old history event in one of these ways
|
|
and would like to execute several consecutive old commands starting
|
|
with this one. \fC^O\fP will execute the current command and then put
|
|
the next command from the history into the editor buffer. Typing
|
|
\fC^O\fP several times will therefore reexecute several consecutive
|
|
commands from the history. Of course, you can edit some of those
|
|
commands in between.
|
|
.PP
|
|
In addition to completion (see below), \fITAB\fP performs expansion if
|
|
possible.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0*.c\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0foofile.c\0fortune.c\0rnd.c\0strfile.c\0unstr.c_
|
|
.De
|
|
For example, suppose you have a bunch of weird files in an important
|
|
directory:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
\0\0*\0*\0*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0;\0&\0%\0$??foo\0\0dspfok\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0foo.c
|
|
\0\0!"foo"!\0\0\0\0\0\0\0`\0\e\0`\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0foo\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0rrr
|
|
.De
|
|
You want to remove them, but you don't want to damage \fCfoo.c\fP.
|
|
Here is one way to do this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0rm\0*\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0rm\0\e\0\e\0\e*\e\0\e*\e\0\e*\e\0\e\0\e\0\0\e!\e"foo\e"\e!\0\e;\e\0\e&\e\0%\e\0\e$'
|
|
''
|
|
'foo\0\e`\e\0\e\e\e\0\e`\0dspfok\0foo\0foo.c\0rrr_
|
|
.De
|
|
When you expand \fC*\fP, \fBzsh\fP inserts the names of all the files
|
|
into the editing buffer, with proper shell quoting.
|
|
Now, just move back and remove \fCfoo.c\fP from the buffer:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0rm\0\e\0\e\0\e*\e\0\e*\e\0\e*\e\0\e\0\e\0\0\e!\e"foo\e"\e!\0\e;\e\0\e&\e\0%\e\0\e$'
|
|
''
|
|
'foo\0\e`\e\0\e\e\e\0\e`\0dspfok\0foo\0\kxr\l'|\nxu\(ul'rr
|
|
.De
|
|
and press return.
|
|
Everything except \fCfoo.c\fP will be deleted from the directory. If
|
|
you do not want to actually expand the current word, but would like to
|
|
see what the matches are, type \fC^Xg\fP.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0rm\0f*\fI^Xg\fP
|
|
foo\0\0\0\0foo.c
|
|
%\0rm\0f*_
|
|
.De
|
|
Here's another trick; let's say you have typed this command in:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0gcc\0-o\0x.out\0foob.c\0-g\0-Wpointer-arith\0-Wtrigraphs_
|
|
.De
|
|
and you forget which library you want. You need to escape
|
|
out for a minute and check by typing
|
|
\fCls /usr/lib\fP, or some other such command;
|
|
but you don't want to retype the whole command again,
|
|
and you can't press return now because the current command
|
|
is incomplete.
|
|
In \fBzsh\fP, you can put the line on the \fIbuffer stack\fP, using
|
|
\fIESC-Q\fP, and type some other commands. The next time a prompt is printed,
|
|
the \fCgcc\fP line will be popped off the stack and put
|
|
in the editing buffer automatically; you can then enter the
|
|
proper library name and press return (or, \fIESC-Q\fP again and look
|
|
for some other libraries whose names you forgot).
|
|
.PP
|
|
A similar situation: what if you forget the option to gcc that
|
|
finds bugs using AI techniques? You could either use \fIESC-Q\fP
|
|
again, and type \fCman gcc\fP, or you could press \fIESC-H\fP, which
|
|
essentially does the same thing; it puts the current line on
|
|
the buffer stack, and executes the command \fCrun-help gcc\fP,
|
|
where \fCrun-help\fP is an alias for \fCman\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Another interesting command is \fIESC-A\fP. This executes the
|
|
current line, but retains it in the buffer, so that it appears
|
|
again when the next prompt is printed.
|
|
Also, the cursor stays in the same place.
|
|
This is useful for executing a series of similar commands:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0cc\0grok.c\0-g\0-lc\0-lgl\0-lsun\0-lmalloc\0-Bstatic\0-o\0b.out
|
|
%\0cc\0fubar.c\0-g\0-lc\0-lgl\0-lsun\0-lmalloc\0-Bstatic\0-o\0b.out
|
|
%\0cc\0fooble.c\0-g\0-lc\0-lgl\0-lsun\0-lmalloc\0-Bstatic\0-o\0b.out
|
|
.De
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fIESC-'\fP command is useful for managing the shell's quoting
|
|
conventions. Let's say you want to print this string:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
don't\0do\0that;\0type\0'rm\0-rf\0\e*',\0with\0a\0\e\0before\0the\0*.
|
|
.De
|
|
All that is necessary is to type it into the editing buffer:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0don't\0do\0that;\0type\0'rm\0-rf\0\e*',\0with\0a\0\e\0before\0the\0*.
|
|
.De
|
|
press \fIESC-'\fP (escape-quote):
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0'don'\e''t\0do\0that;\0type\0'\e''rm\0-rf\0\e*'\e'',\0with\0a\0\e\0before\0the\0*.'
|
|
.De
|
|
then move to the beginning and add the \fCecho\fP command.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0'don'\e''t\0do\0that;\0type\0'\e''rm\0-rf\0\e*'\e'',\0with\0a\0\e\0before\0the\0*.'
|
|
don't\0do\0that;\0type\0'rm\0-rf\0\e*',\0with\0a\0\e\0before\0the\0*.
|
|
.De
|
|
Let's say you want to create an alias to do this \fCecho\fP command.
|
|
This can be done by recalling the line with \fI^P\fP and pressing
|
|
\fIESC-'\fP again:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0'echo\0'\e''don'\e''\e'\e'''\e''t\0do\0that;\0type\0'\e''\e'\e'''\e''rm\0-rf
|
|
\e*'\e''\e'\e'''\e'',\0with\0a\0\e\0before\0the\0*.'\e'''
|
|
.De
|
|
and then move to the beginning and add the command to create
|
|
an alias.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0zoof='echo\0'\e''don'\e''\e'\e'''\e''t\0do\0that;\0type\0'\e''\e'\e'''\e''rm
|
|
-rf\0\e*'\e''\e'\e'''\e'',\0with\0a\0\e\0before\0the\0*.'\e'''
|
|
%\0zoof
|
|
don't\0do\0that;\0type\0'rm\0-rf\0\e*',\0with\0a\0\e\0before\0the\0*.
|
|
.De
|
|
If one of these fancy editor commands changes your command line in a
|
|
way you did not intend, you can undo changes with \fC^_\fP, if you can
|
|
get it out of your keyboard, or \fC^X^U\fP, otherwise.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Another use of the editor is to edit the value of variables.
|
|
For example, an easy way to change your path is to use
|
|
the \fCvared\fP command:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0vared\0PATH
|
|
>\0/u/pfalstad/scr:/u/pfalstad/bin/sun4:/u/maruchck/scr:/u/subbarao/bin:/u/maruc
|
|
hck/bin:/u/subbarao/scripts:/usr/princeton/bin:/usr/ucb:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/host
|
|
s:/usr/princeton/bin/X11:/./usr/lang:/./usr/etc:/./etc
|
|
.De
|
|
You can now edit the path. When you press return, the contents
|
|
of the edit buffer will be assigned to \fBPATH\fP.
|
|
.Sh "Completion"
|
|
.PP
|
|
Another great \fBzsh\fP feature is completion. If you hit \fITAB\fP, \fBzsh\fP
|
|
will complete all kinds of stuff. Like commands or filenames:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0comp\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0compress\0_
|
|
|
|
%\0ls\0nic\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0nicecolors\0_
|
|
|
|
%\0ls\0/usr/pr\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/usr/princeton/_
|
|
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0=com\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0=compress\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
If the completion is ambiguous, the editor will beep. If you find
|
|
this annoying, you can set the \fINOLISTBEEP\fP option. Completion
|
|
can even be done in the middle of words. To use this, you will have
|
|
to set the \fICOMPLETEINWORD\fP option:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0completeinword
|
|
%\0ls\0/usr/p\kxt\l'|\nxu\(ul'on\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/usr/prince\kxt\l'|\nxu\(ul'on/
|
|
%\0setopt\0alwaystoend
|
|
%\0ls\0/usr/p\kxt\l'|\nxu\(ul'on\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/usr/princeton/_
|
|
.De
|
|
You can list possible completions by pressing \fI^D\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmu\fITAB\0\(embeep\(em\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix_
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix\fI^D\fC
|
|
vmunix\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0vmunix.old\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
|
|
vmunix.new.kernelmap.old\0\0vmunix.org
|
|
.De
|
|
Or, you could just set the \fIAUTOLIST\fP option:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0autolist
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmu\fITAB\0\(embeep\(em\fC
|
|
vmunix\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0vmunix.old\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
|
|
vmunix.new.kernelmap.old\0\0vmunix.org
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix_
|
|
.De
|
|
If you like to see the types of the files in these lists, like in
|
|
\fCls\ -F\fP, you can set the \fILISTTYPES\fP option. Together with
|
|
\fIAUTOLIST\fP you can use \fILISTAMBIGUOUS\fP. This will only list
|
|
the possibilities if there is no unambiguous part to add:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0listambiguous
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmu\fITAB\0\(embeep\(em\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix_\fITAB\0\(embeep\(em\fC
|
|
vmunix\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0vmunix.old\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
|
|
vmunix.new.kernelmap.old\0\0vmunix.org
|
|
.De
|
|
If you don't want several of these listings to scroll the screen so
|
|
much, the \fIALWAYSLASTPROMPT\fP option is useful. If set, you can
|
|
continue to edit the line you were editing, with the completion
|
|
listing appearing beneath it.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Another interesting option is \fIMENUCOMPLETE\fP. This affects the
|
|
way \fITAB\fP works. Let's look at the \fC/vmunix\fP example again:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0menucomplete
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmu\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix.new.kernelmap.old\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix.old_
|
|
.De
|
|
Each time you press \fITAB\fP, it displays the next possible completion.
|
|
In this way, you can cycle through the possible completions until
|
|
you find the one you want.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fIAUTOMENU\fP option makes a nice compromise between this method
|
|
of completion and the regular method. If you set this option,
|
|
pressing \fITAB\fP once completes the unambiguous part normally,
|
|
pressing the \fITAB\fP key repeatedly after an ambiguous completion
|
|
will cycle through the possible completions.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Another option you could set is \fIRECEXACT\fP, which causes
|
|
exact matches to be accepted, even if there are other possible
|
|
completions:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0recexact
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmu\fITAB\0\(embeep\(em\fC
|
|
vmunix\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0vmunix.old\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
|
|
vmunix.new.kernelmap.old\0\0vmunix.org
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix_\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0/vmunix\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
To facilitate the typing of pathnames, a slash will be added whenever
|
|
a directory is completed. Some computers don't like the spurious
|
|
slashes at the end of directory names. In that case, the
|
|
\fIAUTOREMOVESLASH\fP option comes to rescue. It will remove these
|
|
slashes when you type a space or return after them.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fIfignore\fP variable lists suffixes of files to ignore
|
|
during completion.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0foo\fITAB\0\(embeep\(em\fC
|
|
foofile.c\0\0foofile.o
|
|
%\0fignore=(\0.o\0\e~\0.bak\0.junk\0)
|
|
%\0ls\0foo\fITAB\fP
|
|
%\0ls\0foofile.c\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
Since \fCfoofile.o\fP has a suffix that is in the \fCfignore\fP list,
|
|
it was not considered a possible completion of \fCfoo\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Username completion is also supported:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0~pfal\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ls\0~pfalstad/_
|
|
.De
|
|
and parameter name completion:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0$ORG\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0echo\0$ORGANIZATION\0_
|
|
%\0echo\0${ORG\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0echo\0${ORGANIZATION\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
Note that in the last example a space is added after the completion as
|
|
usual. But if you want to add a colon or closing brace, you probably
|
|
don't want this extra space. Setting the \fIAUTOPARAMKEYS\fP option
|
|
will automatically remove this space if you type a colon or closing
|
|
brace after such a completion.
|
|
.PP
|
|
There is also option completion:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0nocl\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0setopt\0noclobber\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
and binding completion:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0bindkey\0'^X^X'\0pu\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0bindkey\0'^X^X'\0push-line\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fCcompctl\fP command is used to control completion of the
|
|
arguments of specific commands. For example, to specify that certain
|
|
commands take other commands as arguments, you use \fCcompctl -c\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-c\0man\0nohup
|
|
%\0man\0upt\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0man\0uptime\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
To specify that a command should complete filenames, you should use
|
|
\fCcompctl -f\fP. This is the default. It can be combined with \fC-c\fP,
|
|
as well.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-cf\0echo
|
|
%\0echo\0upt\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0echo\0uptime\0_
|
|
|
|
%\0echo\0fo\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0echo\0foo.c
|
|
.De
|
|
Similarly, use \fC-o\fP to specify options, \fC-v\fP to specify
|
|
variables, and \fC-b\fP to specify bindings.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-o\0setopt\0unsetopt
|
|
%\0compctl\0-v\0typeset\0vared\0unset\0export
|
|
%\0compctl\0-b\0bindkey
|
|
.De
|
|
You can also use \fC-k\fP to specify a custom list of keywords to use
|
|
in completion. After the \fC-k\fP comes either the name of an array
|
|
or a literal array to take completions from.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ftphosts=(ftp.uu.net\0wuarchive.wustl.edu)
|
|
%\0compctl\0-k\0ftphosts\0ftp
|
|
%\0ftp\0wu\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0ftp\0wuarchive.wustl.edu\0_
|
|
|
|
%\0compctl\0-k\0'(cpirazzi\0subbarao\0sukthnkr)'\0mail\0finger
|
|
%\0finger\0cp\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0finger\0cpirazzi\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
To better specify the files to complete for a command, use the
|
|
\fC-g\fP option which takes any glob pattern as an argument. Be sure
|
|
to quote the glob patterns as otherwise they will be expanded when the
|
|
\fCcompctl\fP command is run.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
letter.tex\0\0letter.dvi\0\0letter.aux\0\0letter.log\0\0letter.toc
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'*.tex'\0latex
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'*.dvi'\0xdvi\0dvips
|
|
%\0latex\0l\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0latex\0letter.tex\0_
|
|
%\0xdvi\0l\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0xdvi\0letter.dvi\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
Glob patterns can include qualifiers within parentheses. To rmdir
|
|
only directories and cd to directories and symbolic links pointing to
|
|
them:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'*(-/)'\0cd
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'*(/)'\0rmdir
|
|
.De
|
|
RCS users like to run commands on files which are not in the current
|
|
directory, but in the RCS subdirectory where they all get \fC,v\fP
|
|
suffixes. They might like to use
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'RCS/*(:t:s/\e,v//)'\0co\0rlog\0rcs
|
|
%\0ls\0RCS
|
|
builtin.c,v\0\0lex.c,v\0\0\0\0\0\0zle_main.c,v
|
|
%\0rlog\0bu\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0rlog\0builtin.c\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fC:t\fP modifier keeps only the last part of the pathname and the
|
|
\fC:s/\e,v//\fP will replace any \fC,v\fP by nothing.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fC-s\fP flag is similar to \fC-g\fP, but it uses all expansions,
|
|
instead of just globbing, like brace expansion, parameter substitution
|
|
and command substitution.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-s\0'$(setopt)'\0unsetopt
|
|
.De
|
|
will only complete options which are actually set to be arguments to
|
|
\fCunsetopt\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Sometimes a command takes another command as its argument. You can
|
|
tell \fBzsh\fP to complete commands as the first argument to such a
|
|
command and then use the completion method of the second command. The
|
|
\fC-l\fP flag with a null-string argument is used for this.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-l\0''\0nohup\0exec
|
|
%\0nohup\0comp\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0nohup\0compress\0_
|
|
%\0nohup\0compress\0fil\fITAB\fC
|
|
%\0nohup\0compress\0filename\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
Sometimes you would like to run really complicated commands to find
|
|
out what the possible completions are. To do this, you can specify a
|
|
shell function to be called that will assign the possible completions
|
|
to a variable called reply. Note that this variable must be an array.
|
|
Here's another (much slower) way to get the completions for \fCco\fP
|
|
and friends:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0function\0getrcs\0{
|
|
>\0reply=()
|
|
>\0for\0i\0in\0RCS/*
|
|
>\0\0\0do
|
|
>\0\0\0reply=($reply[*]\0$(basename\0$i\0,v))
|
|
>\0\0\0done
|
|
>\0}
|
|
%\0compctl\0-K\0getrcs\0co\0rlog\0rcs
|
|
.De
|
|
Some command arguments use a prefix that is not a part of the things
|
|
to complete. The kill builtin command takes a signal name after a
|
|
\fC-\fP. To make such a prefix be ignored in the completion process,
|
|
you can use the \fC-P\fP flag.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-P\0-\0-k\0signals\0kill
|
|
%\0kill\0-H\fITAB\fP
|
|
%\0kill\0-HUP\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
TeX is usually run on files ending in \fC.tex\fP, but also sometimes
|
|
on other files. It is somewhat annoying to specify that the arguments
|
|
of TeX should end in \fC.tex\fP and then not be able to complete these
|
|
other files. Therefore you can specify things like \*QComplete to
|
|
files ending in \fC.tex\fP if available, otherwise complete to any
|
|
filename.\*U. This is done with \fIxor\fPed completion:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'*.tex'\0+\0-f\0tex
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fC+\fP tells the editor to only take the next thing into account
|
|
if the current one doesn't generate any matches. If you have not
|
|
changed the default completion, the above example is in fact
|
|
equivalent to
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'*.tex'\0+\0tex
|
|
.De
|
|
as a lone \fC+\fP at the end is equivalent to specifying the default
|
|
completion after the \fC+\fP. This form of completion is also
|
|
frequently used if you want to run some command only on a certain type
|
|
of files, but not necessarily in the current directory. In this case
|
|
you will want to complete both files of this type and directories.
|
|
Depending on your preferences you can use either of
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'*.ps'\0+\0-g\0'*(-/)'\0ghostview
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'*.ps\0*(-/)'\0ghostview
|
|
.De
|
|
where the first one will only complete directories (and symbolic links
|
|
pointing to directories) if no postscript file matches the already
|
|
typed part of the argument.
|
|
.Sh "Extended completion"
|
|
.PP
|
|
If you play with completion, you will soon notice that you would like
|
|
to specify what to complete, depending on what flags you give to the
|
|
command and where you are on the command line. For example, a command
|
|
could take any filename argument after a \fC-f\fP flag, a username
|
|
after a \fC-u\fP flag and an executable after a \fC-x\fP flag. This
|
|
section will introduce you to the ways to specify these things. To
|
|
many people it seems rather difficult at first, but taking the trouble
|
|
to understand it can save you lots of typing in the end. Even I keep
|
|
being surprised when \fBzsh\fP manages to complete a small or even
|
|
empty prefix to the right file in a large directory.
|
|
.PP
|
|
To tell \fBzsh\fP about these kinds of completion, you use \*Qextended
|
|
completion\*U by specifying the \fC-x\fP flag to compctl. The
|
|
\fC-x\fP flag takes a list of patterns/flags pairs. The patterns
|
|
specify when to complete and the flags specify what. The flags are
|
|
simply those mentioned above, like \fC-f\fP or \fC-g \fIglob
|
|
pattern\fR.
|
|
.PP
|
|
As an example, the \fCr[\fIstring1\fC,\fIstring2\fC]\fR pattern
|
|
matches if the cursor is after something that starts with
|
|
\fIstring1\fP and before something that starts with \fIstring2\fP.
|
|
The \fIstring2\fP is often something that you do not want to match
|
|
anything at all.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
foo1\0\0\0bar1\0\0\0foo.Z\0\0bar.Z
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'^*.Z'\0-x\0'r[-d,---]'\0-g\0'*.Z'\0--\0compress
|
|
%\0compress\0f\fITAB\fP
|
|
%\0compress\0foo1\0_
|
|
%\0compress\0-d\0f\fITAB\fP
|
|
%\0compress\0-d\0foo.Z\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
In the above example, if the cursor is after the \fC-d\fP the pattern
|
|
will match and therefore \fBzsh\fP uses the \fC-g *.Z\fP flag that will only
|
|
complete files ending in \fC.Z\fP. Otherwise, if no pattern matches,
|
|
it will use the flags before the \fC-x\fP and in this case complete
|
|
every file that does not end in \fC.Z\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fCs[\fIstring\fC]\fR pattern matches if the current word starts
|
|
with \fIstring\fP. The \fIstring\fP itself is not considered to be
|
|
part of the completion.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-x\0's[-]'\0-k\0signals\0--\0kill
|
|
%\0kill\0-H\fITAB\fP
|
|
%\0kill\0-HUP\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fCtar\fP command takes a tar file as an argument after the
|
|
\fC-f\fP option. The \fCc[\fIoffset\fC,\fIstring\fC]\fR pattern
|
|
matches if the word in position \fIoffset\fP relative to the current
|
|
word is \fIstring\fP. More in particular, if \fIoffset\fP is -1, it
|
|
matches if the previous word is \fIstring\fP. This suggests
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-f\0-x\0'c[-1,-f]'\0-g\0'*.tar'\0--\0tar
|
|
.De
|
|
But this is not enough. The \fC-f\fP option could be the last of a
|
|
longer string of options. \fCC[\fR...\fC,\fR...\fC]\fR is just like
|
|
\fCc[\fR...\fC,\fR...\fC]\fR, except that it uses glob-like pattern
|
|
matching for \fIstring\fP. So
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-f\0-x\0'C[-1,-*f]'\0-g\0'*.tar'\0--\0tar
|
|
.De
|
|
will complete tar files after any option string ending in an \fCf\fP.
|
|
But we'd like even more. Old versions of tar used all options as the
|
|
first argument, but without the minus sign. This might be
|
|
inconsistent with option usage in all other commands, but it is still
|
|
supported by newer versions of \fCtar\fP. So we would also like to
|
|
complete tar files if the first argument ends in an \fCf\fP and we're
|
|
right behind it.
|
|
.PP
|
|
We can `and' patterns by putting them next to each other with a space
|
|
between them. We can `or' these sets by putting comma's between them.
|
|
We will also need some new patterns. \fCp[\fInum\fC]\fR will match if
|
|
the current argument (the one to be completed) is the \fInum\fPth
|
|
argument. \fCW[\fIindex\fC,\fIpattern\fC]\fR will match if the
|
|
argument in place \fIindex\fP matches the \fIpattern\fP. This gives
|
|
us
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-f\0-x\0'C[-1,-*f]\0,\0W[1,*f]\0p[2]'\0-g\0'*.tar'\0--\0tar
|
|
.De
|
|
In words: If the previous argument is an option string that ends in an
|
|
\fCf\fP, or the first argument ended in an \fCf\fP and it is now the
|
|
second argument, then complete only filenames ending in \fC.tar\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
All the above examples used only one set of patterns with one
|
|
completion flag. You can use several of these pattern/flag pairs
|
|
separated by a \fC-\fP. The first matching pattern will be used.
|
|
Suppose you have a version of \fCtar\fP that supports compressed files
|
|
by using a \fC-Z\fP option. Leaving the old tar syntax aside for a
|
|
moment, we would like to complete files ending in \fC.tar.Z\fP if a
|
|
\fC-Z\fP option has been used and files ending in \fC.tar\fP
|
|
otherwise, all this only after a \fC-f\fP flag. Again, the \fC-Z\fP
|
|
can be alone or it can be part of a longer option string, perhaps the
|
|
same as that of the \fC-f\fP flag. Here's how to do it; note the
|
|
backslash and the secondary prompt which are not part of the
|
|
\fCcompctl\fP command.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-f\0-x\0'C[-1,-*Z*f]\0,\0R[-*Z*,---]\0C[-1,-*f]'\0-g\0'*.tar.Z'\0-\0\e
|
|
>\0'C[-1,-*f]'\0-g\0'*.tar'\0--\0tar
|
|
.De
|
|
The first pattern set tells us to match if either the previous
|
|
argument was an option string including a \fCZ\fP and ending in an
|
|
\fCf\fP or there was an option string with a \fCZ\fP somewhere and the
|
|
previous word was any option string ending in an \fCf\fP. If this is
|
|
the case, we need a compressed tar file. Only if this is not the case
|
|
the second pattern set will be considered. By the way,
|
|
\fCR[\fIpattern1\fC,\fIpattern2\fC]\fR is just like
|
|
\fCr[\fR...\fC,\fR...\fC]\fR except that it uses pattern matching with
|
|
shell metacharacters instead of just strings.
|
|
.PP
|
|
You will have noticed the \fC--\fP before the command name. This ends
|
|
the list of pattern/flag pairs of \fC-x\fP. It is usually used just
|
|
before the command name, but you can also use an extended completion
|
|
as one part of a list of xored completions, in which case the \fC--\fP
|
|
appears just before one of the \fC+\fP signs.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Note the difference between using extended completion as part of a
|
|
list of xored completions as in
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
foo\0\0bar
|
|
%\0compctl\0-x\0'r[-d,---]'\0-g\0'*.Z'\0--\0+\0-g\0'^*.Z'\0compress
|
|
%\0compress\0-d\0f\fITAB\fP
|
|
%\0compress\0-d\0foo\0_
|
|
.De
|
|
and specifying something before the \fC-x\fP as in
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0compctl\0-g\0'^*.Z'\0-x\0'r[-d,---]'\0-g\0'*.Z'\0--\0compress
|
|
%\0compress\0-d\0f\fITAB\fP
|
|
%\0compress\0-d\0f_
|
|
.De
|
|
In the first case, the alternative glob pattern (\fC^*.Z\fP) will be
|
|
used if the first part does not generate any possible completions,
|
|
while in the second case the alternative glob pattern will only be
|
|
used if the \fCr[\fR...\fC]\fR pattern doesn't match.
|
|
.Sh "Bindings"
|
|
.PP
|
|
Each of the editor commands we have seen was actually a function bound
|
|
by default to a certain key. The real names of the commands are:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
\fCexpand-or-complete\0\0\0\fITAB\fR
|
|
\fCpush-line\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\fIESC-Q\fR
|
|
\fCrun-help\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\fIESC-H\fR
|
|
\fCaccept-and-hold\0\0\0\0\0\0\fIESC-A\fR
|
|
\fCquote-line\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\fIESC-'\fR
|
|
.De
|
|
These bindings are arbitrary; you could change them if you want.
|
|
For example, to bind \fCaccept-line\fP to \fI^Z\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0bindkey\0'^Z'\0accept-line
|
|
.De
|
|
Another idea would be to bind the delete key to \fCdelete-char\fP;
|
|
this might be convenient if you use \fI^H\fP for backspace.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0bindkey\0'^?'\0delete-char
|
|
.De
|
|
Or, you could bind \fI^X\fP\fI^H\fP to \fCrun-help\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0bindkey\0'^X^H'\0run-help
|
|
.De
|
|
Other examples:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0bindkey\0'^X^Z'\0universal-argument
|
|
%\0bindkey\0'\0'\0magic-space
|
|
%\0bindkey\0-s\0'^T'\0'uptime
|
|
>\0'
|
|
%\0bindkey\0'^Q'\0push-line-or-edit
|
|
.De
|
|
\fCuniversal-argument\fP multiplies the next command by 4.
|
|
Thus \fI^X\fP\fI^Z\fP\fI^W\fP might delete the last four words on the line.
|
|
If you bind space to \fCmagic-space\fP, then csh-style history
|
|
expansion is done on the line whenever you press the space bar.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Something that often happens is that I am typing a multiline command
|
|
and discover an error in one of the previous lines. In this case,
|
|
\fCpush-line-or-edit\fP will put the entire multiline construct into
|
|
the editor buffer. If there is only a single line, it is equivalent
|
|
to \fCpush-line\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fC-s\fP flag to \fCbindkey\fP specifies that you are binding the key
|
|
to a string, not a command. Thus \fCbindkey -s '^T' 'uptime\en'\fP
|
|
lets you VMS lovers get the load average whenever you press \fI^T\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
If you have a NeXT keyboard, the one with the \fC|\fP and \fC\e\fP keys
|
|
very inconveniently placed, the following
|
|
bindings may come in handy:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0bindkey\0-s\0'\ee/'\0'\e\e'
|
|
%\0bindkey\0-s\0'\ee='\0'|'
|
|
.De
|
|
Now you can type \fIALT-/\fP to get a backslash, and \fIALT-=\fP to
|
|
get a vertical bar. This only works inside \fBzsh\fP, of course;
|
|
\fCbindkey\fP has no effect on the key mappings inside \fCtalk\fP
|
|
or \fCmail\fP, etc.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Some people like to bind \fC^S\fP and \fC^Q\fP to editor commands.
|
|
Just binding these has no effect, as the terminal will catch them and
|
|
use them for flow control. You could unset them as stop and start
|
|
characters, but most people like to use these for external commands.
|
|
The solution is to set the \fINOFLOWCONTROL\fP option. This will
|
|
allow you to bind the start and stop characters to editor commands,
|
|
while retaining their normal use for external commands.
|
|
.Sh "Parameter Substitution"
|
|
.PP
|
|
In \fBzsh\fP, parameters are set like this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0foo=bar
|
|
%\0echo\0$foo
|
|
bar
|
|
.De
|
|
Spaces before or after the \fC=\fP are frowned upon:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0foo\0=\0bar
|
|
zsh:\0command\0not\0found:\0foo
|
|
.De
|
|
Also, \fCset\fP doesn't work for setting parameters:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0set\0foo=bar
|
|
%\0set\0foo\0=\0bar
|
|
%\0echo\0$foo
|
|
|
|
%
|
|
.De
|
|
Note that no error message was printed. This is because both
|
|
of these commands were perfectly valid; the \fCset\fP builtin
|
|
assigns its arguments to the \fIpositional parameters\fP
|
|
(\fC$1\fP, \fC$2\fP, etc.).
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0set\0foo=bar
|
|
%\0echo\0$1
|
|
foo=bar
|
|
%\0set\0foo\0=\0bar
|
|
%\0echo\0$3\0$2
|
|
bar\0=
|
|
.De
|
|
If you're really intent on using the csh syntax, define a
|
|
function like this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0set\0()\0{
|
|
>\0\0\0\0eval\0"$1$2$3"
|
|
>\0}
|
|
%\0set\0foo\0=\0bar
|
|
%\0set\0fuu=brrr
|
|
%\0echo\0$foo\0$fuu
|
|
bar\0brrr
|
|
.De
|
|
But then, of course you can't use the form of \fCset\fP with
|
|
options, like \fCset -F\fP (which turns off filename generation).
|
|
Also, the \fCset\fP command by itself won't list all the parameters
|
|
like it should.
|
|
To get around that you need a \fCcase\fP statement:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0set\0()\0{
|
|
>\0\0\0\0case\0$1\0in
|
|
>\0\0\0\0-*|+*|'')\0builtin\0set\0$*\0;;
|
|
>\0\0\0\0*)\0eval\0"$1$2$3"\0;;
|
|
>\0\0\0\0esac
|
|
>\0}
|
|
.De
|
|
For the most part, this should make csh users happy.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The following sh-style operators are supported in \fBzsh\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0unset\0null
|
|
%\0echo\0${foo-xxx}
|
|
bar
|
|
%\0echo\0${null-xxx}
|
|
xxx
|
|
%\0unset\0null
|
|
%\0echo\0${null=xxx}
|
|
xxx
|
|
%\0echo\0$null
|
|
xxx
|
|
%\0echo\0${foo=xxx}
|
|
bar
|
|
%\0echo\0$foo
|
|
bar
|
|
%\0unset\0null
|
|
%\0echo\0${null+set}
|
|
|
|
%\0echo\0${foo+set}
|
|
set
|
|
.De
|
|
Also, csh-style \fC:\fP modifiers may be appended to a parameter
|
|
substitution.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0$PWD
|
|
/home/learning/pf/zsh/zsh2.00/src
|
|
%\0echo\0$PWD:h
|
|
/home/learning/pf/zsh/zsh2.00
|
|
%\0echo\0$PWD:h:h
|
|
/home/learning/pf/zsh
|
|
%\0echo\0$PWD:t
|
|
src
|
|
%\0name=foo.c
|
|
%\0echo\0$name
|
|
foo.c
|
|
%\0echo\0$name:r
|
|
foo
|
|
%\0echo\0$name:e
|
|
c
|
|
.De
|
|
The equivalent constructs in ksh (which are also supported in \fBzsh\fP)
|
|
are a bit more general and easier to remember.
|
|
When the shell expands \fC${foo#\fR\fIpat\fR\fC}\fR,
|
|
it checks to see if \fIpat\fP matches a substring at the beginning
|
|
of the value
|
|
of \fCfoo\fP. If so, it removes that portion of \fCfoo\fP, using the shortest
|
|
possible match.
|
|
With \fC${foo##\fR\fIpat\fR\fC}\fR, the longest possible match is removed.
|
|
\fC${foo%\fR\fIpat\fR\fC}\fR and \fC${foo%%\fR\fIpat\fR\fC}\fR remove the match
|
|
from the end.
|
|
Here are the ksh equivalents of the \fC:\fP modifiers:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0${PWD%/*}
|
|
/home/learning/pf/zsh/zsh2.00
|
|
%\0echo\0${PWD%/*/*}
|
|
/home/learning/pf/zsh
|
|
%\0echo\0${PWD##*/}
|
|
src
|
|
%\0echo\0${name%.*}
|
|
foo
|
|
%\0echo\0${name#*.}
|
|
c
|
|
.De
|
|
\fBzsh\fP also has upper/lowercase modifiers:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0xx=Test
|
|
%\0echo\0$xx:u
|
|
TEST
|
|
%\0echo\0$xx:l
|
|
test
|
|
.De
|
|
and a substitution modifier:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0$name:s/foo/bar/
|
|
bar.c
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
foo.c\0\0\0\0foo.h\0\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0\0foo.pro
|
|
%\0for\0i\0in\0foo.*;\0mv\0$i\0$i:s/foo/bar/
|
|
%\0ls
|
|
bar.c\0\0\0\0bar.h\0\0\0\0bar.o\0\0\0\0bar.pro
|
|
.De
|
|
There is yet another syntax to modify substituted parameters. You can
|
|
add certain modifiers in parentheses after the opening brace like:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
${(\fImodifiers\fC)\fIparameter\fC}
|
|
.De
|
|
For example, \fCo\fP sorts the words resulting from the expansion:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0${path}
|
|
/usr/bin\0/usr/bin/X11\0/etc
|
|
%\0echo\0${(o)path}
|
|
/etc\0/usr/bin\0/usr/bin/X11
|
|
.De
|
|
One possible source of confusion is the fact that in \fBzsh\fP,
|
|
the result of parameter substitution is \fInot\fP split into
|
|
words. Thus, this will not work:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0srcs='glob.c\0exec.c\0init.c'
|
|
%\0ls\0$srcs
|
|
glob.c\0exec.c\0init.c\0not\0found
|
|
.De
|
|
This is considered a feature, not a bug.
|
|
If splitting were done by default, as it is in most other shells,
|
|
functions like this would not work properly:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
$\0ll\0()\0{\0ls\0-F\0$*\0}
|
|
$\0ll\0'fuu\0bar'
|
|
fuu\0not\0found
|
|
bar\0not\0found
|
|
|
|
%\0ll\0'fuu\0bar'
|
|
fuu\0bar\0not\0found
|
|
.De
|
|
Of course, a hackish workaround is available in sh (and \fBzsh\fP):
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0shwordsplit
|
|
%\0ll\0()\0{\0ls\0-F\0"$@"\0}
|
|
%\0ll\0'fuu\0bar'
|
|
fuu\0bar\0not\0found
|
|
.De
|
|
If you like the sh behaviour, \fBzsh\fP can accomodate you:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0${=srcs}
|
|
exec.c\0\0glob.c\0\0init.c
|
|
%\0setopt\0shwordsplit
|
|
%\0ls\0$srcs
|
|
exec.c\0\0glob.c\0\0init.c
|
|
.De
|
|
Another way to get the \fC$srcs\fP trick to work is to use an array:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0unset\0srcs
|
|
%\0srcs=(\0glob.c\0exec.c\0init.c\0)\0\0
|
|
%\0ls\0$srcs
|
|
exec.c\0\0glob.c\0\0init.c
|
|
.De
|
|
or an alias:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0alias\0-g\0SRCS='exec.c\0glob.c\0init.c'
|
|
%\0ls\0SRCS
|
|
exec.c\0\0glob.c\0\0init.c
|
|
.De
|
|
Another option that modifies parameter expansion is
|
|
\fIRCEXPANDPARAM\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0foo/$srcs
|
|
foo/glob.c\0exec.c\0init.c
|
|
%\0setopt\0rcexpandparam
|
|
%\0echo\0foo/$srcs
|
|
foo/glob.c\0foo/exec.c\0foo/init.c
|
|
%\0echo\0foo/${^srcs}
|
|
foo/glob.c\0foo/exec.c\0foo/init.c
|
|
%\0echo\0foo/$^srcs
|
|
foo/glob.c\0foo/exec.c\0foo/init.c
|
|
.De
|
|
.Sh "Shell Parameters"
|
|
.PP
|
|
The shell has many predefined parameters that may be
|
|
accessed. Here are some examples:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0sleep\010\0&
|
|
[1]\03820
|
|
%\0echo\0$!
|
|
3820
|
|
%\0set\0a\0b\0c
|
|
%\0echo\0$#
|
|
3
|
|
%\0echo\0$ARGC
|
|
3
|
|
%\0(\0exit\020\0)\0;\0echo\0$?
|
|
20
|
|
%\0false;\0echo\0$status
|
|
1
|
|
.De
|
|
(\fC$?\fP and \fC$status\fP are equivalent.)
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0$HOST\0$HOSTTYPE
|
|
dendrite\0sun4
|
|
%\0echo\0$UID\0$GID
|
|
701\060
|
|
%\0cd\0/tmp
|
|
%\0cd\0/home
|
|
%\0echo\0$PWD\0$OLDPWD
|
|
/home\0/tmp
|
|
%\0ls\0$OLDPWD/.getwd\0
|
|
/tmp/.getwd
|
|
.De
|
|
\fC~+\fP and \fC~-\fP are short for \fC$PWD\fP and \fC$OLDPWD\fP, respectively.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0~-/.getwd
|
|
/tmp/.getwd
|
|
%\0ls\0-d\0~+/learning
|
|
/home/learning
|
|
%\0echo\0$RANDOM
|
|
4880
|
|
%\0echo\0$RANDOM
|
|
11785
|
|
%\0echo\0$RANDOM
|
|
2062
|
|
%\0echo\0$TTY
|
|
/dev/ttyp4
|
|
%\0echo\0$VERSION
|
|
zsh\0v2.00.03
|
|
%\0echo\0$USERNAME
|
|
pf
|
|
.De
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fCcdpath\fP variable sets the search path for the \fCcd\fP command.
|
|
If you do not specify \fC.\fP somewhere in the path, it is assumed to
|
|
be the first component.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0cdpath=(\0/usr\0~\0~/zsh\0)
|
|
%\0ls\0/usr
|
|
5bin\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0dict\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0lang\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0net\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0sccs\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0sys
|
|
5include\0\0\0\0\0etc\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0lector\0\0\0\0\0\0\0nserve\0\0\0\0\0\0\0services\0\0\0\0\0tmp
|
|
5lib\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0export\0\0\0\0\0\0\0lib\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0oed\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0share\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ucb
|
|
adm\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0games\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0local\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0old\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0skel\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ucbinclude
|
|
bin\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0geac\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0lost+found\0\0\0openwin\0\0\0\0\0\0spool\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0ucblib
|
|
boot\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0hosts\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0macsyma_417\0\0pat\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0src\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0xpg2bin
|
|
demo\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0include\0\0\0\0\0\0man\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0princeton\0\0\0\0stand\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0xpg2include
|
|
diag\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0kvm\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0mdec\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0pub\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0swap\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0xpg2lib
|
|
%\0cd\0spool
|
|
/usr/spool
|
|
%\0cd\0bin
|
|
/usr/bin
|
|
%\0cd\0func
|
|
~/func
|
|
%\0cd\0
|
|
%\0cd\0pub
|
|
%\0pwd
|
|
/u/pfalstad/pub
|
|
%\0ls\0-d\0/usr/pub
|
|
/usr/pub
|
|
.De
|
|
\fBPATH\fP and \fBpath\fP both set the search path for commands.
|
|
These two variables are equivalent, except that one is a string
|
|
and one is an array. If the user modifies \fBPATH\fP, the shell
|
|
changes \fBpath\fP as well, and vice versa.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/tmp:.
|
|
%\0echo\0$path
|
|
/bin\0/usr/bin\0/tmp\0.
|
|
%\0path=(\0/usr/bin\0.\0/usr/local/bin\0/usr/ucb\0)
|
|
%\0echo\0$PATH
|
|
/usr/bin:.:/usr/local/bin:/usr/ucb
|
|
.De
|
|
The same is true of \fBCDPATH\fP and \fBcdpath\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0$CDPATH
|
|
/usr:/u/pfalstad:/u/pfalstad/zsh
|
|
%\0CDPATH=/u/subbarao:/usr/src:/tmp
|
|
%\0echo\0$cdpath
|
|
/u/subbarao\0/usr/src\0/tmp
|
|
.De
|
|
In general, predefined parameters with names in all lowercase are
|
|
arrays; assignments to them take the form:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
\fIname\fR\fC=(\fR\0\fIelem\fR\0...\0\fC)\fR
|
|
.De
|
|
Predefined parameters with names in all uppercase are strings. If
|
|
there is both an array and a string version of the same parameter, the
|
|
string version is a colon-separated list, like \fBPATH\fP. You can use
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0typeset\0-T\0FOO\0foo
|
|
.De
|
|
to create more of these yourself.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0foo=(\0a\0b\0c\0)
|
|
%\0echo\0$FOO
|
|
a:b:c
|
|
.De
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fBHISTFILE\fP is the name of the history file, where the history
|
|
is saved when a shell exits.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0zsh
|
|
phoenix%\0HISTFILE=/tmp/history
|
|
phoenix%\0SAVEHIST=20
|
|
phoenix%\0echo\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
phoenix%\0date
|
|
Fri\0May\024\005:39:35\0EDT\01991
|
|
phoenix%\0uptime
|
|
\0\05:39am\0\0up\04\0days,\020:02,\0\040\0users,\0\0load\0average:\02.30,\02.20,\02.00
|
|
phoenix%\0exit
|
|
%\0cat\0/tmp/history
|
|
HISTFILE=/tmp/history
|
|
SAVEHIST=20
|
|
echo\0foo
|
|
date
|
|
uptime
|
|
exit
|
|
%\0HISTSIZE=3
|
|
%\0history
|
|
\0\0\028\0\0rm\0/tmp/history
|
|
\0\0\029\0\0HISTSIZE=3
|
|
\0\0\030\0\0history
|
|
.De
|
|
If you have several instances of \fBzsh\fP running at the same
|
|
time, like when using the X window system, it might be preferable to
|
|
append the history of each shell to a file when a shell exits instead
|
|
of overwriting the old contents of the file. You can get this
|
|
behaviour by setting the \fIAPPENDHISTORY\fP option.
|
|
.PP
|
|
In \fBzsh\fP, if you say
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0>file
|
|
.De
|
|
the command \fCcat\fP is normally assumed:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0>file
|
|
foo!\0\0\0\0
|
|
^D
|
|
%\0cat\0file
|
|
foo!
|
|
.De
|
|
Thus, you can view a file simply by typing:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0<file
|
|
foo!
|
|
.De
|
|
However, this is not csh or sh compatible. To correct this,
|
|
change the value of the parameter \fBNULLCMD\fP,
|
|
which is \fCcat\fP by default.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0NULLCMD=:
|
|
%\0>file
|
|
%\0ls\0-l\0file
|
|
-rw-r--r--\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\00\0May\024\005:41\0file
|
|
.De
|
|
If \fCNULLCMD\fP is unset, the shell reports an error if no
|
|
command is specified (like csh).
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0unset\0NULLCMD
|
|
%\0>file
|
|
zsh:\0redirection\0with\0no\0command
|
|
.De
|
|
Actually, \fBREADNULLCMD\fP is used whenever you have a null command
|
|
reading input from a single file. Thus, you can set \fBREADNULLCMD\fP
|
|
to \fCmore\fP or \fCless\fP rather than \fCcat\fP. Also, if you
|
|
set \fBNULLCMD\fP to \fC:\fP for sh compatibility, you can still read
|
|
files with \fC< file\fP if you leave \fBREADNULLCMD\fP set to \fCmore\fP.
|
|
.Sh "Prompting"
|
|
.PP
|
|
The default prompt for \fBzsh\fP is:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
phoenix%\0echo\0$PROMPT
|
|
%m%#\0
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fC%m\fP stands for the short form of the current hostname,
|
|
and the \fC%#\fP stands for a \fC%\fP or a \fC#\fP, depending on whether
|
|
the shell is running as root or not.
|
|
\fBzsh\fP supports many other control sequences
|
|
in the \fBPROMPT\fP variable.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%/>\0'
|
|
/u/pfalstad/etc/TeX/zsh>
|
|
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%~>\0'\0\0\0
|
|
~/etc/TeX/zsh>\0
|
|
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%h\0%~>\0'
|
|
6\0~/etc/TeX/zsh>\0
|
|
.De
|
|
\fC%h\fP\0represents\0the\0number\0of\0current\0history\0event.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%h\0%~\0%M>\0'
|
|
10\0~/etc/TeX/zsh\0apple-gunkies.gnu.ai.mit.edu>\0
|
|
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%h\0%~\0%m>\0'
|
|
11\0~/etc/TeX/zsh\0apple-gunkies>\0
|
|
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%h\0%t>\0'
|
|
12\06:11am>\0
|
|
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%n\0%w\0tty%l>'
|
|
pfalstad\0Fri\024\0ttyp0>
|
|
.De
|
|
\fBPROMPT2\fP is used in multiline commands, like for-loops. The
|
|
\fC%_\fP escape sequence was made especially for this prompt. It is
|
|
replaced by the kind of command that is being entered.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0PROMPT2='%_>\0'
|
|
%\0for\0i\0in\0foo\0bar
|
|
for>
|
|
|
|
%\0echo\0'hi
|
|
quote>
|
|
.De
|
|
Also available is the \fBRPROMPT\fP parameter.
|
|
If this is set, the shell puts a prompt on the \fIright\fP side
|
|
of the screen.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0RPROMPT='%t'
|
|
%\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\06:14am
|
|
|
|
%\0RPROMPT='%~'
|
|
%\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0~/etc/TeX/zsh
|
|
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%l\0%T\0%m[%h]\0'\0RPROMPT='\0%~'
|
|
p0\06:15\0phoenix[5]\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0~/etc/TeX/zsh
|
|
.De
|
|
These special escape sequences can also be used with the
|
|
\fC-P\fP option to \fCprint\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0print\0-P\0%h\0tty%l
|
|
15\0ttyp1
|
|
.De
|
|
.PP
|
|
The \fBPOSTEDIT\fP parameter is printed whenever the editor exits.
|
|
This can be useful for termcap tricks. To highlight the prompt
|
|
and command line while leaving command output unhighlighted, try this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0POSTEDIT=`echotc\0se`
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%S%%\0'
|
|
.De
|
|
This trick is mostly superceded by the zle_highlight array parameter.
|
|
.Sh "Login/logout watching"
|
|
.PP
|
|
You can specify login or logout events to monitor
|
|
by setting the \fBwatch\fP variable.
|
|
Normally, this is done by specifying a list of usernames.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0watch=(\0pfalstad\0subbarao\0sukthnkr\0egsirer\0)
|
|
.De
|
|
The \fClog\fP command reports all people logged in
|
|
that you are watching for.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0log
|
|
pfalstad\0has\0logged\0on\0p0\0from\0mickey.
|
|
pfalstad\0has\0logged\0on\0p5\0from\0mickey.
|
|
%\0\fR...\fC
|
|
subbarao\0has\0logged\0on\0p8\0from\0phoenix.
|
|
%\0\fR...\fC
|
|
subbarao\0has\0logged\0off\0p8\0from\0phoenix.
|
|
%\0\fR...\fC
|
|
sukthnkr\0has\0logged\0on\0p8\0from\0dew.
|
|
%\0\fR...\fC
|
|
sukthnkr\0has\0logged\0off\0p8\0from\0dew.
|
|
.De
|
|
If you specify hostnames with an \fC@\fP prepended,
|
|
the shell will watch for all users logging in from
|
|
the specified host.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0watch=(\0@mickey\0@phoenix\0)
|
|
%\0log
|
|
djthongs\0has\0logged\0on\0q2\0from\0phoenix.
|
|
pfalstad\0has\0logged\0on\0p0\0from\0mickey.
|
|
pfalstad\0has\0logged\0on\0p5\0from\0mickey.
|
|
.De
|
|
If you give a tty name with a \fC%\fP prepended, the shell
|
|
will watch for all users logging in on that tty.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0watch=(\0%ttyp0\0%console\0)
|
|
%\0log
|
|
root\0has\0logged\0on\0console\0from\0.
|
|
pfalstad\0has\0logged\0on\0p0\0from\0mickey.
|
|
.De
|
|
The format of the reports may also be changed.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0watch=(\0pfalstad\0gettes\0eps\0djthongs\0jcorr\0bdavis\0)
|
|
%\0log
|
|
jcorr\0has\0logged\0on\0tf\0from\0128.112.176.3:0.
|
|
jcorr\0has\0logged\0on\0r0\0from\0128.112.176.3:0.
|
|
gettes\0has\0logged\0on\0p4\0from\0yo:0.0.
|
|
djthongs\0has\0logged\0on\0pe\0from\0grumpy:0.0.
|
|
djthongs\0has\0logged\0on\0q2\0from\0phoenix.
|
|
bdavis\0has\0logged\0on\0qd\0from\0BRUNO.
|
|
eps\0has\0logged\0on\0p3\0from\0csx30:0.0.
|
|
pfalstad\0has\0logged\0on\0p0\0from\0mickey.
|
|
pfalstad\0has\0logged\0on\0p5\0from\0mickey.
|
|
%\0WATCHFMT='%n\0on\0tty%l\0from\0%M'
|
|
%\0log
|
|
jcorr\0on\0ttytf\0from\0128.112.176.3:0.
|
|
jcorr\0on\0ttyr0\0from\0128.112.176.3:0.
|
|
gettes\0on\0ttyp4\0from\0yo:0.0
|
|
djthongs\0on\0ttype\0from\0grumpy:0.0
|
|
djthongs\0on\0ttyq2\0from\0phoenix.Princeto
|
|
bdavis\0on\0ttyqd\0from\0BRUNO.pppl.gov
|
|
eps\0on\0ttyp3\0from\0csx30:0.0
|
|
pfalstad\0on\0ttyp0\0from\0mickey.Princeton
|
|
pfalstad\0on\0ttyp5\0from\0mickey.Princeton
|
|
%\0WATCHFMT='%n\0fm\0%m'
|
|
%\0log
|
|
jcorr\0fm\0128.112.176.3:0
|
|
jcorr\0fm\0128.112.176.3:0
|
|
gettes\0fm\0yo:0.0
|
|
djthongs\0fm\0grumpy:0.0
|
|
djthongs\0fm\0phoenix
|
|
bdavis\0fm\0BRUNO
|
|
eps\0fm\0csx30:0.0
|
|
pfalstad\0fm\0mickey
|
|
pfalstad\0fm\0mickey
|
|
%\0WATCHFMT='%n\0%a\0at\0%t\0%w.'
|
|
%\0log
|
|
jcorr\0logged\0on\0at\03:15pm\0Mon\020.
|
|
jcorr\0logged\0on\0at\03:16pm\0Wed\022.
|
|
gettes\0logged\0on\0at\06:54pm\0Wed\022.
|
|
djthongs\0logged\0on\0at\07:19am\0Thu\023.
|
|
djthongs\0logged\0on\0at\07:20am\0Thu\023.
|
|
bdavis\0logged\0on\0at\012:40pm\0Thu\023.
|
|
eps\0logged\0on\0at\04:19pm\0Thu\023.
|
|
pfalstad\0logged\0on\0at\03:39am\0Fri\024.
|
|
pfalstad\0logged\0on\0at\03:42am\0Fri\024.
|
|
.De
|
|
If you have a \fC.friends\fP file in your home directory,
|
|
a convenient way to make \fBzsh\fP watch for all your friends
|
|
is to do this:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0watch=(\0$(<\0~/.friends)\0)
|
|
%\0echo\0$watch
|
|
subbarao\0maruchck\0root\0sukthnkr\0\fR...
|
|
.De
|
|
If watch is set to \fCall\fP, then all users logging in or out
|
|
will be reported.
|
|
.Sh "Options"
|
|
.PP
|
|
Some options have already been mentioned; here are a few more:
|
|
.PP
|
|
Using the \fIAUTOCD\fP option, you can simply type the name
|
|
of a directory, and it will become the current directory.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0cd\0/
|
|
%\0setopt\0autocd
|
|
%\0bin
|
|
%\0pwd
|
|
/bin
|
|
%\0../etc
|
|
%\0pwd
|
|
/etc
|
|
.De
|
|
With \fICDABLEVARS\fP, if the argument to \fCcd\fP is the name of a
|
|
parameter whose value is a valid directory, it will become
|
|
the current directory.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0cdablevars
|
|
%\0foo=/tmp
|
|
%\0cd\0foo
|
|
/tmp
|
|
.De
|
|
\fICORRECT\fP turns on spelling correction for commands,
|
|
and the \fICORRECTALL\fP option turns on spelling correction
|
|
for all arguments.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0correct
|
|
%\0sl
|
|
zsh:\0correct\0`sl'\0to\0`ls'\0[nyae]?\0y
|
|
%\0setopt\0correctall
|
|
%\0ls\0x.v11r4
|
|
zsh:\0correct\0`x.v11r4'\0to\0`X.V11R4'\0[nyae]?\0n
|
|
/usr/princton/src/x.v11r4\0not\0found
|
|
%\0ls\0/etc/paswd
|
|
zsh:\0correct\0to\0`/etc/paswd'\0to\0`/etc/passwd'\0[nyae]?\0y
|
|
/etc/passwd
|
|
.De
|
|
If you press \fCy\fP
|
|
when the shell asks you if you want to correct a word, it will
|
|
be corrected. If you press \fCn\fP, it will be left alone.
|
|
Pressing \fCa\fP aborts the command, and pressing \fCe\fP brings the line
|
|
up for editing again, in case you agree the word is spelled wrong
|
|
but you don't like the correction.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Normally, a quoted expression may contain a newline:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0'
|
|
>\0foo
|
|
>\0'
|
|
|
|
foo
|
|
|
|
%
|
|
.De
|
|
With \fICSHJUNKIEQUOTES\fP set, this is illegal, as it is
|
|
in csh.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0cshjunkiequotes
|
|
%\0ls\0'foo
|
|
zsh:\0unmatched\0'
|
|
.De
|
|
\fIGLOBDOTS\fP lets files beginning with a \fC.\fP be matched without
|
|
explicitly specifying the dot. This can also be specified for a particular
|
|
pattern by appending (D) to it.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0ls\0-d\0*x*
|
|
Mailboxes
|
|
%\0ls\0-d\0*x*(D)
|
|
\&.exrc\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0.pnewsexpert\0\0.xserverrc
|
|
\&.mushexpert\0\0\0.xinitrc\0\0\0\0\0\0Mailboxes
|
|
%\0setopt\0globdots
|
|
%\0ls\0-d\0*x*
|
|
\&.exrc\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0.pnewsexpert\0\0.xserverrc
|
|
\&.mushexpert\0\0\0.xinitrc\0\0\0\0\0\0Mailboxes
|
|
.De
|
|
\fIHISTIGNOREDUPS\fP prevents the current line from being
|
|
saved in the history if it is the same as the previous one;
|
|
\fIHISTIGNORESPACE\fP prevents the current line from being
|
|
saved if it begins with a space.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0PROMPT='%h>\0'
|
|
39>\0setopt\0histignoredups
|
|
40>\0echo\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
41>\0echo\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
41>\0echo\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
41>\0echo\0bar
|
|
bar
|
|
42>\0setopt\0histignorespace
|
|
43>\0\0echo\0foo
|
|
foo
|
|
43>\0\0echo\0fubar
|
|
fubar
|
|
43>\0\0echo\0fubar
|
|
fubar
|
|
.De
|
|
\fIIGNOREBRACES\fP turns off csh-style brace expansion.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0x{y{z,a},{b,c}d}e
|
|
xyze\0xyae\0xbde\0xcde
|
|
%\0setopt\0ignorebraces
|
|
%\0echo\0x{y{z,a},{b,c}d}e
|
|
x{y{z,a},{b,c}d}e
|
|
.De
|
|
\fIIGNOREEOF\fP forces the user to type \fCexit\fP or \fClogout\fP,
|
|
instead of just pressing \fI^D\fP.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0ignoreeof
|
|
%\0^D
|
|
zsh:\0use\0'exit'\0to\0exit.
|
|
.De
|
|
\fIINTERACTIVECOMMENTS\fP turns on interactive comments;
|
|
comments begin with a \fC#\fP.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0interactivecomments
|
|
%\0date\0#\0this\0is\0a\0comment
|
|
Fri\0May\024\006:54:14\0EDT\01991
|
|
.De
|
|
\fINOBEEP\fP makes sure the shell never beeps.
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fINOCLOBBER\fP prevents you from accidentally
|
|
overwriting an existing file.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0noclobber
|
|
%\0cat\0/dev/null\0>~/.zshrc
|
|
zsh:\0file\0exists:\0/u/pfalstad/.zshrc
|
|
.De
|
|
If you really do want to clobber a file, you can use the
|
|
\fC>!\fP operator.
|
|
To make things easier in this case, the \fC>\fP is stored in
|
|
the history list as a \fC>!\fP:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0cat\0/dev/null\0>!\0~/.zshrc
|
|
%\0cat\0/etc/motd\0>\0~/.zshrc
|
|
zsh:\0file\0exists:\0/u/pfalstad/.zshrc
|
|
%\0!!
|
|
cat\0/etc/motd\0>!\0~/.zshrc
|
|
%\0\fR...
|
|
.De
|
|
\fIRCQUOTES\fP lets you use a more elegant method for including
|
|
single quotes in a singly quoted string:
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0echo\0'"don'\e''t\0do\0that."'
|
|
"don't\0do\0that."
|
|
%\0echo\0'"don''t\0do\0that."'
|
|
"dont\0do\0that."
|
|
%\0setopt\0rcquotes
|
|
%\0echo\0'"don''t\0do\0that."'
|
|
"don't\0do\0that."
|
|
.De
|
|
Finally,
|
|
\fISUNKEYBOARDHACK\fP wins the award for the strangest option.
|
|
If a line ends with \fC`\fP, and there are an odd number of them
|
|
on the line, the shell will ignore the trailing \fC`\fP. This
|
|
is provided for keyboards whose RETURN key is too small,
|
|
and too close to the \fC`\fP key.
|
|
.Ds
|
|
%\0setopt\0sunkeyboardhack
|
|
%\0date`
|
|
Fri\0May\024\006:55:38\0EDT\01991
|
|
.De
|
|
.Sh "Closing Comments"
|
|
.PP
|
|
I (Bas de Bakker) would be happy to receive mail if anyone has any
|
|
tricks or ideas to add to this document, or if there are some points
|
|
that could be made clearer or covered more thoroughly. Please notify
|
|
me of any errors in this document.
|
|
.if o \{\
|
|
.bp
|
|
.sv 1i
|
|
.\}
|
|
.pn 1
|
|
.bp
|
|
.PX
|