Requires latest tmux built from source (e.g. brew install tmux --HEAD)
Examples:
# 50%/50% width and height on the center of the screen
fzf-tmux -p
# 80%/80%
fzf-tmux -p80%
# 80%/40%
fzf-tmux -p80%,40%
# Separate -w and -h
fzf-tmux -w80% -h40%
# 80%/40% at position (0, 0)
fzf-tmux -w80% -h40% -x0 -y0
You can configure key bindings and fuzzy completion to open in tmux
popup window like so:
FZF_TMUX_OPTS='-p 80%'
To make it easier to write more complex fzf options. Although this
does not break backward compatibility, users are encouraged to update
their code accordingly.
# Before
_fzf_complete "FZF_ARG1 FZF_ARG2..." "$@" < <(
# Print candidates
)
# After
_fzf_complete FZF_ARG1 FZF_ARG2... -- "$@" < <(
# Print candidates
)
Make sure that the shell is ready before hitting CTRL-R
1) Error:
TestFish#test_ctrl_r_multiline:
RuntimeError: timeout
test/test_go.rb:50:in `wait'
test/test_go.rb:125:in `until'
test/test_go.rb:1857:in `test_ctrl_r_multiline'
Restore the original line when search is aborted. Add --query
"$READLINE_LINE" and fall back to the current behavior pre Bash 4.
Co-authored-by: Junegunn Choi <junegunn.c@gmail.com>
- Update preview window even if there is no match for the query string
if any of the placeholder expressions evaluates to a non-empty string.
- Also, if the command template contains {q}, preview window will be
updated if the query string changes even though the focus remains on
the same item.
An example:
git log --oneline --color=always |
fzf --reverse --ansi --preview \
'[ -n {1} ] && git show --color=always {1} || git show --color=always {q}'
Close#1307
After _completion_loader is called, instead of loading the entire
completion.bash file, just restore the fzf completion for the current
command. `_fzf_orig_completion_$cmd` is only set if _completion_loader
actually changed the completion options to avoid infinite loop.
Close#1170
'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