From 9f883c9b775c5e60d77bd60f8a3472aaa728e105 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tanaka Akira Date: Thu, 23 Mar 2000 04:08:17 +0000 Subject: zsh-workers/10178 --- Doc/Zsh/compsys.yo | 10 ++++++++-- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'Doc') diff --git a/Doc/Zsh/compsys.yo b/Doc/Zsh/compsys.yo index 4dea57109..e7d9fe9e4 100644 --- a/Doc/Zsh/compsys.yo +++ b/Doc/Zsh/compsys.yo @@ -1867,8 +1867,8 @@ on the command line (which may be blank). If given a numeric argument var(N), complete the var(N)th most recently modified file. Note the completion, if any, is always unique. ) -findex(_next_tags (^Xn)) -item(tt(_next_tags (^Xn)))( +findex(_next_tags) +item(tt(_next_tags))( This allows to complete types of matches that are not immediately offered because of the setting of the tt(tag-order) style. After a normal completion was tried, invoking this command makes the matches @@ -1878,6 +1878,12 @@ matches selected by tt(_next_tags), the tt(completer) style should contain tt(_next_tags) as its first string. With that, the normal key binding (normally tt(TAB)) can be used to complete the matches shown after the call to tt(_next_tags). + +Normally, this command is not bound to a key. To invoke it with, say +`tt(^Xn)', one would use: + +example(zle -C _next_tags complete-word _next_tags +bindkey '^Xn' _next_tags) ) findex(_read_comp (^X^R)) item(tt(_read_comp (^X^R)))( -- cgit 1.4.1