From 2102d10896fe14e912ed6ed8075bb0ddd3a5bc6a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Markus=20F=C3=A6revaag?= Date: Wed, 1 Nov 2017 22:03:34 +0900 Subject: [PATCH] [wd] Update wd plugin to latest version (#6371) * [wd] Update wd plugin to v0.4.3 * [wd] Update wd plugin to v0.4.4 --- plugins/wd/README.md | 23 ++++++++++----- plugins/wd/_wd.sh | 21 +++++++++++++- plugins/wd/wd.sh | 67 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------------- 3 files changed, 78 insertions(+), 33 deletions(-) diff --git a/plugins/wd/README.md b/plugins/wd/README.md index ed149eb3..b1deeffd 100644 --- a/plugins/wd/README.md +++ b/plugins/wd/README.md @@ -3,16 +3,17 @@ wd [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/mfaerevaag/wd.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/mfaerevaag/wd) -`wd` (*warp directory*) lets you jump to custom directories in zsh, without using `cd`. Why? Because `cd` seems ineffecient when the folder is frequently visited or has a long path. +`wd` (*warp directory*) lets you jump to custom directories in zsh, without using `cd`. Why? Because `cd` seems inefficient when the folder is frequently visited or has a long path. -*NOTE*: If you are not using zsh, check out the `ruby` branch which has `wd` implemented as a gem. +![tty.gif](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mfaerevaag/wd/master/tty.gif) +*NEWS*: If you are not using zsh, check out the c-port, [wd-c](https://github.com/mfaerevaag/wd-c), which works with all shells using wrapper functions. ### Setup ### oh-my-zsh -`wd` comes bundles with [oh-my-zshell](https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh)! +`wd` comes bundled with [oh-my-zshell](https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh)! Just add the plugin in your `~/.zshrc` file: @@ -27,6 +28,10 @@ Run either in terminal: * `wget --no-check-certificate https://github.com/mfaerevaag/wd/raw/master/install.sh -O - | sh` +##### Arch ([AUR](https://aur.archlinux.org/)) + + # yaourt -S zsh-plugin-wd-git + #### Manual @@ -48,7 +53,7 @@ Run either in terminal: #### Completion -If you're NOT using [oh-my-zsh](https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh) and you want to utelize the zsh-completion feature, you will also need to add the path to your `wd` installation (`~/bin/wd` if you used the automatic installer) to your `fpath`. E.g. in your `~/.zshrc`: +If you're NOT using [oh-my-zsh](https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh) and you want to utilize the zsh-completion feature, you will also need to add the path to your `wd` installation (`~/bin/wd` if you used the automatic installer) to your `fpath`. E.g. in your `~/.zshrc`: fpath=(~/path/to/wd $fpath) @@ -66,7 +71,9 @@ Also, you may have to force a rebuild of `zcompdump` by running: If a warp point with the same name exists, use `add!` to overwrite it. - Note, a warp point cannot contain colons, or only consist of only spaces and dots. The first will conflict in how `wd` stores the warp points, and the second will conflict other features, as below. + Note, a warp point cannot contain colons, or only consist of only spaces and dots. The first will conflict in how `wd` stores the warp points, and the second will conflict with other features, as below. + + You can omit point name to use the current directory's name instead. * From an other directory (not necessarily), warp to `foo` with: @@ -84,6 +91,8 @@ Also, you may have to force a rebuild of `zcompdump` by running: $ wd rm foo + You can omit point name to use the current directory's name instead. + * List all warp points (stored in `~/.warprc`): $ wd list @@ -143,8 +152,8 @@ The project is licensed under the [MIT-license](https://github.com/mfaerevaag/wd ### Finally -If you have issues, feedback or improvements, don't hesitate to report it or submit a pull-request. In the case of an issue, we would much appreciate if you would include a failing test in `test/tests.sh`. Explanation on how to run the tests, read the section "Testing" in this README. +If you have issues, feedback or improvements, don't hesitate to report it or submit a pull-request. In the case of an issue, we would much appreciate if you would include a failing test in `test/tests.sh`. For an explanation on how to run the tests, read the section "Testing" in this README. -Credit to [altschuler](https://github.com/altschuler) for awesome idea. +Credit to [altschuler](https://github.com/altschuler) for an awesome idea. Hope you enjoy! diff --git a/plugins/wd/_wd.sh b/plugins/wd/_wd.sh index b67f4a1e..65fa1ddd 100644 --- a/plugins/wd/_wd.sh +++ b/plugins/wd/_wd.sh @@ -16,6 +16,19 @@ function _wd() { warp_points=( "${(f)mapfile[$CONFIG]//$HOME/~}" ) + typeset -A points + while read -r line + do + arr=(${(s,:,)line}) + name=${arr[1]} + path=${arr[2]} + + # replace ~ from path to fix completion (#17) + path=${path/#\~/$HOME} + + points[$name]=$path + done < $CONFIG + commands=( 'add:Adds the current working directory to your warp points' 'add!:Overwrites existing warp point' @@ -34,13 +47,15 @@ function _wd() { '1: :->first_arg' \ '2: :->second_arg' && ret=0 + local target=$words[2] + case $state in first_arg) _describe -t warp_points "Warp points" warp_points && ret=0 _describe -t commands "Commands" commands && ret=0 ;; second_arg) - case $words[2] in + case $target in add\!|rm) _describe -t points "Warp points" warp_points && ret=0 ;; @@ -56,6 +71,10 @@ function _wd() { path) _describe -t points "Warp points" warp_points && ret=0 ;; + *) + # complete sub directories from the warp point + _path_files -W "(${points[$target]})" -/ && ret=0 + ;; esac ;; esac diff --git a/plugins/wd/wd.sh b/plugins/wd/wd.sh index cf54713b..c330dd35 100755 --- a/plugins/wd/wd.sh +++ b/plugins/wd/wd.sh @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ # @github.com/mfaerevaag/wd # version -readonly WD_VERSION=0.4.2 +readonly WD_VERSION=0.4.4 # colors readonly WD_BLUE="\033[96m" @@ -72,25 +72,28 @@ wd_print_msg() wd_print_usage() { cat <<- EOF -Usage: wd [command] +Usage: wd [command] [point] Commands: - add Adds the current working directory to your warp points - add! Overwrites existing warp point - rm Removes the given warp point - show Print warp points to current directory - show Print path to given warp point - list Print all stored warp points -ls Show files from given warp point -path Show the path to given warp point - clean! Remove points warping to nonexistent directories + add Adds the current working directory to your warp points + add Adds the current working directory to your warp points with current directory's name + add! Overwrites existing warp point + add! Overwrites existing warp point with current directory's name + rm Removes the given warp point + rm Removes the given warp point with current directory's name + show Print path to given warp point + show Print warp points to current directory + list Print all stored warp points + ls Show files from given warp point (ls) + path Show the path to given warp point (pwd) + clean! Remove points warping to nonexistent directories - -v | --version Print version - -d | --debug Exit after execution with exit codes (for testing) - -c | --config Specify config file (default ~/.warprc) - -q | --quiet Suppress all output + -v | --version Print version + -d | --debug Exit after execution with exit codes (for testing) + -c | --config Specify config file (default ~/.warprc) + -q | --quiet Suppress all output - help Show this extremely helpful text + help Show this extremely helpful text EOF } @@ -131,10 +134,11 @@ wd_getdir() wd_warp() { local point=$1 + local sub=$2 if [[ $point =~ "^\.+$" ]] then - if [ $#1 < 2 ] + if [[ $#1 < 2 ]] then wd_exit_warn "Warping to current directory?" else @@ -143,7 +147,12 @@ wd_warp() fi elif [[ ${points[$point]} != "" ]] then - cd ${points[$point]/#\~/$HOME} + if [[ $sub != "" ]] + then + cd ${points[$point]/#\~/$HOME}/$sub + else + cd ${points[$point]/#\~/$HOME} + fi else wd_exit_fail "Unknown warp point '${point}'" fi @@ -154,6 +163,11 @@ wd_add() local force=$1 local point=$2 + if [[ $point == "" ]] + then + point=$(basename $PWD) + fi + if [[ $point =~ "^[\.]+$" ]] then wd_exit_fail "Warp point cannot be just dots" @@ -163,10 +177,7 @@ wd_add() elif [[ $point == *:* ]] then wd_exit_fail "Warp point cannot contain colons" - elif [[ $point == "" ]] - then - wd_exit_fail "Warp point cannot be empty" - elif [[ ${points[$2]} == "" ]] || $force + elif [[ ${points[$point]} == "" ]] || $force then wd_remove $point > /dev/null printf "%q:%s\n" "${point}" "${PWD/#$HOME/~}" >> $WD_CONFIG @@ -185,6 +196,11 @@ wd_remove() { local point=$1 + if [[ $point == "" ]] + then + point=$(basename $PWD) + fi + if [[ ${points[$point]} != "" ]] then local config_tmp=$WD_CONFIG.tmp @@ -294,7 +310,7 @@ wd_clean() { key=${arr[1]} val=${arr[2]} - if [ -d "$val" ] + if [ -d "${val/#\~/$HOME}" ] then wd_tmp=$wd_tmp"\n"`echo $line` else @@ -356,7 +372,8 @@ while read -r line do arr=(${(s,:,)line}) key=${arr[1]} - val=${arr[2]} + # join the rest, in case the path contains colons + val=${(j,:,)arr[2,-1]} points[$key]=$val done < $WD_CONFIG @@ -424,7 +441,7 @@ else break ;; *) - wd_warp $o + wd_warp $o $2 break ;; --)