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# Reedline, Nu's line editor |
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Nushell's line editor [Reedline](https://github.com/nushell/reedline) is a |
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cross-platform line reader designed to be modular and flexible. The engine is |
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in charge of controlling the command history, validations, completions, hints |
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and screen paint. |
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## Configuration |
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### Editing mode |
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Reedline allows you to edit text using two modes: vi and emacs. If not |
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specified, the default edit mode is emacs mode. In order to select your |
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favorite you need to modify your config file and write down your preferred |
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mode. |
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For example: |
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
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... |
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edit_mode: emacs |
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... |
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} |
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``` |
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#### Default keybindings |
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Each edit mode comes with the usual keybinding for vi and emacs text editing. |
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Emacs and Vi Insert keybindings |
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| Key | Event | |
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| ----------- | --------------------- | |
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| Esc | Esc | |
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| Backspace | Backspace | |
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| End | Move to end of line | |
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| End | Complete history hint | |
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| Home | Move to line start | |
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| Ctr + c | Cancel current line | |
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| Ctr + l | Clear screen | |
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| Ctr + r | Search history | |
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| Ctr + Right | Complete history word | |
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| Ctr + Right | Move word right | |
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| Ctr + Left | Move word left | |
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| Up | Move menu up | |
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| Up | Move up | |
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| Down | Move menu down | |
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| Down | Move down | |
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| Left | Move menu left | |
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| Left | Move left | |
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| Right | History hint complete | |
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| Right | Move menu right | |
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| Right | Move right | |
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| Ctr + b | Move menu left | |
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| Ctr + b | Move left | |
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| Ctr + f | History hint complete | |
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| Ctr + f | Move menu right | |
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| Ctr + f | Move right | |
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| Ctr + p | Move menu up | |
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| Ctr + p | Move up | |
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| Ctr + n | Move menu down | |
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| Ctr + n | Move down | |
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Vi Normal keybindings |
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| Key | Event | |
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| ------- | ------------------- | |
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| Ctr + c | Cancel current line | |
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| Ctr + l | Clear screen | |
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| Up | Move menu up | |
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| Up | Move up | |
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| Down | Move menu down | |
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| Down | Move down | |
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| Left | Move menu left | |
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| Left | Move left | |
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| Right | Move menu right | |
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| Right | Move right | |
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Besides the previous keybindings, while in Vi normal mode you can use the classic |
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vi mode of executing actions by selecting a motion or an action. The available |
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options for the combinations are: |
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Vi Normal motions |
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| Key | motion | |
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| --- | ----------------- | |
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| w | Word | |
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| d | Line end | |
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| 0 | Line start | |
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| $ | Line end | |
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| f | Right until char | |
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| t | Right before char | |
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| F | Left until char | |
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| T | Left before char | |
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Vi Normal actions |
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| Key | action | |
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| --- | ------------------------------- | |
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| d | Delete | |
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| p | Paste after | |
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| P | Paste before | |
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| h | Move left | |
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| l | Move right | |
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| j | Move down | |
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| k | Move up | |
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| w | Move word right | |
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| b | Move word left | |
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| i | Enter Vi insert at current char | |
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| a | Enter Vi insert after char | |
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| 0 | Move to start of line | |
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| ^ | Move to start of line | |
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| $ | Move to end of line | |
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| u | Undo | |
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| c | Change | |
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| x | Delete char | |
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| s | History search | |
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| D | Delete to end | |
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| A | Append to end | |
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### Command history |
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As mentioned before, Reedline manages and stores all the commands that are |
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edited and sent to Nushell. To configure the max number of records that |
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Reedline should store you will need to adjust this value in your config file: |
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
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... |
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history: { |
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... |
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max_size: 1000 |
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... |
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} |
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... |
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} |
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``` |
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### Customizing your prompt |
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Reedline prompt is also highly customizable. In order to construct your perfect |
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prompt, you could define the next environment variables in your config file: |
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```nu |
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# Use nushell functions to define your right and left prompt |
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def create_left_prompt [] { |
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let path_segment = ($env.PWD) |
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$path_segment |
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} |
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def create_right_prompt [] { |
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let time_segment = ([ |
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(date now | format date '%m/%d/%Y %r') |
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] | str join) |
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$time_segment |
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} |
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$env.PROMPT_COMMAND = { create_left_prompt } |
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$env.PROMPT_COMMAND_RIGHT = { create_right_prompt } |
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``` |
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::: tip |
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You don't have to define the environment variables using Nushell |
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functions. You can use simple strings to define them. |
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::: |
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You can also customize the prompt indicator for the line editor by modifying |
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the next env variables. |
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```nu |
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$env.PROMPT_INDICATOR = "〉" |
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$env.PROMPT_INDICATOR_VI_INSERT = ": " |
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$env.PROMPT_INDICATOR_VI_NORMAL = "〉" |
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$env.PROMPT_MULTILINE_INDICATOR = "::: " |
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``` |
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::: tip |
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The prompt indicators are environment variables that represent the |
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state of the prompt |
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::: |
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## Keybindings |
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Reedline keybindings are powerful constructs that let you build chains of |
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events that can be triggered with a specific combination of keys. |
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For example, let's say that you would like to map the completion menu to the |
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`Ctrl + t` keybinding (default is `tab`). You can add the next entry to your |
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config file. |
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
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... |
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keybindings: [ |
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{ |
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name: completion_menu |
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modifier: control |
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keycode: char_t |
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mode: emacs |
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event: { send: menu name: completion_menu } |
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} |
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] |
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... |
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} |
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``` |
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After loading this new `config.nu`, your new keybinding (`Ctrl + t`) will open |
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the completion command. |
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Each keybinding requires the next elements: |
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- name: Unique name for your keybinding for easy reference in `$config.keybindings` |
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- modifier: A key modifier for the keybinding. The options are: |
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- none |
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- control |
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- alt |
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- shift |
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- shift_alt |
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- alt_shift |
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- control_alt |
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- alt_control |
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- control_shift |
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- shift_control |
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- control_alt_shift |
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- control_shift_alt |
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- keycode: This represent the key to be pressed |
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- mode: emacs, vi_insert, vi_normal (a single string or a list. e.g. |
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[`vi_insert` `vi_normal`]) |
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- event: The type of event that is going to be sent by the keybinding. The |
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options are: |
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- send |
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- edit |
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- until |
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::: tip |
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All of the available modifiers, keycodes and events can be found with |
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the command [`keybindings list`](/commands/docs/keybindings_list.md) |
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::: |
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::: tip |
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The keybindings added to `vi_insert` mode will be available when the |
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line editor is in insert mode (when you can write text), and the keybindings |
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marked with `vi_normal` mode will be available when in normal (when the cursor |
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moves using h, j, k or l) |
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::: |
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The event section of the keybinding entry is where the actions to be performed |
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are defined. In this field you can use either a record or a list of records. |
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Something like this |
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```nu |
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... |
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event: { send: Enter } |
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... |
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``` |
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or |
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```nu |
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... |
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event: [ |
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{ edit: Clear } |
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{ send: Enter } |
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] |
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... |
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``` |
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The first keybinding example shown in this page follows the first case; a |
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single event is sent to the engine. |
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The next keybinding is an example of a series of events sent to the engine. It |
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first clears the prompt, inserts a string and then enters that value |
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
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... |
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keybindings: [ |
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{ |
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name: change_dir_with_fzf |
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modifier: CONTROL |
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keycode: Char_t |
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mode: emacs |
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event:[ |
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{ edit: Clear } |
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{ edit: InsertString, |
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value: "cd (ls | where type == dir | each { |it| $it.name} | str join (char nl) | fzf | decode utf-8 | str trim)" |
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} |
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{ send: Enter } |
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] |
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} |
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... |
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} |
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``` |
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One disadvantage of the previous keybinding is the fact that the inserted text |
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will be processed by the validator and saved in the history, making the |
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keybinding a bit slow and populating the command history with the same command. |
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For that reason there is the `executehostcommand` type of event. The next |
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example does the same as the previous one in a simpler way, sending a single |
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event to the engine |
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
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... |
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keybindings: [ |
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{ |
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name: change_dir_with_fzf |
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modifier: CONTROL |
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keycode: Char_y |
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mode: emacs |
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event: { |
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send: executehostcommand, |
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cmd: "cd (ls | where type == dir | each { |it| $it.name} | str join (char nl) | fzf | decode utf-8 | str trim)" |
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} |
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} |
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] |
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... |
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} |
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``` |
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Before we continue you must have noticed that the syntax changes for edits and |
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sends, and for that reason it is important to explain them a bit more. A `send` |
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is all the `Reedline` events that can be processed by the engine and an `edit` |
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are all the `EditCommands` that can be processed by the engine. |
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### Send type |
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To find all the available options for `send` you can use |
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```nu |
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keybindings list | where type == events |
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``` |
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And the syntax for `send` events is the next one |
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```nu |
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... |
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event: { send: <NAME OF EVENT FROM LIST> } |
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... |
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``` |
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::: tip |
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You can write the name of the events with capital letters. The |
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keybinding parser is case insensitive |
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::: |
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There are two exceptions to this rule: the `Menu` and `ExecuteHostCommand`. |
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Those two events require an extra field to be complete. The `Menu` needs the |
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name of the menu to be activated (completion_menu or history_menu) |
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```nu |
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... |
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event: { |
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send: menu |
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name: completion_menu |
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} |
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... |
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``` |
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and the `ExecuteHostCommand` requires a valid command that will be sent to the |
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engine |
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```nu |
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... |
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event: { |
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send: executehostcommand |
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cmd: "cd ~" |
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} |
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... |
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``` |
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It is worth mentioning that in the events list you will also see `Edit([])`, |
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`Multiple([])` and `UntilFound([])`. These options are not available for the |
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parser since they are constructed based on the keybinding definition. For |
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example, a `Multiple([])` event is built for you when defining a list of |
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records in the keybinding's event. An `Edit([])` event is the same as the |
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`edit` type that was mentioned. And the `UntilFound([])` event is the same as |
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the `until` type mentioned before. |
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### Edit type |
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The `edit` type is the simplification of the `Edit([])` event. The `event` type |
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simplifies defining complex editing events for the keybindings. To list the |
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available options you can use the next command |
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```nu |
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keybindings list | where type == edits |
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``` |
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The usual syntax for an `edit` is the next one |
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```nu |
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... |
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event: { edit: <NAME OF EDIT FROM LIST> } |
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... |
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``` |
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The syntax for the edits in the list that have a `()` changes a little bit. |
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Since those edits require an extra value to be fully defined. For example, if |
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we would like to insert a string where the prompt is located, then you will |
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have to use |
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```nu |
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... |
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event: { |
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edit: insertstring |
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value: "MY NEW STRING" |
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} |
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... |
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``` |
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or say you want to move right until the first `S` |
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```nu |
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... |
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event: { |
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edit: moverightuntil |
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value: "S" |
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} |
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... |
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``` |
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As you can see, these two types will allow you to construct any type of |
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keybinding that you require |
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### Until type |
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To complete this keybinding tour we need to discuss the `until` type for event. |
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As you have seen so far, you can send a single event or a list of events. And |
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as we have seen, when a list of events is sent, each and every one of them is |
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processed. |
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However, there may be cases when you want to assign different events to the |
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same keybinding. This is especially useful with Nushell menus. For example, say |
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you still want to activate your completion menu with `Ctrl + t` but you also |
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want to move to the next element in the menu once it is activated using the |
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same keybinding. |
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For these cases, we have the `until` keyword. The events listed inside the |
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until event will be processed one by one with the difference that as soon as |
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one is successful, the event processing is stopped. |
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The next keybinding represents this case. |
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
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... |
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keybindings: [ |
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{ |
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name: completion_menu |
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modifier: control |
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keycode: char_t |
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mode: emacs |
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event: { |
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until: [ |
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{ send: menu name: completion_menu } |
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{ send: menunext } |
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] |
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} |
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} |
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] |
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... |
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} |
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``` |
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The previous keybinding will first try to open a completion menu. If the menu |
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is not active, it will activate it and send a success signal. If the keybinding |
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is pressed again, since there is an active menu, then the next event it will |
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send is MenuNext, which means that it will move the selector to the next |
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element in the menu. |
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As you can see the `until` keyword allows us to define two events for the same |
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keybinding. At the moment of this writing, only the Menu events allow this type |
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of layering. The other non menu event types will always return a success value, |
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meaning that the `until` event will stop as soon as it reaches the command. |
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For example, the next keybinding will always send a `down` because that event |
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is always successful |
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
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... |
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keybindings: [ |
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{ |
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name: completion_menu |
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modifier: control |
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keycode: char_t |
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mode: emacs |
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event: { |
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until: [ |
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{ send: down } |
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{ send: menu name: completion_menu } |
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{ send: menunext } |
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] |
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} |
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} |
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] |
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|
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... |
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} |
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``` |
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### Removing a default keybinding |
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If you want to remove a certain default keybinding without replacing it with a different action, you can set `event: null`. |
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e.g. to disable screen clearing with `Ctrl + l` for all edit modes |
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
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... |
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keybindings: [ |
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{ |
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modifier: control |
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keycode: char_l |
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mode: [emacs, vi_normal, vi_insert] |
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event: null |
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} |
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] |
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|
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... |
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} |
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``` |
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### Troubleshooting keybinding problems |
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Your terminal environment may not always propagate your key combinations on to nushell the way you expect it to. |
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You can use the command [`keybindings listen`](/commands/docs/keybindings_listen.md) to figure out if certain keypresses are actually received by nushell, and how. |
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## Menus |
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Thanks to Reedline, Nushell has menus that can help you with your day to day |
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shell scripting. Next we present the default menus that are always available |
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when using Nushell |
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### Help menu |
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The help menu is there to ease your transition into Nushell. Say you are |
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putting together an amazing pipeline and then you forgot the internal command |
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that would reverse a string for you. Instead of deleting your pipe, you can |
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activate the help menu with `F1`. Once active just type keywords for the |
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command you are looking for and the menu will show you commands that match your |
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input. The matching is done on the name of the commands or the commands |
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description. |
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To navigate the menu you can select the next element by using `tab`, you can |
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scroll the description by pressing left or right and you can even paste into |
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the line the available command examples. |
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The help menu can be configured by modifying the next parameters |
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|
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```nu |
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$env.config = { |
|
... |
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|
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menus = [ |
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... |
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{ |
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name: help_menu |
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only_buffer_difference: true # Search is done on the text written after activating the menu |
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marker: "? " # Indicator that appears with the menu is active |
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type: { |
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layout: description # Type of menu |
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columns: 4 # Number of columns where the options are displayed |
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col_width: 20 # Optional value. If missing all the screen width is used to calculate column width |
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col_padding: 2 # Padding between columns |
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selection_rows: 4 # Number of rows allowed to display found options |
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description_rows: 10 # Number of rows allowed to display command description |
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} |
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style: { |
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text: green # Text style |
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selected_text: green_reverse # Text style for selected option |
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description_text: yellow # Text style for description |
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} |
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} |
|
... |
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] |
|
... |
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``` |
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|
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### Completion menu |
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|
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The completion menu is a context sensitive menu that will present suggestions |
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based on the status of the prompt. These suggestions can range from path |
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suggestions to command alternatives. While writing a command, you can activate |
|
the menu to see available flags for an internal command. Also, if you have |
|
defined your custom completions for external commands, these will appear in the |
|
menu as well. |
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|
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The completion menu by default is accessed by pressing `tab` and it can be configured by |
|
modifying these values from the config object: |
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|
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```nu |
|
$env.config = { |
|
... |
|
|
|
menus: [ |
|
... |
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{ |
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name: completion_menu |
|
only_buffer_difference: false # Search is done on the text written after activating the menu |
|
marker: "| " # Indicator that appears with the menu is active |
|
type: { |
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layout: columnar # Type of menu |
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columns: 4 # Number of columns where the options are displayed |
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col_width: 20 # Optional value. If missing all the screen width is used to calculate column width |
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col_padding: 2 # Padding between columns |
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} |
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style: { |
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text: green # Text style |
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selected_text: green_reverse # Text style for selected option |
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description_text: yellow # Text style for description |
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} |
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} |
|
... |
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] |
|
... |
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``` |
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|
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By modifying these parameters you can customize the layout of your menu to your |
|
liking. |
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|
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### History menu |
|
|
|
The history menu is a handy way to access the editor history. When activating |
|
the menu (default `Ctrl+r`) the command history is presented in reverse |
|
chronological order, making it extremely easy to select a previous command. |
|
|
|
The history menu can be configured by modifying these values from the config object: |
|
|
|
```nu |
|
$env.config = { |
|
... |
|
|
|
menus = [ |
|
... |
|
{ |
|
name: history_menu |
|
only_buffer_difference: true # Search is done on the text written after activating the menu |
|
marker: "? " # Indicator that appears with the menu is active |
|
type: { |
|
layout: list # Type of menu |
|
page_size: 10 # Number of entries that will presented when activating the menu |
|
} |
|
style: { |
|
text: green # Text style |
|
selected_text: green_reverse # Text style for selected option |
|
description_text: yellow # Text style for description |
|
} |
|
} |
|
... |
|
] |
|
... |
|
``` |
|
|
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When the history menu is activated, it pulls `page_size` records from the |
|
history and presents them in the menu. If there is space in the terminal, when |
|
you press `Ctrl+x` again the menu will pull the same number of records and |
|
append them to the current page. If it isn't possible to present all the pulled |
|
records, the menu will create a new page. The pages can be navigated by |
|
pressing `Ctrl+z` to go to previous page or `Ctrl+x` to go to next page. |
|
|
|
#### Searching the history |
|
|
|
To search in your history you can start typing key words for the command you |
|
are looking for. Once the menu is activated, anything that you type will be |
|
replaced by the selected command from your history. for example, say that you |
|
have already typed this |
|
|
|
```nu |
|
let a = () |
|
``` |
|
|
|
you can place the cursor inside the `()` and activate the menu. You can filter |
|
the history by typing key words and as soon as you select an entry, the typed |
|
words will be replaced |
|
|
|
```nu |
|
let a = (ls | where size > 10MiB) |
|
``` |
|
|
|
#### Menu quick selection |
|
|
|
Another nice feature of the menu is the ability to quick select something from |
|
it. Say you have activated your menu and it looks like this |
|
|
|
```nu |
|
> |
|
0: ls | where size > 10MiB |
|
1: ls | where size > 20MiB |
|
2: ls | where size > 30MiB |
|
3: ls | where size > 40MiB |
|
``` |
|
|
|
Instead of pressing down to select the fourth entry, you can type `!3` and |
|
press enter. This will insert the selected text in the prompt position, saving |
|
you time scrolling down the menu. |
|
|
|
History search and quick selection can be used together. You can activate the |
|
menu, do a quick search, and then quick select using the quick selection |
|
character. |
|
|
|
### User defined menus |
|
|
|
In case you find that the default menus are not enough for you and you have |
|
the need to create your own menu, Nushell can help you with that. |
|
|
|
In order to add a new menu that fulfills your needs, you can use one of the default |
|
layouts as a template. The templates available in nushell are columnar, list or |
|
description. |
|
|
|
The columnar menu will show you data in a columnar fashion adjusting the column |
|
number based on the size of the text displayed in your columns. |
|
|
|
The list type of menu will always display suggestions as a list, giving you the |
|
option to select values using `!` plus number combination. |
|
|
|
The description type will give you more space to display a description for some |
|
values, together with extra information that could be inserted into the buffer. |
|
|
|
Let's say we want to create a menu that displays all the variables created |
|
during your session, we are going to call it `vars_menu`. This menu will use a |
|
list layout (layout: list). To search for values, we want to use only the things |
|
that are written after the menu has been activated (only_buffer_difference: |
|
true). |
|
|
|
With that in mind, the desired menu would look like this |
|
|
|
```nu |
|
$env.config = { |
|
... |
|
|
|
menus = [ |
|
... |
|
{ |
|
name: vars_menu |
|
only_buffer_difference: true |
|
marker: "# " |
|
type: { |
|
layout: list |
|
page_size: 10 |
|
} |
|
style: { |
|
text: green |
|
selected_text: green_reverse |
|
description_text: yellow |
|
} |
|
source: { |buffer, position| |
|
$nu.scope.vars |
|
| where name =~ $buffer |
|
| sort-by name |
|
| each { |it| {value: $it.name description: $it.type} } |
|
} |
|
} |
|
... |
|
] |
|
... |
|
``` |
|
|
|
As you can see, the new menu is identical to the `history_menu` previously |
|
described. The only huge difference is the new field called [`source`](/commands/docs/source.md). The |
|
[`source`](/commands/docs/source.md) field is a nushell definition of the values you want to display in the |
|
menu. For this menu we are extracting the data from `$nu.scope.vars` and we |
|
are using it to create records that will be used to populate the menu. |
|
|
|
The required structure for the record is the next one |
|
|
|
```nu |
|
{ |
|
value: # The value that will be inserted in the buffer |
|
description: # Optional. Description that will be display with the selected value |
|
span: { # Optional. Span indicating what section of the string will be replaced by the value |
|
start: |
|
end: |
|
} |
|
extra: [string] # Optional. A list of strings that will be displayed with the selected value. Only works with a description menu |
|
} |
|
``` |
|
|
|
For the menu to display something, at least the `value` field has to be present |
|
in the resulting record. |
|
|
|
In order to make the menu interactive, these two variables are available in |
|
the block: `$buffer` and `$position`. The `$buffer` contains the value captured |
|
by the menu, when the option `only_buffer_difference` is true, `$buffer` is the |
|
text written after the menu was activated. If `only_buffer_difference` is |
|
false, `$buffer` is all the string in line. The `$position` variable can be |
|
used to create replacement spans based on the idea you had for your menu. The |
|
value of `$position` changes based on whether `only_buffer_difference` is true |
|
or false. When true, `$position` is the starting position in the string where |
|
text was inserted after the menu was activated. When the value is false, |
|
`$position` indicates the actual cursor position. |
|
|
|
Using this information, you can design your menu to present the information you |
|
require and to replace that value in the location you need it. The only thing |
|
extra that you need to play with your menu is to define a keybinding that will |
|
activate your brand new menu. |
|
|
|
### Menu keybindings |
|
|
|
In case you want to change the default way both menus are activated, you can |
|
change that by defining new keybindings. For example, the next two keybindings |
|
assign the completion and history menu to `Ctrl+t` and `Ctrl+y` respectively |
|
|
|
```nu |
|
$env.config = { |
|
... |
|
|
|
keybindings: [ |
|
{ |
|
name: completion_menu |
|
modifier: control |
|
keycode: char_t |
|
mode: [vi_insert vi_normal] |
|
event: { |
|
until: [ |
|
{ send: menu name: completion_menu } |
|
{ send: menupagenext } |
|
] |
|
} |
|
} |
|
{ |
|
name: history_menu |
|
modifier: control |
|
keycode: char_y |
|
mode: [vi_insert vi_normal] |
|
event: { |
|
until: [ |
|
{ send: menu name: history_menu } |
|
{ send: menupagenext } |
|
] |
|
} |
|
} |
|
] |
|
|
|
... |
|
} |
|
``` |
|
|