1ZSHROADMAP(1)               General Commands Manual              ZSHROADMAP(1)
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NAME

6       zshroadmap - informal introduction to the zsh manual
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8       The  Zsh Manual, like the shell itself, is large and often complicated.
9       This section of the manual provides some pointers to areas of the shell
10       that  are  likely  to be of particular interest to new users, and indi‐
11       cates where in the rest of the manual the documentation is to be found.
12

WHEN THE SHELL STARTS

14       When it starts, the shell reads commands from various files.  These can
15       be  created  or  edited  to  customize  the  shell.   See  the  section
16       Startup/Shutdown Files in zsh(1).
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18       If no personal initialization files exist for the current user, a func‐
19       tion  is  run  to help you change some of the most common settings.  It
20       won't appear if your administrator has disabled the zsh/newuser module.
21       The  function  is  designed  to be self-explanatory.  You can run it by
22       hand with `autoload -Uz zsh-newuser-install;  zsh-newuser-install  -f'.
23       See also the section User Configuration Functions in zshcontrib(1).
24

INTERACTIVE USE

26       Interaction with the shell uses the builtin Zsh Line Editor, ZLE.  This
27       is described in detail in zshzle(1).
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29       The first decision a user must make is whether to use the Emacs  or  Vi
30       editing  mode  as  the  keys  for  editing are substantially different.
31       Emacs editing mode is probably more natural for beginners  and  can  be
32       selected explicitly with the command bindkey -e.
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34       A  history mechanism for retrieving previously typed lines (most simply
35       with the Up or Down arrow keys) is available; note that,  unlike  other
36       shells,  zsh  will not save these lines when the shell exits unless you
37       set appropriate variables, and the number of history lines retained  by
38       default  is  quite  small (30 lines).  See the description of the shell
39       variables (referred to in the documentation  as  parameters)  HISTFILE,
40       HISTSIZE and SAVEHIST in zshparam(1).
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42       The shell now supports the UTF-8 character set (and also others if sup‐
43       ported by the operating system).  This is  (mostly)  handled  transpar‐
44       ently  by the shell, but the degree of support in terminal emulators is
45       variable.   There  is  some  discussion  of  this  in  the  shell  FAQ,
46       http://zsh.dotsrc.org/FAQ/  .   Note  in  particular that for combining
47       characters to be handled the option COMBINING_CHARS needs  to  be  set.
48       Because  the shell is now more sensitive to the definition of the char‐
49       acter set, note that if you are upgrading from an older version of  the
50       shell  you should ensure that the appropriate variable, either LANG (to
51       affect all aspects of the shell's operation)  or  LC_CTYPE  (to  affect
52       only  the  handling  of character sets) is set to an appropriate value.
53       This is true even if you are using a single-byte character set  includ‐
54       ing  extensions  of  ASCII  such as ISO-8859-1 or ISO-8859-15.  See the
55       description of LC_CTYPE in zshparam(1).
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57   Completion
58       Completion is a feature present in many shells. It allows the  user  to
59       type only a part (usually the prefix) of a word and have the shell fill
60       in the rest.  The completion system in zsh is programmable.  For  exam‐
61       ple,  the  shell can be set to complete email addresses in arguments to
62       the mail command from your ~/.abook/addressbook; usernames,  hostnames,
63       and  even  remote  paths in arguments to scp, and so on.  Anything that
64       can be written in or glued together with zsh can be the source of  what
65       the line editor offers as possible completions.
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67       Zsh  has  two  completion systems, an old, so called compctl completion
68       (named after the builtin command that serves as its complete  and  only
69       user  interface),  and  a new one, referred to as compsys, organized as
70       library of builtin and user-defined functions.  The two systems  differ
71       in  their  interface  for  specifying the completion behavior.  The new
72       system is more customizable and is supplied with completions  for  many
73       commonly used commands; it is therefore to be preferred.
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75       The completion system must be enabled explicitly when the shell starts.
76       For more information see zshcompsys(1).
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78   Extending the line editor
79       Apart from completion, the line editor is highly extensible by means of
80       shell  functions.   Some  useful functions are provided with the shell;
81       they provide facilities such as:
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83       insert-composed-char
84              composing characters not found on the keyboard
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86       match-words-by-style
87              configuring what the line editor considers a word when moving or
88              deleting by word
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90       history-beginning-search-backward-end, etc.
91              alternative ways of searching the shell history
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93       replace-string, replace-pattern
94              functions for replacing strings or patterns globally in the com‐
95              mand line
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97       edit-command-line
98              edit the command line with an external editor.
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100       See the section `ZLE Functions' in zshcontrib(1)  for  descriptions  of
101       these.
102

OPTIONS

104       The  shell  has  a  large number of options for changing its behaviour.
105       These cover all aspects of the shell; browsing the  full  documentation
106       is  the only good way to become acquainted with the many possibilities.
107       See zshoptions(1).
108

PATTERN MATCHING

110       The shell has a rich set of  patterns  which  are  available  for  file
111       matching  (described  in the documentation as `filename generation' and
112       also known for historical reasons as `globbing') and for use when  pro‐
113       gramming.   These are described in the section `Filename Generation' in
114       zshexpn(1).
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116       Of particular interest are the following patterns that are not commonly
117       supported by other systems of pattern matching:
118
119       **     for matching over multiple directories
120
121       ~, ^   the   ability   to  exclude  patterns  from  matching  when  the
122              EXTENDED_GLOB option is set
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124       (...)  glob qualifiers, included in parentheses at the end of the  pat‐
125              tern,  which  select  files  by  type  (such  as directories) or
126              attribute (such as size).
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GENERAL COMMENTS ON SYNTAX

129       Although the syntax of zsh is in ways similar to the  Korn  shell,  and
130       therefore  more  remotely to the original UNIX shell, the Bourne shell,
131       its default behaviour does not entirely  correspond  to  those  shells.
132       General  shell  syntax  is introduced in the section `Shell Grammar' in
133       zshmisc(1).
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135       One commonly encountered difference is that variables substituted  onto
136       the  command line are not split into words.  See the description of the
137       shell option SH_WORD_SPLIT in the section `Parameter Expansion' in zsh‐
138       expn(1).  In zsh, you can either explicitly request the splitting (e.g.
139       ${=foo}) or use an array when you want a variable  to  expand  to  more
140       than one word.  See the section `Array Parameters' in zshparam(1).
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PROGRAMMING

143       The  most  convenient  way of adding enhancements to the shell is typi‐
144       cally  by  writing  a  shell  function  and  arranging  for  it  to  be
145       autoloaded.  Functions are described in the section `Functions' in zsh‐
146       misc(1).  Users changing from the C  shell  and  its  relatives  should
147       notice that aliases are less used in zsh as they don't perform argument
148       substitution, only simple text replacement.
149
150       A few general functions, other than those for the line editor described
151       above,  are provided with the shell and are described in zshcontrib(1).
152       Features include:
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154       promptinit
155              a prompt theme system for changing prompts easily, see the  sec‐
156              tion `Prompt Themes'
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159       zsh-mime-setup
160              a  MIME-handling  system  which dispatches commands according to
161              the suffix of a file as done by graphical file managers
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163       zcalc  a calculator
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165       zargs  a version of xargs that makes the find command redundant
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167       zmv    a command for renaming files by means of shell patterns.
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171zsh 4.3.11                     December 20, 2010                 ZSHROADMAP(1)
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