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Abraxas l33t
Joined: 25 May 2003 Posts: 814
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Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2004 3:36 am Post subject: |
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I changed the characters, took the case statement out, and it worked. The only weird thing was "transpose words" . It messed everything else up so I just deleted that. I never use it anyway. FYI my keys were ^[[1, ^[[2, etc. _________________ Time makes more converts than reason. - Thomas Paine
Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. - Mark Twain |
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laz-e-coyote n00b
Joined: 25 Jun 2004 Posts: 6
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Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2004 11:19 am Post subject: |
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Dolio wrote: | For red:
RPROMPT="[%{$fg_bold[red]%}%T%{$reset_color%}]"
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I tried this and I get this error:
Code: | preexec:1: bad math expression: operand expected at `%{^[[0;31m%...' |
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pindar Apprentice
Joined: 30 Apr 2004 Posts: 220
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Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2004 6:49 pm Post subject: |
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I've been a zsh lover and user for quite while now. I started using zsh on OS X, and now, after reading this thread, I changed my default shell in gentoo as well. One question though: is it possible to have zsh display the prompt in a different color when I su to become root? I tried this in my .zshrc:
Code: | if [ `/usr/bin/whoami` = 'root' ]
then
export PS1="%t:%{${fg_bold[red]}%n%}@%{${fg_bold[blue]}%}%m: %~ %{${fg[white]}%}%# "
else
export PS1="%t:%{${fg_bold[green]}%n%}@%{${fg_bold[blue]}%}%m: %~ %{${fg[white]}%}%# "
fi
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It works when I issue
after becoming root, but how can I make it happen automagically? |
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laz-e-coyote n00b
Joined: 25 Jun 2004 Posts: 6
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Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2004 6:54 pm Post subject: |
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copy the .zshrc to /root
if that doesn't work, then try doing
alias su="su --login"
so it would load it |
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pindar Apprentice
Joined: 30 Apr 2004 Posts: 220
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Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2004 8:15 pm Post subject: |
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Quote: | copy the .zshrc to /root |
Great, that worked! Thanks a lot! |
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citizen428 Retired Dev
Joined: 10 Jun 2002 Posts: 317 Location: Vienna, Austria
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Posted: Tue Jun 29, 2004 3:19 pm Post subject: Re: awsom! |
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laz-e-coyote wrote: | Zsh is amazing, the autocomplete is absolutely incredible
and a smart autocomplete, if i do "cd<tab>" it will only show me directories (or symlinks to directories)
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Bash does this too, just add
complete -d cd
to your .bashrc.
Anyway, I'm playing around with ZSH for month now, I guess I'll switch over sometime completely... |
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alyent n00b
Joined: 20 Nov 2002 Posts: 38 Location: Vancouver BC, Canada
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Posted: Sat Jul 03, 2004 4:54 pm Post subject: |
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I am trying to bind ctrl-del, but whenever I press it '^' gets printed. How do I fix that? Code: | bindkey '\e[3^' delete-word |
I also cannot get shift-tab working Code: | bindkey '\e[0Z' reverse-menu-complete | Any Ideas? |
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rav Tux's lil' helper
Joined: 24 Nov 2003 Posts: 114
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Posted: Sun Jul 04, 2004 11:45 am Post subject: |
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About the menu selection, is it possible to bypass the initial list, and jump straight into menuselection? Thus stoping it from ever doing this Code: | zsh: do you wish to see all 704 possibilities (353 lines)? |
Edit: Er.. looks like "setopt NO_AUTO_LIST" does that
Also, can you get it not to insert the text in the menuselection until i press enter? Thus if I typed Code: | /bin/z<tab><tab><tab> | it would still say
alyent wrote: | I am trying to bind ctrl-del, but whenever I press it '^' gets printed. How do I fix that? Code: | bindkey '\e[3^' delete-word |
I also cannot get shift-tab working Code: | bindkey '\e[0Z' reverse-menu-complete | Any Ideas? |
Check exactly what the key is bound to for you using <ctrl>v, and use that. eg.
<ctrl>v<shift><tab> gives me '^[[Z'
<ctrl>v<shift><delete> gives me '^[[3;2~' |
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allucid Veteran
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 1314 Location: atlanta
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Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2004 8:53 am Post subject: |
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I'm having problems with wildard matching in certain circumstances. For example, if I use a wild card with scp it will error out without even attempting a connection:
Code: | (root):(copperhead)# scp home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf . (Sun,18)
zsh: no matches found: home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf
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here's the relevant part of my zhsrc:
Code: | set -o noclobber
## history settings ##
HISTFILE=~/.history_zsh
HISTSIZE=3000
SAVEHIST=3000
## Fancypants completion ##
autoload -U compinit
compinit
# completion for "man" by Gossamer <gossamer@tertius.net.au> 980827
# This is damn funky. I'm going to do something similar for pinfo,
# hopefully.
compctl -f -x 'S[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]' -k '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)' \
- 'R[[1-9nlo]|[1-9](|[a-z]),^*]' -K 'match-man' \
- 's[-M],c[-1,-M]' -g '*(-/)' \
- 's[-P],c[-1,-P]' -c \
- 's[-S],s[-1,-S]' -k '( )' \
- 's[-]' -k '(a d f h k t M P)' \
- 'p[1,-1]' -c + -K 'match-man' \
-- man
# Completition
compctl -b bindkey
compctl -v export
compctl -o setopt
compctl -v unset
compctl -o unsetopt
compctl -v vared
compctl -c which
compctl -c sudo
## set home, end, and delete (these may differ depeding on your system) ##
bindkey "\e[2~" transpose-words
bindkey "\e[3~" delete-char
case $HOSTNAME in (blackmamba)
bindkey "\e[7~" beginning-of-line
bindkey "\e[8~" end-of-line
esac
case $HOSTNAME in (copperhead)
bindkey "\e[1~" beginning-of-line
bindkey "\e[4~" end-of-line
esac
## copy/paste from X clipboard function ##
copy-to-clipboard ()
{
if [ -n "$LBUFFER$RBUFFER" ]; then
echo $LBUFFER$RBUFFER | xclip -i
fi
}
paste-from-clipboard ()
{
CLIPOUT=`xclip -o`
BUFFER=$LBUFFER$CLIPOUT$RBUFFER
}
zle -N paste-from-clipboard paste-from-clipboard
zle -N copy-to-clipboard copy-to-clipboard
bindkey "^V" paste-from-clipboard
bindkey "^X" copy-to-clipboard
## use colordiff for cvs ##
function cvsdiff () { cvs diff $@ | colordiff |less -R; }
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mixa Tux's lil' helper
Joined: 05 Mar 2004 Posts: 133 Location: Finland
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Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2004 10:05 am Post subject: |
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I installed zsh yesterday and I'm loving it.. I just love the tab completion that is way more advanced than in bash. And the prompt is cool too |
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RaaR Tux's lil' helper
Joined: 24 Jul 2003 Posts: 125
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Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2004 10:33 am Post subject: |
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[quote="allucid"]I'm having problems with wildard matching in certain circumstances. For example, if I use a wild card with scp it will error out without even attempting a connection:
Code: | (root):(copperhead)# scp home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf . (Sun,18)
zsh: no matches found: home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf
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Try:
Code: | # scp 'home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf' . |
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mrmodin Apprentice
Joined: 24 Jan 2004 Posts: 216 Location: Stockholm, Sweden
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Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2004 11:27 am Post subject: |
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I like it. Really! |
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allucid Veteran
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 1314 Location: atlanta
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Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2004 8:08 pm Post subject: |
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RaaR wrote: | allucid wrote: | I'm having problems with wildard matching in certain circumstances. For example, if I use a wild card with scp it will error out without even attempting a connection:
Code: | (root):(copperhead)# scp home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf . (Sun,18)
zsh: no matches found: home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf
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Try:
Code: | # scp 'home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf' . |
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That's more of a workaround then a fix. Can I get it to work the other way like it worked in bash? |
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RaaR Tux's lil' helper
Joined: 24 Jul 2003 Posts: 125
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Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2004 9:35 pm Post subject: |
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allucid wrote: | RaaR wrote: | allucid wrote: | I'm having problems with wildard matching in certain circumstances. For example, if I use a wild card with scp it will error out without even attempting a connection:
Code: | (root):(copperhead)# scp home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf . (Sun,18)
zsh: no matches found: home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf
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Try:
Code: | # scp 'home:~allucid/tmp/*.conf' . |
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That's more of a workaround then a fix. Can I get it to work the other way like it worked in bash? |
What you're seeing is globbing.
To not have that happening again you need to edit /etc/zsh/zshrc, ~/.zshrc or wherever you define your zsh options and make sure your setopt line has the options noglob and noextendedglob.
Here's mine: Code: | # grep setopt /etc/zsh/zshrc
setopt autocd autopushd multios histfindnodups histexpiredupsfirst sharehistory correct
setopt nobeep pushdignoredups noglob noextendedglob noclobber noautomenu mailwarning extendedhistory |
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shm Advocate
Joined: 09 Dec 2002 Posts: 2380 Location: Atlanta, Universe
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Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2004 10:03 pm Post subject: |
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I used zsh for a long time back when bash didn't have programmable completetion. Well, it does now, and it's almost as advanced as zsh's. Zsh does have other advantages however: a lot of it's syntax is a lot simplier than bash's. For example, to unzip some files, you can just do for x in *.zip; unzip $x. (if I recall right) _________________ what up |
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allucid Veteran
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 1314 Location: atlanta
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Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2004 11:10 pm Post subject: |
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RaaR wrote: | What you're seeing is globbing.
To not have that happening again you need to edit /etc/zsh/zshrc, ~/.zshrc or wherever you define your zsh options and make sure your setopt line has the options noglob and noextendedglob.
Here's mine: Code: | # grep setopt /etc/zsh/zshrc
setopt autocd autopushd multios histfindnodups histexpiredupsfirst sharehistory correct
setopt nobeep pushdignoredups noglob noextendedglob noclobber noautomenu mailwarning extendedhistory |
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Can I set it to always glob except on remote hosts?
I want all of these to work:
1) Code: | $ scp home:~/tmp/*.txt . |
2) Code: | $ scp *.txt home:~/tmp/ |
3)
with glob set, #1 fails, #2 and #3 work
with noglob set, #1 works, #2 and #3 fail.
I could set alias scp='noglob scp' but then #2 fails |
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RaaR Tux's lil' helper
Joined: 24 Jul 2003 Posts: 125
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Posted: Mon Jul 19, 2004 8:41 am Post subject: |
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Since you want some scp commands to glob and others not to, I guess you'll have to go with my first option, use the quotes to prevent globbing.
I've gotten so used to the quotes I even use them when they're not needed. |
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allucid Veteran
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 1314 Location: atlanta
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Posted: Mon Jul 19, 2004 6:29 pm Post subject: |
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RaaR wrote: | Since you want some scp commands to glob and others not to, I guess you'll have to go with my first option, use the quotes to prevent globbing.
I've gotten so used to the quotes I even use them when they're not needed. |
I actually want them both to glob but zsh tries to glob remote directories on my local machine. Anyways, I guess that will have to do for now. I might look into functions later to see if I can write a function to handle it.
Thanks everyone for the help. |
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kamagurka Veteran
Joined: 25 Jan 2004 Posts: 1026 Location: /germany/munich
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Posted: Tue Jul 20, 2004 4:05 pm Post subject: |
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good god, this shell rules. i especially love the 2 line prompt with the infobar on top!
2 problems, though:
1. when logging in, zsh comes up just fine.
but when i open a new aterm in X, it still comes up with bash. what do i have to change?
2. i'm using raoul's zshrc (thanks man), and i went through it and removed all of the stuff i could see i didn't need (like his cvs- and ssh-aliases), but i still have a little problem with the colors of the prompt, and it looks pretty complicated how to figure out (also because i don't want to put in or remove anything that would mess up raoul's presets); anyway:
right now i have +$USERNAME@$HOST$LOCATION, and it's all bold, and white, like so:
+kamagurka@kumquad~/data3 (only black=white)
what i want is
kamagurka:~/data3 (black still = white)
(i don't need the hostname as i only have one machine here)
the username color should also switch to red when su'ing.
now, i realize i shouldn't be troubling you like this, but the prompt part of my zshrc looks *really* complicated, and i don't know what i can leave out, what i sould modify and what i better leave alone...
if one of you gurus could tell me that, i'd be really grateful (i have a one-computer, one-user setup. no fancy stuff like "figuring out on which machine i am" is needed).
here is the prompt part of raoul's really nice zshrc:
Code: | ## prompt
precmd () {
local TERMWIDTH
(( TERMWIDTH = ${COLUMNS} - 1 ))
PR_FILLBAR=""
PR_PWDLEN=""
local promptsize=${#${(%):---(+%n@%m)---(%D{%H:%M})---}}
local pwdsize=${#${(%):-%~}}
if [[ "$promptsize + $pwdsize" -gt $TERMWIDTH ]]; then
((PR_PWDLEN=$TERMWIDTH - $promptsize))
else
PR_FILLBAR="\${(l.(($TERMWIDTH - ($promptsize + $pwdsize)))..${PR_HBAR}.)}"
fi
# print dir name in term title
case $TERM in
xterm*|rxvt|Eterm|Aterm)
print -Pn "\e]0;%n@%m: %~\a"
;;
esac
}
setprompt () {
setopt prompt_subst
autoload colors
colors
for color in BLACK RED GREEN YELLOW BLUE MAGENTA CYAN WHITE; do
eval $color='%{$termcap[md]$fg[${(L)color}]%}'
eval LIGHT_$color='%{$fg[${(L)color}]%}'
(( count = $count + 1 ))
done
DEF="%{$termcap[me]%}"
typeset -A altchar
set -A altchar ${(s..)termcap[ac]}
PR_SET_CHARSET="%{$termcap[eA]%}"
PR_SHIFT_IN="%{$termcap[as]%}"
PR_SHIFT_OUT="%{$termcap[ae]%}"
PR_HBAR=${altchar[q]:--}
PR_ULCORNER=${altchar[l]:--}
PR_LLCORNER=${altchar[m]:--}
PR_LRCORNER=${altchar[j]:--}
PR_URCORNER=${altchar[k]:--}
if [[ $LOCATION = HOME_LAPTOP ]]; then MCOLOR=$YELLOW
elif [[ $LOCATION = HOME_MAIN ]]; then MCOLOR=$CYAN
elif [[ $LOCATION = HOME_GATE ]]; then MCOLOR=$RED
elif [[ $LOCATION = KB_NETBSD ]]; then MCOLOR=$GREEN
elif [[ $LOCATION = KB_ALPHA ]]; then MCOLOR=$BLACK
elif [[ $LOCATION = KB_SUN ]]; then MCOLOR=$MAGENTA
else MCOLOR=$WHITE
fi
PROMPT='$PR_SET_CHARSET\
$BLACK$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_ULCORNER$BLUE$PR_HBAR$PR_SHIFT_OUT(\
$MCOLOR+$WHITE%n$MCOLOR@$WHITE%m$MCOLOR%$PR_PWDLEN<...<%~%<<\
$BLUE)$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_HBAR$BLACK$PR_HBAR${(e)PR_FILLBAR}$PR_HBAR$BLUE$PR_HBAR$PR_SHIFT_OUT(\
$WHITE%D{%H:%M}\
$BLUE)$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_HBAR$BLACK$PR_URCORNER$PR_SHIFT_OUT\
$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_LLCORNER$BLUE$PR_HBAR$PR_SHIFT_OUT%(!.#.$)$DEF '
RPROMPT=' $BLACK$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_HBAR$BLUE$PR_HBAR$PR_SHIFT_OUT\
($MCOLOR%(?,$GREEN\\o/,$RED\\o_ $WHITE%139(?,Seg fault,\
%130(?,Interrupt,%138(?,Bus Error,%?)))$RED _o/)\
$BLUE)$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_HBAR$BLACK$PR_LRCORNER$PR_SHIFT_OUT$DEF'
SPROMPT='zsh: correct $MCOLOR%R$DEF to $MCOLOR%r$DEF%b ? ([${MCOLOR}Y$DEF]es/\
[${MCOLOR}N$DEF]o/[${MCOLOR}E$DEF]dit/[${MCOLOR}A$DEF]bort) '
PS2='$BLACK$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_HBAR$PR_SHIFT_OUT\
$BLUE$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_HBAR$PR_SHIFT_OUT(\
$MCOLOR%_$BLUE)$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_HBAR$PR_SHIFT_OUT\
$BLACK$PR_SHIFT_IN$PR_HBAR$PR_SHIFT_OUT$DEF '
}
LISTPROMPT=''
setprompt |
thanks for pointing this bad boy out! _________________ If you loved me, you'd all kill yourselves today.
--Spider Jerusalem, the Word |
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Legoguy Apprentice
Joined: 22 Dec 2003 Posts: 166 Location: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
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Posted: Tue Jul 20, 2004 10:25 pm Post subject: |
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I just started using this today - But I'm having a problem with the colors...
Whenever there are colors in the prompt, the completion scrwes up the width of the prompt...
For example...
Code: |
legoguy@legobase / % cat <tab>
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Then it gets all ugly...
Code: |
legoguy@legobase / % cat bin/ cat bin/
---- file
bin/ dev/ lib/ opt/ root/ shared/ tmp/ var/ winxp/
boot/ cvs/ etc/ home/ mnt/ proc/ sbin/ sys/ usr/ |
Note the doubled cat /bin...
I try to remove this doubled thing, but can't delete past the second cat /bin, essentially making everything until the "c" in the second cat /bin part of the prompt...
I think it has something to do with some sort of problem with escaped chars...I'm researching it now...
Found it.
Whoever manages the "Gentoo" prompt theme for zsh:
You need to enclose colors in %{ <color> %}, not just ${ <color> }. I know that you do not use %{ %} because the problem I explained above happens with the Gentoo prompt... |
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AngusYoung Retired Dev
Joined: 20 Dec 2002 Posts: 473 Location: Czech Republic
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Posted: Wed Jul 21, 2004 12:29 am Post subject: |
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Another converted here zsh is great!
Here a small tip for my brazillians friends that may have an ABNT-2 keyboard. For your home/end key work you can try this:
Code: |
# Terms
if [[ $TERM == "rxvt" || $TERM == "Eterm" ]]
then
bindkey "^[[7~" beginning-of-line # Home
bindkey "^[[8~" end-of-line # End
# Console
else
bindkey "^[[1~" beginning-of-line # Home
bindkey "^[[4~" end-of-line # End
fi |
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allucid Veteran
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 1314 Location: atlanta
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Posted: Wed Jul 21, 2004 1:19 am Post subject: |
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kamagurka wrote: |
what i want is
kamagurka:~/data3 (black still = white)
(i don't need the hostname as i only have one machine here)
the username color should also switch to red when su'ing. |
Here is all you need for the prompt you described (I included a bunch of colors you don't need just for reference). It's really not that hard, I don't know any shell programming and I can usually figure stuff out by looking at other people's examples. I am not sure if I got the bold right, I don't use bold on any terminals. You need to have this prompt set for your user and for root if you want the colors to change right (i think). I also added a little dollar sign/pound sign to the end of the promt. If you don't want it just remove $PRMT from the PROMPT= statement.
Code: | ## Define some colors for easy use ##
## Bold colors in caps...i think##
local black=$'%{\e[0;30m%}'
local BLACK=$'%{\e[1;30m%}'
local red=$'%{\e[0;31m%}'
local RED=$'%{\e[1;31m%}'
local green=$'%{\e[0;32m%}'
local GREEN=$'%{\e[1;32m%}'
local yellow=$'%{\e[0;33m%}'
local YELLOW=$'%{\e[1;33m%}'
local blue=$'%{\e[0;34m%}'
local BLUE=$'%{\e[1;34m%}'
local purple=$'%{\e[0;35m%}'
local PURPLE=$'%{\e[1;35m%}'
local cyan=$'%{\e[0;36m%}'
local CYAN=$'%{\e[1;36m%}'
local WHITE=$'%{\e[1;37m%}'
local white=$'%{\e[0;37m%}'
local NC=$'%{\e[0m%}' # no color
if [ `/usr/bin/whoami` = 'root' ] ; then
local NAME=$GREEN'%n'$NC; local PRMT='$'
else
local NAME=$RED'%n'$NC; local PRMT='#'
fi
PROMPT=$NAME$white':%~ '$GREEN$PRMT$NC' '
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asph l33t
Joined: 25 Aug 2003 Posts: 741 Location: Barcelona, Spain
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Posted: Wed Jul 21, 2004 10:00 am Post subject: |
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another ksh user, when you get used to it you can't live without it _________________ gentoo sex is updatedb; locate; talk; date; cd; strip; look; touch; finger; unzip; uptime; gawk; head; emerge --oneshot condom; mount; fsck; gasp; more; yes; yes; yes; more; umount; emerge -C condom; make clean; sleep |
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allucid Veteran
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 1314 Location: atlanta
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Posted: Sat Jul 24, 2004 9:02 am Post subject: |
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allucid wrote: | RaaR wrote: | What you're seeing is globbing.
To not have that happening again you need to edit /etc/zsh/zshrc, ~/.zshrc or wherever you define your zsh options and make sure your setopt line has the options noglob and noextendedglob.
Here's mine: Code: | # grep setopt /etc/zsh/zshrc
setopt autocd autopushd multios histfindnodups histexpiredupsfirst sharehistory correct
setopt nobeep pushdignoredups noglob noextendedglob noclobber noautomenu mailwarning extendedhistory |
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Can I set it to always glob except on remote hosts?
I want all of these to work:
1) Code: | $ scp home:~/tmp/*.txt . |
2) Code: | $ scp *.txt home:~/tmp/ |
3)
with glob set, #1 fails, #2 and #3 work
with noglob set, #1 works, #2 and #3 fail.
I could set alias scp='noglob scp' but then #2 fails |
I found out I can set 'setop nonomatch' to ignore glob errors from the mailing list. |
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oberyno Guru
Joined: 15 Feb 2004 Posts: 467 Location: /bin/zsh
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Posted: Sat Jul 24, 2004 12:01 pm Post subject: |
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Great find alucid nonomatch also fixes my dislike of using quotes for emerging specific versions, i.e. Code: | oberyno> emerge -p =nvidia-kernel-1.0.5336-r4 ~
zsh: nvidia-kernel-1.0.5336-r4 not found
oberyno> emerge -p "=nvidia-kernel-1.0.5336-r4" ~
These are the packages that I would merge, in order:
Calculating dependencies ...done!
[ebuild UD] media-video/nvidia-kernel-1.0.5336-r4 [1.0.6106]
| but with nonomatch Code: | oberyno> emerge -p =nvidia-kernel-1.0.5336-r4 ~
These are the packages that I would merge, in order:
Calculating dependencies ...done!
[ebuild UD] media-video/nvidia-kernel-1.0.5336-r4 [1.0.6106]
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Of course, zsh doesn't complete exact version emerges. I think I'll write a patch for that. Edit: The patch is done and on bugzilla. https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=58198
Last edited by oberyno on Sat Jul 31, 2004 6:22 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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