'accept-non-empty' is similar to 'accept' (which is bound to 'enter' and
'double-click' by default) but it prevents fzf from exiting without any
selection.
Close#1162
replace-query action replaces the query string with the current
selection. If the selection is too long, it will be truncated.
If the line contains meta-characters of fzf search syntax, it is
possible that the line is no longer included in the updated result.
e.g.
echo '!hello' | fzf --bind ctrl-v:replace-query
Close#1137
Similarly to --bind or --color.
--expect used to replace the previously specified keys, and
fzf#wrap({'options': '--expect=f1'}) wouldn't work as expected. It
forced us to come up with some ugly hacks like the following:
13b27c45c8/autoload/fzf/vim.vim (L1086)
Close#669
You can use your mouse or binadble preview-up and preview-down actions
to scroll the content of the preview window.
fzf --preview 'highlight -O ansi {}' --bind alt-j:preview-down,alt-k:preview-up
- Make structs smaller
- Introduce Result struct and use it to represent matched items instead of
reusing Item struct for that purpose
- Avoid unnecessary memory allocation
- Avoid growing slice from the initial capacity
- Code cleanup
- Slightly more efficient processing of Options
- Do not return reference type arguments that are mutated inside the
function
- Use util.Constrain function when appropriate
Related: #452
When `--multi` is set, tab key will bring your cursor down, and
shift-tab up. But since fzf by default draws the screen in bottom-up
fashion, one may feel that the opposite of the behavior is more
desirable and choose to customize the key bindings as follows.
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="--bind tab:toggle-up,shift-tab:toggle-down"
This configuration, however, becomes no longer straightforward when
`--reverse` is set and fzf switches to top-down layout. To address the
requirement, this commit adds `toggle-in` and `toggle-out` option which
switch direction depending on `--reverse`-ness.
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="--bind tab:toggle-out,shift-tab:toggle-in"