.nr PI 0 .nr LL 6.5i .if \n(.g \{\ .if "\*(.T"ascii" .ftr C R .if "\*(.T"latin1" .ftr C R .if "\*(.T"html" .nr HTML 1 .nr De \n[.ss] .\} .\" ----- macro defintions ----- .\" Ds/De: start/end of example .\" Sh: section header .\" XXX: It seems we can't use the same definition for both pdf and html .\" (at least with groff-12.3.0). .\" .\" for HTML output .ie \n[HTML] \{\ .de Ds .DS I .5i .ft C .. .de De .DE .ft R .. .de Sh .NH \\$1 .. .\} .\" for other output (such as PDF) .el \{\ .de Ds .DS I .5i .ft C .ps 9 .vs 11 .ss 11 .. .de De .DE .ft R .ps .vs .ie \n(.g .ss \n(De .el .ss .. .de Sh .NH .XN \\$1 .. .\} .\" .\" ----- Cover page ----- .if !\n[HTML] \{\ .nr HM 4i .ce 99 .ps 18 .vs 20 .ss 20 \f3An Introduction to the Z Shell\fP .ps 14 .vs 16 .ss 16 \f2Paul Falstad pf@software.com Bas de Bakker bas@phys.uva.nl\fP .ce 0 .nr HM 1i .pn 1 .bp .\" This blank page on the reverse of the cover. .sv |1i .pn 1 .bp .\} .\" .\" ----- main text ----- .TL An Introduction to the Z Shell .AU Paul Falstad pf@software.com .AU Bas de Bakker bas@phys.uva.nl .PP .Sh "Introduction" .PP \fBzsh\fP is a shell designed for interactive use, although it is also a powerful scripting language. Many of the useful features of bash, ksh, and tcsh were incorporated into \fBzsh\fP; many original features were added. This document details some of the unique features of \fBzsh\fP. It assumes basic knowledge of the standard UNIX shells; the intent is to show a reader already familiar with one of the other major shells what makes \fBzsh\fP more useful or more powerful. This document is not at all comprehensive; read the manual entry for a description of the shell that is complete and concise, although somewhat overwhelming and devoid of examples. .PP The text will frequently mention options that you can set to change the behaviour of \fBzsh\fP. You can set these options with the command .Ds %\0setopt\0\fIoptionname\fC .De and unset them again with .Ds %\0unsetopt\0\fIoptionname\fC .De Case is ignored in option names, as are embedded underscores. .Sh "Filename Generation" .PP Otherwise known as \fIglobbing\fP, filename generation is quite extensive in \fBzsh\fP. Of course, it has all the basics: .Ds %\0ls 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 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 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 %\0ls\0*.c foo.c\0\0q.c %\0ls\0*.[co] bar.o\0\0\0foo.c\0\0\0foo.o\0\0\0main.o\0\0q.c %\0ls\0foo.? foo.c\0\0foo.o %\0ls\0*.[^c] bar.o\0\0\0file.h\0\0foo.o\0\0\0main.h\0\0main.o %\0ls\0*.[^oh] foo.c\0\0q.c .De Also, if the \fIEXTENDEDGLOB\fP option is set, some new features are activated. For example, the \fC^\fP character negates the pattern following it: .Ds %\0setopt\0extendedglob %\0ls\0-d\0^*.c Makefile\0\0\0file.pro\0\0\0link\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff\0\0run2\0\0\0\0\0\0\0run303 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 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 %\0ls\0-d\0^*.* 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 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 %\0ls\0-d\0^Makefile 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 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 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 %\0ls\0-d\0*.^c \&.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 .De An expression of the form \fC<\fIx\fR\-\fIy\fC>\fR matches a range of integers: .Ds %\0ls\0run<200-300> run234\0\0run240 %\0ls\0run<300-400> run303 %\0ls\0run<-200> run123\0\0run2 %\0ls\0run<300-> run303 %\0ls\0run<-> run123\0\0run2\0\0\0\0run234\0\0run240\0\0run303 .De The \fINUMERICGLOBSORT\fP option will sort files with numbers according to the number. This will not work with \fCls\fP as it resorts its arguments: .Ds %\0setopt\0numericglobsort %\0echo\0run<-> run2\0run123\0run234\0run240\0run303 .De Grouping is possible: .Ds %\0ls\0(foo|bar).* bar.o\0\0foo.c\0\0foo.o %\0ls\0*.(c|o|pro) 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 .De Also, the string \fC**/\fP forces a recursive search of subdirectories: .Ds %\0ls\0-R 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 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 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 morestuff: stuff: file\0\0xxx\0\0\0yyy stuff/xxx: foobar stuff/yyy: frobar %\0ls\0**/*bar stuff/xxx/foobar\0\0stuff/yyy/frobar %\0ls\0**/f* 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 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 %\0ls\0*bar* bar.o %\0ls\0**/*bar* bar.o\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/xxx/foobar\0\0stuff/yyy/frobar %\0ls\0stuff/**/*bar* stuff/xxx/foobar\0\0stuff/yyy/frobar .De .PP It is possible to exclude certain files from the patterns using the ~ character. A pattern of the form \fC*.c~bar.c\fP lists all files matching \fC*.c\fP, except for the file \fCbar.c\fP. .Ds %\0ls\0*.c foo.c\0\0\0\0foob.c\0\0\0\0bar.c %\0ls\0*.c~bar.c foo.c\0\0\0\0foob.c %\0ls\0*.c~f* bar.c .De .PP One can add a number of \fIqualifiers\fP to the end of any of these patterns, to restrict matches to certain file types. A qualified pattern is of the form .DS \fIpattern\fC(\fR...\fC)\fR .De with single-character qualifiers inside the parentheses. .Ds %\0alias\0l='ls\0-dF' %\0l\0* 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 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 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/ 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 %\0l\0*(/) morestuff/\0\0stuff/ %\0l\0*(@) link@ %\0l\0*(*) foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0stuff/ %\0l\0*(x) foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0stuff/ %\0l\0*(X) foo*\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0stuff/ %\0l\0*(R) 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 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/ .De Note that \fC*(x)\fP and \fC*(*)\fP both match executables. \fC*(X)\fP matches files executable by others, as opposed to \fC*(x)\fP, which matches files executable by the owner. \fC*(R)\fP and \fC*(r)\fP match readable files; \fC*(W)\fP and \fC*(w)\fP, which checks for writable files. \fC*(W)\fP is especially important, since it checks for world-writable files: .Ds %\0l\0*(w) 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 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/ %\0l\0*(W) link@\0\0\0run240 %\0l\0-l\0link\0run240 lrwxrwxrwx\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\010\0May\023\018:12\0link\0->\0/usr/bin/ -rw-rw-rw-\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\00\0May\023\018:12\0run240 .De 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: .Ds %\0l\0*(-/) 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/ %\0l\0*(x^@/) foo* .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 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 %\0l\0*(^.) link@\0\0\0\0\0\0\0morestuff/\0\0pipe\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0stuff/ %\0l\0s*(.) 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$1\0passwd.byname } .De This idea has other benefits. By adding a \fC#!\fP header to the files, you can make them double as shell scripts. (Although it is faster to use them as functions, since a separate process is not created.) .Ds %\0ed\0/tmp/funs/yp 25 i #!\0/usr/local/bin/zsh . w 42 q %\0\0cd\0src ~/src> .De the shell will print the current directory in the prompt, using the \fC~\fP character. However, \fBzsh\fP is smarter than most other shells in this respect: .Ds ~/src>\0cd\0~subbarao ~subbarao>\0cd\0~maruchck ~maruchck>\0cd\0lib ~maruchck/lib>\0cd\0fun ~maruchck/lib/fun>\0foo=/usr/princeton/common/src ~maruchck/lib/fun>\0cd\0~foo ~foo>\0cd\0.. /usr/princeton/common>\0cd\0src ~foo>\0cd\0news/nntp ~foo/news/nntp>\0cd\0inews ~foo/news/nntp/inews> .De Note that \fBzsh\fP prints \fIother\fP users' directories in the form \fC~user\fP. Also note that you can set a parameter and use it as a directory name; \fBzsh\fP will act as if \fCfoo\fP is a user with the login directory \fC/usr/princeton/common/src\fP. This is convenient, especially if you're sick of seeing prompts like this: .Ds phoenix:/usr/princeton/common/src/X.V11R4/contrib/clients/xv/docs> .De If you get stuck in this position, you can give the current directory a short name, like this: .Ds /usr/princeton/common/src/news/nntp/inews>\0inews=$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 >(\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 accommodate 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$FOO a:b:c .De .PP \fBHISTFILE\fP is the name of the history file, where the history is saved when a shell exits. .Ds %\0zsh phoenix%\0HISTFILE=/tmp/history phoenix%\0SAVEHIST=20 phoenix%\0echo\0foo foo phoenix%\0date Fri\0May\024\005:39:35\0EDT\01991 phoenix%\0uptime \0\05:39am\0\0up\04\0days,\020:02,\0\040\0users,\0\0load\0average:\02.30,\02.20,\02.00 phoenix%\0exit %\0cat\0/tmp/history HISTFILE=/tmp/history SAVEHIST=20 echo\0foo date uptime exit %\0HISTSIZE=3 %\0history \0\0\028\0\0rm\0/tmp/history \0\0\029\0\0HISTSIZE=3 \0\0\030\0\0history .De If you have several instances of \fBzsh\fP running at the same time, like when using the X window system, it might be preferable to append the history of each shell to a file when a shell exits instead of overwriting the old contents of the file. You can get this behaviour by setting the \fIAPPENDHISTORY\fP option. .PP In \fBzsh\fP, if you say .Ds %\0>file .De the command \fCcat\fP is normally assumed: .Ds %\0>file foo!\0\0\0\0 ^D %\0cat\0file foo! .De Thus, you can view a file simply by typing: .Ds %\0file %\0ls\0-l\0file -rw-r--r--\0\01\0pfalstad\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\00\0May\024\005:41\0file .De If \fCNULLCMD\fP is unset, the shell reports an error if no command is specified (like csh). .Ds %\0unset\0NULLCMD %\0>file zsh:\0redirection\0with\0no\0command .De Actually, \fBREADNULLCMD\fP is used whenever you have a null command reading input from a single file. Thus, you can set \fBREADNULLCMD\fP to \fCmore\fP or \fCless\fP rather than \fCcat\fP. Also, if you set \fBNULLCMD\fP to \fC:\fP for sh compatibility, you can still read files with \fC< file\fP if you leave \fBREADNULLCMD\fP set to \fCmore\fP. .Sh "Prompting" .PP The default prompt for \fBzsh\fP is: .Ds phoenix%\0echo\0$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 superseded 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 !\n[HTML] \{\ .if o \{\ .bp .sv 1i .\} .pn 1 .bp .PX .\}