fzf - a command-line fuzzy finder [![travis-ci](https://travis-ci.org/junegunn/fzf.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/junegunn/fzf) === fzf is a general-purpose command-line fuzzy finder. It's an interactive Unix filter for command-line that can be used with any list; files, command history, processes, hostnames, bookmarks, git commits, etc. Pros ---- - Portable, no dependencies - Blazingly fast - The most comprehensive feature set - Flexible layout - Batteries included - Vim/Neovim plugin, key bindings and fuzzy auto-completion Table of Contents ----------------- * [Installation](#installation) * [Using Homebrew or Linuxbrew](#using-homebrew-or-linuxbrew) * [Using git](#using-git) * [As Vim plugin](#as-vim-plugin) * [Arch Linux](#arch-linux) * [Fedora](#fedora) * [Windows](#windows) * [Upgrading fzf](#upgrading-fzf) * [Building fzf](#building-fzf) * [Usage](#usage) * [Using the finder](#using-the-finder) * [Layout](#layout) * [Search syntax](#search-syntax) * [Environment variables](#environment-variables) * [Options](#options) * [Examples](#examples) * [fzf-tmux script](#fzf-tmux-script) * [Key bindings for command line](#key-bindings-for-command-line) * [Fuzzy completion for bash and zsh](#fuzzy-completion-for-bash-and-zsh) * [Files and directories](#files-and-directories) * [Process IDs](#process-ids) * [Host names](#host-names) * [Environment variables / Aliases](#environment-variables--aliases) * [Settings](#settings) * [Supported commands](#supported-commands) * [Vim plugin](#vim-plugin) * [Advanced topics](#advanced-topics) * [Performance](#performance) * [Executing external programs](#executing-external-programs) * [Preview window](#preview-window) * [Tips](#tips) * [Respecting .gitignore](#respecting-gitignore) * [git ls-tree for fast traversal](#git-ls-tree-for-fast-traversal) * [Fish shell](#fish-shell) * [License](#license) Installation ------------ fzf project consists of the following components: - `fzf` executable - `fzf-tmux` script for launching fzf in a tmux pane - Shell extensions - Key bindings (`CTRL-T`, `CTRL-R`, and `ALT-C`) (bash, zsh, fish) - Fuzzy auto-completion (bash, zsh) - Vim/Neovim plugin You can [download fzf executable][bin] alone if you don't need the extra stuff. [bin]: https://github.com/junegunn/fzf-bin/releases ### Using Homebrew or Linuxbrew You can use [Homebrew](http://brew.sh/) or [Linuxbrew](http://linuxbrew.sh/) to install fzf. ```sh brew install fzf # To install useful key bindings and fuzzy completion: $(brew --prefix)/opt/fzf/install ``` ### Using git Alternatively, you can "git clone" this repository to any directory and run [install](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf/blob/master/install) script. ```sh git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/junegunn/fzf.git ~/.fzf ~/.fzf/install ``` ### As Vim plugin Once you have fzf installed, you can enable it inside Vim simply by adding the directory to `&runtimepath` in your Vim configuration file as follows: ```vim " If installed using Homebrew set rtp+=/usr/local/opt/fzf " If installed using git set rtp+=~/.fzf ``` If you use [vim-plug](https://github.com/junegunn/vim-plug), the same can be written as: ```vim " If installed using Homebrew Plug '/usr/local/opt/fzf' " If installed using git Plug '~/.fzf' ``` But instead of separately installing fzf on your system (using Homebrew or "git clone") and enabling it on Vim (adding it to `&runtimepath`), you can use vim-plug to do both. ```vim " PlugInstall and PlugUpdate will clone fzf in ~/.fzf and run install script Plug 'junegunn/fzf', { 'dir': '~/.fzf', 'do': './install --all' } " Both options are optional. You don't have to install fzf in ~/.fzf " and you don't have to run install script if you use fzf only in Vim. ``` ### Arch Linux ```sh sudo pacman -Sy fzf ``` ### Fedora fzf is available in Fedora 26 and above, and can be installed using the usual method: ```sh sudo dnf install fzf ``` Shell completion and plugins for vim or neovim are enabled by default. Shell key bindings are installed but not enabled by default. See Fedora's package documentation (/usr/share/doc/fzf/README.Fedora) for more information. ### Windows Pre-built binaries for Windows can be downloaded [here][bin]. fzf is also available as a [Chocolatey package][choco]. [choco]: https://chocolatey.org/packages/fzf ```sh choco install fzf ``` However, other components of the project may not work on Windows. Known issues and limitations can be found on [the wiki page][windows-wiki]. You might want to consider installing fzf on [Windows Subsystem for Linux][wsl] where everything runs flawlessly. [windows-wiki]: https://github.com/junegunn/fzf/wiki/Windows [wsl]: https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/wsl/ Upgrading fzf ------------- fzf is being actively developed and you might want to upgrade it once in a while. Please follow the instruction below depending on the installation method used. - git: `cd ~/.fzf && git pull && ./install` - brew: `brew update; brew reinstall fzf` - chocolatey: `choco upgrade fzf` - vim-plug: `:PlugUpdate fzf` Building fzf ------------ See [BUILD.md](BUILD.md). Usage ----- fzf will launch interactive finder, read the list from STDIN, and write the selected item to STDOUT. ```sh find * -type f | fzf > selected ``` Without STDIN pipe, fzf will use find command to fetch the list of files excluding hidden ones. (You can override the default command with `FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND`) ```sh vim $(fzf) ``` #### Using the finder - `CTRL-J` / `CTRL-K` (or `CTRL-N` / `CTRL-P`) to move cursor up and down - `Enter` key to select the item, `CTRL-C` / `CTRL-G` / `ESC` to exit - On multi-select mode (`-m`), `TAB` and `Shift-TAB` to mark multiple items - Emacs style key bindings - Mouse: scroll, click, double-click; shift-click and shift-scroll on multi-select mode #### Layout fzf by default starts in fullscreen mode, but you can make it start below the cursor with `--height` option. ```sh vim $(fzf --height 40%) ``` Also check out `--reverse` option if you prefer "top-down" layout instead of the default "bottom-up" layout. ```sh vim $(fzf --height 40% --reverse) ``` You can add these options to `$FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS` so that they're applied by default. For example, ```sh export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--height 40% --reverse --border' ``` #### Search syntax Unless otherwise specified, fzf starts in "extended-search mode" where you can type in multiple search terms delimited by spaces. e.g. `^music .mp3$ sbtrkt !fire` | Token | Match type | Description | | --------- | -------------------------- | ------------------------------------ | | `sbtrkt` | fuzzy-match | Items that match `sbtrkt` | | `'wild` | exact-match (quoted) | Items that include `wild` | | `^music` | prefix-exact-match | Items that start with `music` | | `.mp3$` | suffix-exact-match | Items that end with `.mp3` | | `!fire` | inverse-exact-match | Items that do not include `fire` | | `!^music` | inverse-prefix-exact-match | Items that do not start with `music` | | `!.mp3$` | inverse-suffix-exact-match | Items that do not end with `.mp3` | If you don't prefer fuzzy matching and do not wish to "quote" every word, start fzf with `-e` or `--exact` option. Note that when `--exact` is set, `'`-prefix "unquotes" the term. A single bar character term acts as an OR operator. For example, the following query matches entries that start with `core` and end with either `go`, `rb`, or `py`. ``` ^core go$ | rb$ | py$ ``` #### Environment variables - `FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND` - Default command to use when input is tty - e.g. `export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='fd --type f'` - `FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS` - Default options - e.g. `export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="--reverse --inline-info"` #### Options See the man page (`man fzf`) for the full list of options. Examples -------- Many useful examples can be found on [the wiki page](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf/wiki/examples). Feel free to add your own as well. `fzf-tmux` script ----------------- [fzf-tmux](bin/fzf-tmux) is a bash script that opens fzf in a tmux pane. ```sh # usage: fzf-tmux [-u|-d [HEIGHT[%]]] [-l|-r [WIDTH[%]]] [--] [FZF OPTIONS] # (-[udlr]: up/down/left/right) # select git branches in horizontal split below (15 lines) git branch | fzf-tmux -d 15 # select multiple words in vertical split on the left (20% of screen width) cat /usr/share/dict/words | fzf-tmux -l 20% --multi --reverse ``` It will still work even when you're not on tmux, silently ignoring `-[udlr]` options, so you can invariably use `fzf-tmux` in your scripts. Alternatively, you can use `--height HEIGHT[%]` option not to start fzf in fullscreen mode. ```sh fzf --height 40% ``` Key bindings for command line ----------------------------- The install script will setup the following key bindings for bash, zsh, and fish. - `CTRL-T` - Paste the selected files and directories onto the command line - Set `FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND` to override the default command - Set `FZF_CTRL_T_OPTS` to pass additional options - `CTRL-R` - Paste the selected command from history onto the command line - If you want to see the commands in chronological order, press `CTRL-R` again which toggles sorting by relevance - Set `FZF_CTRL_R_OPTS` to pass additional options - `ALT-C` - cd into the selected directory - Set `FZF_ALT_C_COMMAND` to override the default command - Set `FZF_ALT_C_OPTS` to pass additional options If you're on a tmux session, you can start fzf in a split pane by setting `FZF_TMUX` to 1, and change the height of the pane with `FZF_TMUX_HEIGHT` (e.g. `20`, `50%`). If you use vi mode on bash, you need to add `set -o vi` *before* `source ~/.fzf.bash` in your .bashrc, so that it correctly sets up key bindings for vi mode. More tips can be found on [the wiki page](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf/wiki/Configuring-shell-key-bindings). Fuzzy completion for bash and zsh --------------------------------- #### Files and directories Fuzzy completion for files and directories can be triggered if the word before the cursor ends with the trigger sequence which is by default `**`. - `COMMAND [DIRECTORY/][FUZZY_PATTERN]**` ```sh # Files under current directory # - You can select multiple items with TAB key vim ** # Files under parent directory vim ../** # Files under parent directory that match `fzf` vim ../fzf** # Files under your home directory vim ~/** # Directories under current directory (single-selection) cd ** # Directories under ~/github that match `fzf` cd ~/github/fzf** ``` #### Process IDs Fuzzy completion for PIDs is provided for kill command. In this case there is no trigger sequence, just press tab key after kill command. ```sh # Can select multiple processes with or keys kill -9 ``` #### Host names For ssh and telnet commands, fuzzy completion for host names is provided. The names are extracted from /etc/hosts and ~/.ssh/config. ```sh ssh ** telnet ** ``` #### Environment variables / Aliases ```sh unset ** export ** unalias ** ``` #### Settings ```sh # Use ~~ as the trigger sequence instead of the default ** export FZF_COMPLETION_TRIGGER='~~' # Options to fzf command export FZF_COMPLETION_OPTS='+c -x' # Use fd (https://github.com/sharkdp/fd) instead of the default find # command for listing path candidates. # - The first argument to the function ($1) is the base path to start traversal # - See the source code (completion.{bash,zsh}) for the details. _fzf_compgen_path() { fd --hidden --follow --exclude ".git" . "$1" } # Use fd to generate the list for directory completion _fzf_compgen_dir() { fd --type d --hidden --follow --exclude ".git" . "$1" } ``` #### Supported commands On bash, fuzzy completion is enabled only for a predefined set of commands (`complete | grep _fzf` to see the list). But you can enable it for other commands as well like follows. ```sh complete -F _fzf_path_completion -o default -o bashdefault ag complete -F _fzf_dir_completion -o default -o bashdefault tree ``` Vim plugin ---------- See [README-VIM.md](README-VIM.md). Advanced topics --------------- ### Performance fzf is fast, and is [getting even faster][perf]. Performance should not be a problem in most use cases. However, you might want to be aware of the options that affect the performance. - `--ansi` tells fzf to extract and parse ANSI color codes in the input and it makes the initial scanning slower. So it's not recommended that you add it to your `$FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS`. - `--nth` makes fzf slower as fzf has to tokenize each line. - `--with-nth` makes fzf slower as fzf has to tokenize and reassemble each line. - If you absolutely need better performance, you can consider using `--algo=v1` (the default being `v2`) to make fzf use faster greedy algorithm. However, this algorithm is not guaranteed to find the optimal ordering of the matches and is not recommended. [perf]: https://junegunn.kr/images/fzf-0.17.0.png ### Executing external programs You can set up key bindings for starting external processes without leaving fzf (`execute`, `execute-silent`). ```bash # Press F1 to open the file with less without leaving fzf # Press CTRL-Y to copy the line to clipboard and aborts fzf (requires pbcopy) fzf --bind 'f1:execute(less -f {}),ctrl-y:execute-silent(echo {} | pbcopy)+abort' ``` See *KEY BINDINGS* section of the man page for details. ### Preview window When `--preview` option is set, fzf automatically starts external process with the current line as the argument and shows the result in the split window. ```bash # {} is replaced to the single-quoted string of the focused line fzf --preview 'cat {}' ``` Since preview window is updated only after the process is complete, it's important that the command finishes quickly. ```bash # Use head instead of cat so that the command doesn't take too long to finish fzf --preview 'head -100 {}' ``` Preview window supports ANSI colors, so you can use programs that syntax-highlights the content of a file. - Highlight: http://www.andre-simon.de/doku/highlight/en/highlight.php - CodeRay: http://coderay.rubychan.de/ - Rouge: https://github.com/jneen/rouge ```bash # Try highlight, coderay, rougify in turn, then fall back to cat fzf --preview '[[ $(file --mime {}) =~ binary ]] && echo {} is a binary file || (highlight -O ansi -l {} || coderay {} || rougify {} || cat {}) 2> /dev/null | head -500' ``` You can customize the size and position of the preview window using `--preview-window` option. For example, ```bash fzf --height 40% --reverse --preview 'file {}' --preview-window down:1 ``` For more advanced examples, see [Key bindings for git with fzf][fzf-git]. [fzf-git]: https://junegunn.kr/2016/07/fzf-git/ Tips ---- #### Respecting `.gitignore` You can use [fd](https://github.com/sharkdp/fd), [ripgrep](https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep), or [the silver searcher](https://github.com/ggreer/the_silver_searcher) instead of the default find command to traverse the file system while respecting `.gitignore`. ```sh # Feed the output of fd into fzf fd --type f | fzf # Setting fd as the default source for fzf export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='fd --type f' # Now fzf (w/o pipe) will use fd instead of find fzf # To apply the command to CTRL-T as well export FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND="$FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND" ``` If you want the command to follow symbolic links, and don't want it to exclude hidden files, use the following command: ```sh export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='fd --type f --hidden --follow --exclude .git' ``` #### `git ls-tree` for fast traversal If you're running fzf in a large git repository, `git ls-tree` can boost up the speed of the traversal. ```sh export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND=' (git ls-tree -r --name-only HEAD || find . -path "*/\.*" -prune -o -type f -print -o -type l -print | sed s/^..//) 2> /dev/null' ``` #### Fish shell Fish shell before version 2.6.0 [doesn't allow](https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1362) reading from STDIN in command substitution, which means simple `vim (fzf)` doesn't work as expected. The workaround for fish 2.5.0 and earlier is to use the `read` fish command: ```sh fzf | read -l result; and vim $result ``` or, for multiple results: ```sh fzf -m | while read -l r; set result $result $r; end; and vim $result ``` The globbing system is different in fish and thus `**` completion will not work. However, the `CTRL-T` command will use the last token on the commandline as the root folder for the recursive search. For instance, hitting `CTRL-T` at the end of the following commandline ```sh ls /var/ ``` will list all files and folders under `/var/`. When using a custom `FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND`, use the unexpanded `$dir` variable to make use of this feature. `$dir` defaults to `.` when the last token is not a valid directory. Example: ```sh set -g FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND "command find -L \$dir -type f 2> /dev/null | sed '1d; s#^\./##'" ``` [License](LICENSE) ------------------ The MIT License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2017 Junegunn Choi