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Direktori : /usr/share/zsh/5.0.2/functions/ |
Current File : //usr/share/zsh/5.0.2/functions/smart-insert-last-word |
# smart-insert-last-word # Inspired by Christoph Lange <langec@gmx.de> from zsh-users/3265; # rewritten to correct multiple-call behavior after zsh-users/3270; # modified to work with copy-earlier-word after zsh-users/5832. # Edited further per zsh-users/10881 and zsh-users/10884. # # This function as a ZLE widget can replace insert-last-word, like so: # # zle -N insert-last-word smart-insert-last-word # # With a numeric prefix, behaves like insert-last-word, except that words # in comments are ignored when interactive_comments is set. # # Otherwise, the rightmost "interesting" word from any previous command is # found and inserted. The default definition of "interesting" is that the # word contains at least one alphabetic character, slash, or backslash. # This definition can be overridden by use of a style like so: # # zstyle :insert-last-word match '*[[:alpha:]/\\]*' # # For example, you might want to include words that contain spaces: # # zstyle :insert-last-word match '*[[:alpha:][:space:]/\\]*' # # Or include numbers as long as the word is at least two characters long: # # zstyle :insert-last-word match '*([[:digit:]]?|[[:alpha:]/\\])*' # # That causes redirections like "2>" to be included. # # Note also that the style is looked up based on the widget name, so you # can bind this function to different widgets to use different patterns: # # zle -N insert-last-assignment smart-insert-last-word # zstyle :insert-last-assignment match '[[:alpha:]][][[:alnum:]]#=*' # bindkey '\e=' insert-last-assignment # # The "auto-previous" style, if set to a true value, causes the search to # proceed upward through the history until an interesting word is found. # If auto-previous is unset or false and there is no interesting word, the # last word is returned. emulate -L zsh setopt extendedglob nohistignoredups # Begin by preserving completion suffix if any zle auto-suffix-retain # Not strictly necessary: # (($+_ilw_hist)) || integer -g _ilw_hist _ilw_count _ilw_cursor _ilw_lcursor integer cursor=$CURSOR lcursor=$CURSOR local lastcmd pattern numeric=$NUMERIC # Save state for repeated calls if (( HISTNO == _ilw_hist && cursor == _ilw_cursor )); then NUMERIC=$[_ilw_count+1] lcursor=$_ilw_lcursor else NUMERIC=1 _ilw_lcursor=$lcursor fi # Handle the up to three arguments of .insert-last-word if (( $+1 )); then if (( $+3 )); then ((NUMERIC = -($1))) else ((NUMERIC = _ilw_count - $1)) fi (( NUMERIC )) || LBUFFER[lcursor+1,cursor+1]='' numeric=$((-(${2:--numeric}))) fi _ilw_hist=$HISTNO _ilw_count=$NUMERIC if [[ -z "$numeric" ]] then zstyle -s :$WIDGET match pattern || pattern='*[[:alpha:]/\\]*' fi # Note that we must use .up-history for navigation here because of # possible "holes" in the $history hash (the result of dup expiry). # We need $history because $BUFFER retains edits in progress as the # user moves around the history, but we search the unedited lines. { zmodload -i zsh/parameter zle .end-of-history # Start from final command zle .up-history || return 1 # Retrieve previous command local buffer=$history[$HISTNO] # Get unedited history line lastcmd=( ${${(z)buffer}:#\;} ) # Split into shell words if [[ -n "$pattern" ]] then # This is the "smart" part -- search right-to-left and # latest-to-earliest through the history for a word. integer n=0 found=$lastcmd[(I)$pattern] if zstyle -t :$WIDGET auto-previous then while (( found == 0 && ++n )) do zle .up-history || return 1 buffer=$history[$HISTNO] lastcmd=( ${${(z)buffer}:#\;} ) found=$lastcmd[(I)$pattern] done fi # The following accounts for 1-based index (( found-- > 0 && (numeric = $#lastcmd - found) )) fi } always { HISTNO=$_ilw_hist # Return to current command CURSOR=$cursor # Restore cursor position NUMERIC=${numeric:-1} # In case of fall-through } (( NUMERIC > $#lastcmd )) && return 1 LBUFFER[lcursor+1,cursor+1]=$lastcmd[-NUMERIC] _ilw_cursor=$CURSOR