diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Functions/Zle/predict-on')
-rw-r--r-- | Functions/Zle/predict-on | 119 |
1 files changed, 98 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/Functions/Zle/predict-on b/Functions/Zle/predict-on index 07ce0703a..bd7212050 100644 --- a/Functions/Zle/predict-on +++ b/Functions/Zle/predict-on @@ -1,64 +1,141 @@ # This set of functions implements a sort of magic history searching. # After predict-on, typing characters causes the editor to look backward -# in the history for the first line beginning with what you have typed -# so far. After predict-off, editing returns to normal for the line found. +# in the history for the first line beginning with what you have typed so +# far. After predict-off, editing returns to normal for the line found. # In fact, you often don't even need to use predict-off, because if the -# line doesn't match something in the history, adding a key at the end -# behaves as normal --- though editing in the middle is liable to delete +# line doesn't match something in the history, adding a key performs +# standard completion --- though editing in the middle is liable to delete # the rest of the line. # +# With the function based completion system (which is needed for this), +# you should be able to type TAB at almost any point to advance the cursor +# to the next "interesting" character position (usually the end of the +# current word, but sometimes somewhere in the middle of the word). And +# of course as soon as the entire line is what you want, you can accept +# with RETURN, without needing to move the cursor to the end first. +# # To use it: # autoload -U predict-on # zle -N predict-on # zle -N predict-off # bindkey '...' predict-on # bindkey '...' predict-off -# Note that all the functions are defined when you first call type the -# predict-on key, which means typing the predict-off key before that gives -# a harmless error message. +# Note that all functions are defined when you first type the predict-on +# key, which means typing the predict-off key before that gives a harmless +# error message. predict-on() { - zle -N self-insert insert-and-predict - zle -N magic-space insert-and-predict - zle -N backward-delete-char delete-backward-and-predict + zle -N self-insert insert-and-predict + zle -N magic-space insert-and-predict + zle -N backward-delete-char delete-backward-and-predict + zle -N delete-char-or-list delete-no-predict } predict-off() { - zle -A .self-insert self-insert - zle -A .magic-space magic-space - zle -A .backward-delete-char backward-delete-char + zle -A .self-insert self-insert + zle -A .magic-space magic-space + zle -A .backward-delete-char backward-delete-char } insert-and-predict () { - emulate -L zsh - if [[ ${RBUFFER[1]} = ${KEYS[-1]} ]] + setopt localoptions noshwordsplit noksharrays + if [[ $LBUFFER = *$'\012'* ]] + then + # Editing a multiline buffer, it's unlikely prediction is wanted + zle .$WIDGET "$@" + return + elif [[ ${RBUFFER[1]} = ${KEYS[-1]} ]] then - # same as what's typed, just move on + # Same as what's typed, just move on ((++CURSOR)) else LBUFFER="$LBUFFER$KEYS" if [[ $LASTWIDGET == (self-insert|magic-space|backward-delete-char) ]] then - zle .history-beginning-search-backward || RBUFFER="" + if ! zle .history-beginning-search-backward + then + RBUFFER="" + if [[ ${KEYS[-1]} != ' ' ]] + then + unsetopt automenu recexact + integer curs=$CURSOR pos nchar=${#LBUFFER//[^${KEYS[-1]}]} + local -a +h comppostfuncs + local crs curcontext="${curcontext}" + + [[ -z "$curcontext" ]] && curcontext=::: + curcontext="predict:${curcontext#*:}" + + comppostfuncs=( predict-limit-list ) + zle complete-word + # Decide where to leave the cursor. The dummy loop is used to + # get out of that `case'. + repeat 1 + do + zstyle -s ":completion:${curcontext}:" cursor crs + case $crs in + (complete) + # At the place where the completion left it, if it is after + # the character typed. + [[ ${LBUFFER[-1]} = ${KEYS[-1]} ]] && break + ;& + (key) + # Or maybe at the n'th occurrence of the character typed. + pos=${BUFFER[(in:nchar:)${KEYS[-1]}]} + if [[ pos -gt curs ]] + then + CURSOR=$pos + break + fi + ;& + (*) + # Or else at the previous position. + CURSOR=$curs + esac + done + fi + fi fi fi return 0 } delete-backward-and-predict() { - emulate -L zsh if [[ -n "$LBUFFER" ]] then + setopt localoptions noshwordsplit noksharrays + if [[ $LBUFFER = *$'\012'* ]] then + # Editing a multiline buffer, it's unlikely prediction is wanted + zle .$WIDGET "$@" # If the last widget was e.g. a motion, then probably the intent is # to actually edit the line, not change the search prefix. - if [[ $LASTWIDGET == (self-insert|magic-space|backward-delete-char) ]] + elif [[ $LASTWIDGET == (self-insert|magic-space|backward-delete-char) ]] then ((--CURSOR)) zle .history-beginning-search-forward || RBUFFER="" return 0 else - # Depending on preference, you might call "predict-off" here, - # and also set up forward deletions to turn off prediction. + # Depending on preference, you might call "predict-off" here. LBUFFER="$LBUFFER[1,-2]" fi fi } +delete-no-predict() { + [[ $WIDGET != delete-char-or-list || -n $RBUFFER ]] && predict-off + zle .$WIDGET "$@" +} + +# This is a helper function for autocompletion to prevent long lists +# of matches from forcing a "do you wish to see all ...?" prompt. + +predict-limit-list() { + if (( compstate[list_lines]+BUFFERLINES > LINES || + ( compstate[list_max] != 0 && + compstate[nmatches] > compstate[list_max] ) )) + then + compstate[list]='' + elif zstyle -t ":completion:predict::::" list always + then + compstate[list]='force list' + fi +} + +# Handle zsh autoloading conventions [[ -o kshautoload ]] || predict-on "$@" |