Tim Abell 0c9b42a863 docs(alias-finder): add some examples (#12502) | 5 months ago | |
---|---|---|
.. | ||
tests | 1 year ago | |
.zunit.yml | 1 year ago | |
README.md | 5 months ago | |
alias-finder.plugin.zsh | 1 year ago |
This plugin searches the defined aliases and outputs any that match the command inputted. This makes learning new aliases easier.
To use it, add alias-finder
to the plugins
array of your zshrc file:
plugins=(... alias-finder)
To enable it for every single command, set zstyle in your ~/.zshrc
.
# ~/.zshrc
zstyle ':omz:plugins:alias-finder' autoload yes # disabled by default
zstyle ':omz:plugins:alias-finder' longer yes # disabled by default
zstyle ':omz:plugins:alias-finder' exact yes # disabled by default
zstyle ':omz:plugins:alias-finder' cheaper yes # disabled by default
As you can see, options are also available with zstyle.
When you execute a command alias finder will look at your defined aliases and suggest shorter aliases you could have used, for example:
Running the un-aliased git status
command:
╭─tim@fox ~/repo/gitopolis ‹main›
╰─$ git status
gst='git status' # <=== shorter suggestion from alias-finder
On branch main
Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/main'.
nothing to commit, working tree clean
Running a shorter git st
alias from .gitconfig
that it suggested :
╭─tim@fox ~/repo/gitopolis ‹main›
╰─$ git st
gs='git st' # <=== shorter suggestion from alias-finder
## main...origin/main
Running the shortest gs
shell alias that it found:
╭─tim@fox ~/repo/gitopolis ‹main›
╰─$ gs
# <=== no suggestions alias-finder because this is the shortest
## main...origin/main
In order to clarify, let's say
alias a=abc
has source 'abc' and destination 'a'.
--longer
or -l
to include aliases where the source is longer than the input (in other words, the source could contain the whole input).--exact
or -e
to avoid aliases where the source is shorter than the input (in other words, the source must be the same with the input).--cheaper
or -c
to avoid aliases where the destination is longer than the input (in other words, the destination must be the shorter than the input).