1ZSHCOMPCTL(1) General Commands Manual ZSHCOMPCTL(1)
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3
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6 zshcompctl - zsh programmable completion
7
9 This version of zsh has two ways of performing completion of words on
10 the command line. New users of the shell may prefer to use the newer
11 and more powerful system based on shell functions; this is described in
12 zshcompsys(1), and the basic shell mechanisms which support it are
13 described in zshcompwid(1). This manual entry describes the older com‐
14 pctl command.
15 compctl [ -CDT ] options [ command ... ]
16 compctl [ -CDT ] options [ -x pattern options - ... -- ] [ + options [
17 -x ... -- ] ... [+] ] [ command ... ]
18 compctl -M match-specs ...
19 compctl -L [ -CDTM ] [ command ... ]
20 compctl + command ...
21
22 Control the editor's completion behavior according to the supplied set
23 of options. Various editing commands, notably expand-or-complete-word,
24 usually bound to tab, will attempt to complete a word typed by the
25 user, while others, notably delete-char-or-list, usually bound to ^D in
26 EMACS editing mode, list the possibilities; compctl controls what those
27 possibilities are. They may for example be filenames (the most common
28 case, and hence the default), shell variables, or words from a
29 user-specified list.
30
32 Completion of the arguments of a command may be different for each com‐
33 mand or may use the default. The behavior when completing the command
34 word itself may also be separately specified. These correspond to the
35 following flags and arguments, all of which (except for -L) may be com‐
36 bined with any combination of the options described subsequently in the
37 section `Option Flags':
38
39 command ...
40 controls completion for the named commands, which must be listed
41 last on the command line. If completion is attempted for a com‐
42 mand with a pathname containing slashes and no completion defi‐
43 nition is found, the search is retried with the last pathname
44 component. If the command starts with a =, completion is tried
45 with the pathname of the command.
46
47 Any of the command strings may be patterns of the form normally
48 used for filename generation. These should be be quoted to pro‐
49 tect them from immediate expansion; for example the command
50 string 'foo*' arranges for completion of the words of any com‐
51 mand beginning with foo. When completion is attempted, all pat‐
52 tern completions are tried in the reverse order of their defini‐
53 tion until one matches. By default, completion then proceeds as
54 normal, i.e. the shell will try to generate more matches for the
55 specific command on the command line; this can be overridden by
56 including -tn in the flags for the pattern completion.
57
58 Note that aliases are expanded before the command name is deter‐
59 mined unless the COMPLETE_ALIASES option is set. Commands may
60 not be combined with the -C, -D or -T flags.
61
62 -C controls completion when the command word itself is being com‐
63 pleted. If no compctl -C command has been issued, the names of
64 any executable command (whether in the path or specific to the
65 shell, such as aliases or functions) are completed.
66
67 -D controls default completion behavior for the arguments of com‐
68 mands not assigned any special behavior. If no compctl -D com‐
69 mand has been issued, filenames are completed.
70
71 -T supplies completion flags to be used before any other processing
72 is done, even before processing for compctls defined for spe‐
73 cific commands. This is especially useful when combined with
74 extended completion (the -x flag, see the section `Extended Com‐
75 pletion' below). Using this flag you can define default behav‐
76 ior which will apply to all commands without exception, or you
77 can alter the standard behavior for all commands. For example,
78 if your access to the user database is too slow and/or it con‐
79 tains too many users (so that completion after `~' is too slow
80 to be usable), you can use
81
82 compctl -T -x 's[~] C[0,[^/]#]' -k friends -S/ -tn
83
84 to complete the strings in the array friends after a `~'. The
85 C[...] argument is necessary so that this form of ~-completion
86 is not tried after the directory name is finished.
87
88 -L lists the existing completion behavior in a manner suitable for
89 putting into a start-up script; the existing behavior is not
90 changed. Any combination of the above forms, or the -M flag
91 (which must follow the -L flag), may be specified, otherwise all
92 defined completions are listed. Any other flags supplied are
93 ignored.
94
95 no argument
96 If no argument is given, compctl lists all defined completions
97 in an abbreviated form; with a list of options, all completions
98 with those flags set (not counting extended completion) are
99 listed.
100
101 If the + flag is alone and followed immediately by the command list,
102 the completion behavior for all the commands in the list is reset to
103 the default. In other words, completion will subsequently use the
104 options specified by the -D flag.
105
106 The form with -M as the first and only option defines global matching
107 specifications (see zshcompwid). The match specifications given will be
108 used for every completion attempt (only when using compctl, not with
109 the new completion system) and are tried in the order in which they are
110 defined until one generates at least one match. E.g.:
111
112 compctl -M '' 'm:{a-zA-Z}={A-Za-z}'
113
114 This will first try completion without any global match specifications
115 (the empty string) and, if that generates no matches, will try case
116 insensitive completion.
117
119 [ -fcFBdeaRGovNAIOPZEnbjrzu/12 ]
120 [ -k array ] [ -g globstring ] [ -s subststring ]
121 [ -K function ]
122 [ -Q ] [ -P prefix ] [ -S suffix ]
123 [ -W file-prefix ] [ -H num pattern ]
124 [ -q ] [ -X explanation ] [ -Y explanation ]
125 [ -y func-or-var ] [ -l cmd ] [ -h cmd ] [ -U ]
126 [ -t continue ] [ -J name ] [ -V name ]
127 [ -M match-spec ]
128
129 The remaining options specify the type of command arguments to look for
130 during completion. Any combination of these flags may be specified;
131 the result is a sorted list of all the possibilities. The options are
132 as follows.
133
134 Simple Flags
135 These produce completion lists made up by the shell itself:
136
137 -f Filenames and file system paths.
138
139 -/ Just file system paths.
140
141 -c Command names, including aliases, shell functions, builtins and
142 reserved words.
143
144 -F Function names.
145
146 -B Names of builtin commands.
147
148 -m Names of external commands.
149
150 -w Reserved words.
151
152 -a Alias names.
153
154 -R Names of regular (non-global) aliases.
155
156 -G Names of global aliases.
157
158 -d This can be combined with -F, -B, -w, -a, -R and -G to get names
159 of disabled functions, builtins, reserved words or aliases.
160
161 -e This option (to show enabled commands) is in effect by default,
162 but may be combined with -d; -de in combination with -F, -B, -w,
163 -a, -R and -G will complete names of functions, builtins,
164 reserved words or aliases whether or not they are disabled.
165
166 -o Names of shell options (see zshoptions(1)).
167
168 -v Names of any variable defined in the shell.
169
170 -N Names of scalar (non-array) parameters.
171
172 -A Array names.
173
174 -I Names of integer variables.
175
176 -O Names of read-only variables.
177
178 -p Names of parameters used by the shell (including special parame‐
179 ters).
180
181 -Z Names of shell special parameters.
182
183 -E Names of environment variables.
184
185 -n Named directories.
186
187 -b Key binding names.
188
189 -j Job names: the first word of the job leader's command line.
190 This is useful with the kill builtin.
191
192 -r Names of running jobs.
193
194 -z Names of suspended jobs.
195
196 -u User names.
197
198 Flags with Arguments
199 These have user supplied arguments to determine how the list of comple‐
200 tions is to be made up:
201
202 -k array
203 Names taken from the elements of $array (note that the `$' does
204 not appear on the command line). Alternatively, the argument
205 array itself may be a set of space- or comma-separated values in
206 parentheses, in which any delimiter may be escaped with a back‐
207 slash; in this case the argument should be quoted. For example,
208
209 compctl -k "(cputime filesize datasize stacksize
210 coredumpsize resident descriptors)" limit
211
212 -g globstring
213 The globstring is expanded using filename globbing; it should be
214 quoted to protect it from immediate expansion. The resulting
215 filenames are taken as the possible completions. Use `*(/)'
216 instead of `*/' for directories. The fignore special parameter
217 is not applied to the resulting files. More than one pattern
218 may be given separated by blanks. (Note that brace expansion is
219 not part of globbing. Use the syntax `(either|or)' to match
220 alternatives.)
221
222 -s subststring
223 The subststring is split into words and these words are than
224 expanded using all shell expansion mechanisms (see zshexpn(1)).
225 The resulting words are taken as possible completions. The fig‐
226 nore special parameter is not applied to the resulting files.
227 Note that -g is faster for filenames.
228
229 -K function
230 Call the given function to get the completions. Unless the name
231 starts with an underscore, the function is passed two arguments:
232 the prefix and the suffix of the word on which completion is to
233 be attempted, in other words those characters before the cursor
234 position, and those from the cursor position onwards. The whole
235 command line can be accessed with the -c and -l flags of the
236 read builtin. The function should set the variable reply to an
237 array containing the completions (one completion per element);
238 note that reply should not be made local to the function. From
239 such a function the command line can be accessed with the -c and
240 -l flags to the read builtin. For example,
241
242 function whoson { reply=(`users`); }
243 compctl -K whoson talk
244
245 completes only logged-on users after `talk'. Note that `whoson'
246 must return an array, so `reply=`users`' would be incorrect.
247
248 -H num pattern
249 The possible completions are taken from the last num history
250 lines. Only words matching pattern are taken. If num is zero
251 or negative the whole history is searched and if pattern is the
252 empty string all words are taken (as with `*'). A typical use
253 is
254
255 compctl -D -f + -H 0 ''
256
257 which forces completion to look back in the history list for a
258 word if no filename matches.
259
260 Control Flags
261 These do not directly specify types of name to be completed, but manip‐
262 ulate the options that do:
263
264 -Q This instructs the shell not to quote any metacharacters in the
265 possible completions. Normally the results of a completion are
266 inserted into the command line with any metacharacters quoted so
267 that they are interpreted as normal characters. This is appro‐
268 priate for filenames and ordinary strings. However, for special
269 effects, such as inserting a backquoted expression from a com‐
270 pletion array (-k) so that the expression will not be evaluated
271 until the complete line is executed, this option must be used.
272
273 -P prefix
274 The prefix is inserted just before the completed string; any
275 initial part already typed will be completed and the whole pre‐
276 fix ignored for completion purposes. For example,
277
278 compctl -j -P "%" kill
279
280 inserts a `%' after the kill command and then completes job
281 names.
282
283 -S suffix
284 When a completion is found the suffix is inserted after the com‐
285 pleted string. In the case of menu completion the suffix is
286 inserted immediately, but it is still possible to cycle through
287 the list of completions by repeatedly hitting the same key.
288
289 -W file-prefix
290 With directory file-prefix: for command, file, directory and
291 globbing completion (options -c, -f, -/, -g), the file prefix is
292 implicitly added in front of the completion. For example,
293
294 compctl -/ -W ~/Mail maildirs
295
296 completes any subdirectories to any depth beneath the directory
297 ~/Mail, although that prefix does not appear on the command
298 line. The file-prefix may also be of the form accepted by the
299 -k flag, i.e. the name of an array or a literal list in paren‐
300 thesis. In this case all the directories in the list will be
301 searched for possible completions.
302
303 -q If used with a suffix as specified by the -S option, this causes
304 the suffix to be removed if the next character typed is a blank
305 or does not insert anything or if the suffix consists of only
306 one character and the next character typed is the same charac‐
307 ter; this the same rule used for the AUTO_REMOVE_SLASH option.
308 The option is most useful for list separators (comma, colon,
309 etc.).
310
311 -l cmd This option restricts the range of command line words that are
312 considered to be arguments. If combined with one of the
313 extended completion patterns `p[...]', `r[...]', or `R[...]'
314 (see the section `Extended Completion' below) the range is
315 restricted to the range of arguments specified in the brackets.
316 Completion is then performed as if these had been given as argu‐
317 ments to the cmd supplied with the option. If the cmd string is
318 empty the first word in the range is instead taken as the com‐
319 mand name, and command name completion performed on the first
320 word in the range. For example,
321
322 compctl -x 'r[-exec,;]' -l '' -- find
323
324 completes arguments between `-exec' and the following `;' (or
325 the end of the command line if there is no such string) as if
326 they were a separate command line.
327
328 -h cmd Normally zsh completes quoted strings as a whole. With this
329 option, completion can be done separately on different parts of
330 such strings. It works like the -l option but makes the comple‐
331 tion code work on the parts of the current word that are sepa‐
332 rated by spaces. These parts are completed as if they were argu‐
333 ments to the given cmd. If cmd is the empty string, the first
334 part is completed as a command name, as with -l.
335
336 -U Use the whole list of possible completions, whether or not they
337 actually match the word on the command line. The word typed so
338 far will be deleted. This is most useful with a function (given
339 by the -K option) which can examine the word components passed
340 to it (or via the read builtin's -c and -l flags) and use its
341 own criteria to decide what matches. If there is no completion,
342 the original word is retained. Since the produced possible com‐
343 pletions seldom have interesting common prefixes and suffixes,
344 menu completion is started immediately if AUTO_MENU is set and
345 this flag is used.
346
347 -y func-or-var
348 The list provided by func-or-var is displayed instead of the
349 list of completions whenever a listing is required; the actual
350 completions to be inserted are not affected. It can be provided
351 in two ways. Firstly, if func-or-var begins with a $ it defines
352 a variable, or if it begins with a left parenthesis a literal
353 array, which contains the list. A variable may have been set by
354 a call to a function using the -K option. Otherwise it contains
355 the name of a function which will be executed to create the
356 list. The function will be passed as an argument list all
357 matching completions, including prefixes and suffixes expanded
358 in full, and should set the array reply to the result. In both
359 cases, the display list will only be retrieved after a complete
360 list of matches has been created.
361
362 Note that the returned list does not have to correspond, even in
363 length, to the original set of matches, and may be passed as a
364 scalar instead of an array. No special formatting of characters
365 is performed on the output in this case; in particular, newlines
366 are printed literally and if they appear output in columns is
367 suppressed.
368
369 -X explanation
370 Print explanation when trying completion on the current set of
371 options. A `%n' in this string is replaced by the number of
372 matches that were added for this explanation string. The expla‐
373 nation only appears if completion was tried and there was no
374 unique match, or when listing completions. Explanation strings
375 will be listed together with the matches of the group specified
376 together with the -X option (using the -J or -V option). If the
377 same explanation string is given to multiple -X options, the
378 string appears only once (for each group) and the number of
379 matches shown for the `%n' is the total number of all matches
380 for each of these uses. In any case, the explanation string will
381 only be shown if there was at least one match added for the
382 explanation string.
383
384 The sequences %B, %b, %S, %s, %U, and %u specify output
385 attributes (bold, standout, and underline), %F, %f, %K, %k spec‐
386 ify foreground and background colours, and %{...%} can be used
387 to include literal escape sequences as in prompts.
388
389 -Y explanation
390 Identical to -X, except that the explanation first undergoes
391 expansion following the usual rules for strings in double
392 quotes. The expansion will be carried out after any functions
393 are called for the -K or -y options, allowing them to set vari‐
394 ables.
395
396 -t continue
397 The continue-string contains a character that specifies which
398 set of completion flags should be used next. It is useful:
399
400 (i) With -T, or when trying a list of pattern completions, when
401 compctl would usually continue with ordinary processing after
402 finding matches; this can be suppressed with `-tn'.
403
404 (ii) With a list of alternatives separated by +, when compctl
405 would normally stop when one of the alternatives generates
406 matches. It can be forced to consider the next set of comple‐
407 tions by adding `-t+' to the flags of the alternative before the
408 `+'.
409
410 (iii) In an extended completion list (see below), when compctl
411 would normally continue until a set of conditions succeeded,
412 then use only the immediately following flags. With `-t-', com‐
413 pctl will continue trying extended completions after the next
414 `-'; with `-tx' it will attempt completion with the default
415 flags, in other words those before the `-x'.
416
417 -J name
418 This gives the name of the group the matches should be placed
419 in. Groups are listed and sorted separately; likewise, menu com‐
420 pletion will offer the matches in the groups in the order in
421 which the groups were defined. If no group name is explicitly
422 given, the matches are stored in a group named default. The
423 first time a group name is encountered, a group with that name
424 is created. After that all matches with the same group name are
425 stored in that group.
426
427 This can be useful with non-exclusive alternative completions.
428 For example, in
429
430 compctl -f -J files -t+ + -v -J variables foo
431
432 both files and variables are possible completions, as the -t+
433 forces both sets of alternatives before and after the + to be
434 considered at once. Because of the -J options, however, all
435 files are listed before all variables.
436
437 -V name
438 Like -J, but matches within the group will not be sorted in
439 listings nor in menu completion. These unsorted groups are in a
440 different name space from the sorted ones, so groups defined as
441 -J files and -V files are distinct.
442
443 -1 If given together with the -V option, makes only consecutive
444 duplicates in the group be removed. Note that groups with and
445 without this flag are in different name spaces.
446
447 -2 If given together with the -J or -V option, makes all duplicates
448 be kept. Again, groups with and without this flag are in differ‐
449 ent name spaces.
450
451 -M match-spec
452 This defines additional matching control specifications that
453 should be used only when testing words for the list of flags
454 this flag appears in. The format of the match-spec string is
455 described in zshcompwid.
456
458 compctl [ -CDT ] options + options [ + ... ] [ + ] command ...
459
460 The form with `+' specifies alternative options. Completion is tried
461 with the options before the first `+'. If this produces no matches com‐
462 pletion is tried with the flags after the `+' and so on. If there are
463 no flags after the last `+' and a match has not been found up to that
464 point, default completion is tried. If the list of flags contains a -t
465 with a + character, the next list of flags is used even if the current
466 list produced matches.
467
468 Additional options are available that restrict completion to some part
469 of the command line; this is referred to as `extended completion'.
470
472 compctl [ -CDT ] options -x pattern options - ... --
473 [ command ... ]
474 compctl [ -CDT ] options [ -x pattern options - ... -- ]
475 [ + options [ -x ... -- ] ... [+] ] [ command ... ]
476
477 The form with `-x' specifies extended completion for the commands
478 given; as shown, it may be combined with alternative completion using
479 `+'. Each pattern is examined in turn; when a match is found, the cor‐
480 responding options, as described in the section `Option Flags' above,
481 are used to generate possible completions. If no pattern matches, the
482 options given before the -x are used.
483
484 Note that each pattern should be supplied as a single argument and
485 should be quoted to prevent expansion of metacharacters by the shell.
486
487 A pattern is built of sub-patterns separated by commas; it matches if
488 at least one of these sub-patterns matches (they are `or'ed). These
489 sub-patterns are in turn composed of other sub-patterns separated by
490 white spaces which match if all of the sub-patterns match (they are
491 `and'ed). An element of the sub-patterns is of the form `c[...][...]',
492 where the pairs of brackets may be repeated as often as necessary, and
493 matches if any of the sets of brackets match (an `or'). The example
494 below makes this clearer.
495
496 The elements may be any of the following:
497
498 s[string]...
499 Matches if the current word on the command line starts with one
500 of the strings given in brackets. The string is not removed and
501 is not part of the completion.
502
503 S[string]...
504 Like s[string] except that the string is part of the completion.
505
506 p[from,to]...
507 Matches if the number of the current word is between one of the
508 from and to pairs inclusive. The comma and to are optional; to
509 defaults to the same value as from. The numbers may be nega‐
510 tive: -n refers to the n'th last word on the line.
511
512 c[offset,string]...
513 Matches if the string matches the word offset by offset from the
514 current word position. Usually offset will be negative.
515
516 C[offset,pattern]...
517 Like c but using pattern matching instead.
518
519 w[index,string]...
520 Matches if the word in position index is equal to the corre‐
521 sponding string. Note that the word count is made after any
522 alias expansion.
523
524 W[index,pattern]...
525 Like w but using pattern matching instead.
526
527 n[index,string]...
528 Matches if the current word contains string. Anything up to and
529 including the indexth occurrence of this string will not be con‐
530 sidered part of the completion, but the rest will. index may be
531 negative to count from the end: in most cases, index will be 1
532 or -1. For example,
533
534 compctl -s '`users`' -x 'n[1,@]' -k hosts -- talk
535
536 will usually complete usernames, but if you insert an @ after
537 the name, names from the array hosts (assumed to contain host‐
538 names, though you must make the array yourself) will be com‐
539 pleted. Other commands such as rcp can be handled similarly.
540
541 N[index,string]...
542 Like n except that the string will be taken as a character
543 class. Anything up to and including the indexth occurrence of
544 any of the characters in string will not be considered part of
545 the completion.
546
547 m[min,max]...
548 Matches if the total number of words lies between min and max
549 inclusive.
550
551 r[str1,str2]...
552 Matches if the cursor is after a word with prefix str1. If
553 there is also a word with prefix str2 on the command line after
554 the one matched by str1 it matches only if the cursor is before
555 this word. If the comma and str2 are omitted, it matches if the
556 cursor is after a word with prefix str1.
557
558 R[str1,str2]...
559 Like r but using pattern matching instead.
560
561 q[str]...
562 Matches the word currently being completed is in single quotes
563 and the str begins with the letter `s', or if completion is done
564 in double quotes and str starts with the letter `d', or if com‐
565 pletion is done in backticks and str starts with a `b'.
566
568 compctl -u -x 's[+] c[-1,-f],s[-f+]' \
569 -g '~/Mail/*(:t)' - 's[-f],c[-1,-f]' -f -- mail
570
571 This is to be interpreted as follows:
572
573 If the current command is mail, then
574
575 if ((the current word begins with + and the previous word is -f)
576 or (the current word begins with -f+)), then complete the
577 non-directory part (the `:t' glob modifier) of files in the directory
578 ~/Mail; else
579
580 if the current word begins with -f or the previous word was -f, then
581 complete any file; else
582
583 complete user names.
584
585
586
587
588zsh 4.3.11 December 20, 2010 ZSHCOMPCTL(1)