I use zsh and I want to use a function I wrote to replace cd.
This function gives you the ability to move to a parent directory:
$ pwd
/a/b/c/d
$ cl b
$ pwd
/a/b
You can also move into a subdirectory of a parent directory:
$ pwd
/a/b/c/d
$ cl b/e
$ pwd
/a/b/e
If the first part of the path is not a parent directory, it will just function as normal cd would. I hope that makes sense.
In summary, when in /a/b/c/d, I want to be able to move to /a, /a/b, /a/b/c, all subdirectories of /a/b/c/d and any absolute path starting with /, ~/ or ../ (or ./).
I hope that makes sense.
This is the function I wrote:
cl () {
local first=$( echo $1 | cut -d/ -f1 )
if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
# cl without any arguments moves back to the previous directory
cd - > /dev/null
elif [ -d $first ]; then
# If the first argument is an existing normal directory, move there
cd $1
else
# Otherwise, move to a parent directory
cd ${PWD%/$first/*}/$1
fi
}
There is probably a better way to this (tips are welcome), but I haven't had any problems with this so far.
Now I want to add autocompletion. This is what I have so far:
_cl() {
pth=${words[2]}
opts=""
new=${pth##*/}
[[ "$pth" != *"/"*"/"* ]] && middle="" || middle="${${pth%/*}#*/}/"
if [[ "$pth" != *"/"* ]]; then
# If this is the start of the path
# In this case we should also show the parent directories
opts+=" "
first=""
d="${${PWD#/}%/*}/"
opts+="${d///// }"
dir=$PWD
else
first=${pth%%/*}
if [[ "$first" == "" ]]; then
# path starts with "/"
dir="/$middle"
elif [[ "$first" == "~" ]]; then
# path starts with "~/"
dir="$HOME/$middle"
elif [ -d $first ]; then
# path starts with a directory in the current directory
dir="$PWD/$first/$middle"
else
# path starts with parent directory
dir=${PWD%/$first/*}/$first/$middle
fi
first=$first/
fi
# List al sub directories of the $dir directory
if [ -d "$dir" ]; then
for d in $(ls -a $dir); do
if [ -d $dir/$d ] && [[ "$d" != "." ]] && [[ "$d" != ".." ]]; then
opts+="$first$middle$d/ "
fi
done
fi
_multi_parts / "(${opts})"
return 0
}
compdef _cl cl
Again, probably not the best way to do this, but it works... kinda.
One of the problems is that what I type cl ~/, it replaces it with cl ~/ and does not suggest any directories in my home folder. Is there a way to get this to work?
EDIT
cl () {
local first=$( echo $1 | cut -d/ -f1 )
if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
# cl without any arguments moves back to the previous directory
local pwd_bu=$PWD
[[ $(dirs) == "~" ]] && return 1
while [[ $PWD == $pwd_bu ]]; do
popd >/dev/null
done
local pwd_nw=$PWD
[[ $(dirs) != "~" ]] && popd >/dev/null
pushd $pwd_bu >/dev/null
pushd $pwd_nw >/dev/null
elif [ -d $first ]; then
pushd $1 >/dev/null # If the first argument is an existing normal directory, move there
else
pushd ${PWD%/$first/*}/$1 >/dev/null # Otherwise, move to a parent directory or a child of that parent directory
fi
}
_cl() {
_cd
pth=${words[2]}
opts=""
new=${pth##*/}
local expl
# Generate the visual formatting and store it in `$expl`
_description -V ancestor-directories expl 'ancestor directories'
[[ "$pth" != *"/"*"/"* ]] && middle="" || middle="${${pth%/*}#*/}/"
if [[ "$pth" != *"/"* ]]; then
# If this is the start of the path
# In this case we should also show the parent directories
local ancestor=$PWD:h
while (( $#ancestor > 1 )); do
# -f: Treat this as a file (incl. dirs), so you get proper highlighting.
# -Q: Don't quote (escape) any of the characters.
# -W: Specify the parent of the dir we're adding.
# ${ancestor:h}: The parent ("head") of $ancestor.
# ${ancestor:t}: The short name ("tail") of $ancestor.
compadd "$expl[@]" -fQ -W "${ancestor:h}/" - "${ancestor:t}"
# Move on to the next parent.
ancestor=$ancestor:h
done
else
# $first is the first part of the path the user typed in.
# it it is part of the current direoctory, we know the user is trying to go back to a directory
first=${pth%%/*}
# $middle is the rest of the provided path
if [ ! -d $first ]; then
# path starts with parent directory
dir=${PWD%/$first/*}/$first
first=$first/
# List all sub directories of the $dir/$middle directory
if [ -d "$dir/$middle" ]; then
for d in $(ls -a $dir/$middle); do
if [ -d $dir/$middle/$d ] && [[ "$d" != "." ]] && [[ "$d" != ".." ]]; then
compadd "$expl[@]" -fQ -W $dir/ - $first$middle$d
fi
done
fi
fi
fi
}
compdef _cl cl
This is as far as I got on my own. It does works (kinda) but has a couple of problems:
- When going back to a parent directory, completion mostly works. But when you go to a child of the paretn directory, the suggestions are wrong (they display the full path you have typed, not just the child directory). The result does work
- I use syntax-hightlighting, but the path I type is just white (when using going to a parent directory. the normal cd functions are colored)
- In my zshrc, I have the line:
zstyle ':completion:*' matcher-list 'm:{a-z}={A-Za-z}' '+l:|=* r:|=*'
Whith cd this means I can type "load" and it will complete to "Downloads". With cl, this does not work. Not event when using the normal cd functionality.
Is there a way to fix (some of these) problems?
I hope you guys understand my questions. I find it hard to explain the problem.
Thanks for your help!
See Question&Answers more detail:
os