So that it can determine if it should subtract 1 from $FZF_PREVIEW_LINES
to avoid scrolling issue of Sixel image that touches the bottom of the
screen.
When a Sixel image touches the bottom of the screen, the whole screen
scrolls up one line to make room for the cursor. Add an ANSI escape
code to compensate for the movement. Unfortunately, the movement of the
screen is sometimes noticeable.
fzf --preview='fzf-preview.sh {}' --preview-window border-left
* Fix regression where previous image is not properly cleared
* Change the way fzf calculates the number of required lines to display
an image (ceil -> floor) to fix the issue where an image is always
rendered as a wireframe.
Progress:
* Sixel image can now be displayed with other text, and is scrollable
* If an image can't be displayed entirely due to the scroll offset, fzf
will render a wireframe to indicate that an image should be displayed
* Renamed $FZF_PREVIEW_{WIDTH,HEIGHT} to $FZF_PREVIEW_PIXEL_{WIDTH,HEIGHT}
for clarity
* Added bin/fzf-preview.sh script to demonstrate how to display an image
using Kitty or Sixel protocol
An example:
ls *.jpg | fzf --preview='seq $((FZF_PREVIEW_LINES*9/10)); fzf-preview.sh {}; seq 100'
A known issue:
* If you reduce the size of the preview window, the image may extend
beyond the preview window
when the preview window is re-enabled and the current preview process is
taking more than 500ms and previewDelayed is triggered
fzf --preview 'sleep 1; date; seq 1000' --bind space:toggle-preview
# Scrolling will behave similarly to CTRL-E and CTRL-Y of vim
fzf --bind scroll-up:offset-up,scroll-down:offset-down \
--bind ctrl-y:offset-up,ctrl-e:offset-down \
--scroll-off=5
Close#3456
Close#3228
* Works inside and outside of tmux
* There is a problem where fzf unnecessarily displays the scroll offset
indicator at the topbright of the screen when the image just fits the
preview window. This is because `kitty icat` generates an extra line
after the image area.
# A 5-row images; an extra row at the end confuses fzf
["\e_Ga ... \e[9C̅̅ࠪ̅̍ࠪ̅̎ࠪ̅̐ࠪ̅̒ࠪ̅̽ࠪ̅̾ࠪ̅̿ࠪ̅͆ࠪ̅͊ࠪ̅͋ࠪ\n",
"\r\e[9C̍̅ࠪ̍̍ࠪ̍̎ࠪ̍̐ࠪ̍̒ࠪ̍̽ࠪ̍̾ࠪ̍̿ࠪ̍͆ࠪ̍͊ࠪ̍͋ࠪ\n",
"\r\e[9C̎̅ࠪ̎̍ࠪ̎̎ࠪ̎̐ࠪ̎̒ࠪ̎̽ࠪ̎̾ࠪ̎̿ࠪ̎͆ࠪ̎͊ࠪ̎͋ࠪ\n",
"\r\e[9C̐̅ࠪ̐̍ࠪ̐̎ࠪ̐̐ࠪ̐̒ࠪ̐̽ࠪ̐̾ࠪ̐̿ࠪ̐͆ࠪ̐͊ࠪ̐͋ࠪ\n",
"\r\e[9C̒̅ࠪ̒̍ࠪ̒̎ࠪ̒̐ࠪ̒̒ࠪ̒̽ࠪ̒̾ࠪ̒̿ࠪ̒͆ࠪ̒͊ࠪ̒͋ࠪ\n",
"\r\e[39m\e8"]
* Example:
fzf --preview='
if file --mime-type {} | grep -qF 'image/'; then
# --transfer-mode=memory is the fastest option but if you want fzf to be able
# to redraw the image on terminal resize or on 'change-preview-window',
# you need to use --transfer-mode=stream.
kitty icat --clear --transfer-mode=memory --stdin=no --place=${FZF_PREVIEW_COLUMNS}x${FZF_PREVIEW_LINES}@0x0 {}
else
bat --color=always {}
fi
'
Currently there is not option to bind ctrl-delete and shift-delete. As
suggested by issue #3240, shift-delete could be used to bind "delete
entry from history" as it is a common way to do so in other
applications, e.g. browsers.
This, however, does only implement to use the key combination itself and
does not assign a default action to any of them. This does enable to
call one's all predefined actions. With the exec action this can
expanded like the issue #3240 suggested.
If desirable, the key combinations could later get a default behavior.
Co-authored-by: Junegunn Choi <junegunn.c@gmail.com>