This makes it easier to make customizations, for example instead of
bind -x '"\C-o\C-i": FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND="fasd -Rl" FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="$FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS --tiebreak=index " fzf-file-widget'
it's enough to just
bind -x '"\C-o\C-i": FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND="fasd -Rl" fzf-file-widget --tiebreak=index'
Requires latest tmux built from source (e.g. brew install tmux --HEAD)
Examples:
# 50%/50% width and height on the center of the screen
fzf-tmux -p
# 80%/80%
fzf-tmux -p80%
# 80%/40%
fzf-tmux -p80%,40%
# Separate -w and -h
fzf-tmux -w80% -h40%
# 80%/40% at position (0, 0)
fzf-tmux -w80% -h40% -x0 -y0
You can configure key bindings and fuzzy completion to open in tmux
popup window like so:
FZF_TMUX_OPTS='-p 80%'
Restore the original line when search is aborted. Add --query
"$READLINE_LINE" and fall back to the current behavior pre Bash 4.
Co-authored-by: Junegunn Choi <junegunn.c@gmail.com>
Close#1370
Parses the history list, converts it to a NUL-delimited list of possibly
multiline entries. Adds the fzf --read0 option. Works with and without
histexpand enabled.
Co-authored-by: Junegunn Choi <junegunn.c@gmail.com>
Make C-t more consistent pre and post Bash 4. It already kills the
command line separately before and after the insertion point. Add
set-mark and exchange-point-and-mark to restore the insertion point
after yanking back and apply the same behavior to M-c.
* CTRL-T should put extra space after pasted items
Co-authored-by: Junegunn Choi <junegunn.c@gmail.com>
Close#1216
1. Append a single space so that step 3 won't fail
2. CTRL-E to move to the end of the line
3. CTRL-U to delete the whole line before the cursor
4. CTRL-Y to paste the deleted line
5. ESC+Y to rotate the kill ring and bring back the previous yank before step 3
6. CTRL-U to delete the whole line again
7. Paste `__fzf_history__`
8. ESC+CTRL-E to expand the command substitution
9. ESC+R to redraw the line
10. ESC+^ to expand the history entry (!NUMBER)
CTRL-R binding used to start with --no-sort to list the matched commands
in chronological order. However, it has been a constant source of
confusion. Let's enable it by default from now on. The sorted result
shouldn't be too confusing as we use --tiebreak=index.
Faster startup. Use internal bash globbing instead of external grep binary (adapter from Gentoo's `/etc/bash/bashrc` TERM checking). Insignificant on Linux, but on Cygwin this cuts startup time by 40 ms on my Core i7 laptop.
Summary:
Fix adapted from [@adamheins: fzf, vi-mode, and fixing delays][1].
[1]: https://adamheins.com/blog/fzf-vi-mode-and-fixing-delays
The basic problem is that
fzf presses <Esc> to enter vi-movement-mode
(as opposed to insert mode)
and then presses a bunch of keys to set up the buffer.
But the <Esc> keypress is also the prefix for a bunch of other commands,
so Bash will dutifully wait an excruciating half-second
before actually executing this command.
Instead, we bind <C-x><C-a>, which is unused by default
and seems reasonably unlikely to be custom-bound,
to be another way to enter vi-movement-mode;
this binding is unambiguous, so fzf can use it without delay.
This change was made by just `:s/\\e/\\C-x\\C-a/gc`
in the relevant section,
after adding the actual binding and comment at the top.
Instead of choosing one at initialization, choose the correct one
when it's actually called, so that the behavior is correct even after
resizing.
Bonus fixes for tmux with bash 4+:
- No extra space when cancelling CTRL-T.
- Fix cursor position problem in vi mode.