This also modifies <C-t> behaviour.
The longest file path in the input is used as root directory for `find`
command. The remainder of the input is passed to fzf's --query as a
initial search parameters.
If "." is given as the argument to begin <C-t> completion, the leading
"." is not correctly removed. In general, if user selects a fzf
completion, the current token should be "consumed".
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.
Replace the "temp file" workaround with the "read" function: it's
simpler and faster.
Use proper escaping, remove the custom function.
The "file" widget uses last token as root for the "find" command.
This replaces the equivalent of '**' completion in bash/zsh.
The "$dir" non-expanded variable can be used in FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND to
set the root.
This seems like a bug of fish, but sometimes when you select an item
fish complains:
"insertion mode switches can not be used when not in insertion mode"
This only happens when using tmux pane. Injecting a dummy command
somehow fixes the issue.
- Use symlinks instead of generating the full content
- Update fish_user_paths and remove ~/.config/fish/functions/fzf.fish
- Create wrapper script for fzf when Ruby version and use it instead of
exported function not to break fzf-tmux