$var
where var="foo bar"
not do what I expect?In most Bourne-shell derivatives, multiple-word variables such as
var="foo bar"are split into words when passed to a command or used in a
for foo in
$var
loop. By default, zsh does not have that behaviour: the
variable remains intact. (This is not a bug! See below.) The option
SH_WORD_SPLIT
exists to provide compatibility.
For example, defining the function args to show the number of its arguments:
args() { echo $#; }and with our definition of `var',
args $varproduces the output `1'. After
setopt shwordsplitthe same function produces the output `2', as with sh and ksh.
Unless you need strict sh/ksh compatibility, you should ask yourself whether you really want this behaviour, as it can produce unexpected effects for variables with entirely innocuous embedded spaces. This can cause horrendous quoting problems when invoking scripts written for other shells (see 2.8). The natural way to produce word-splitting behaviour in zsh is via arrays. For example,
set -A array one two three twenty(or
array=(one two three twenty)if you prefer), followed by
args $arrayproduces the output `4', regardless of the setting of
SH_WORD_SPLIT
.
Arrays are also much more versatile than single strings. Probably
if this mechanism had always been available there would never have
been automatic word splitting in scalars, which is a sort of
uncontrollable poor man's array.
Note that word splitting happens regardless of the value of the internal field
separator, $IFS
; in other words, with IFS=:; foo=a:b; args $foo
you get the answer 1.
Other ways of causing word splitting include a judicious use of `eval':
sentence="Longtemps, je me suis couch\\'e de bonne heure." eval "words=($sentence)"after which $words is an array with the words of $sentence (note characters special to the shell, such as the
'
in this example,
must already be quoted), or, less standard but more reliable,
turning on SH_WORD_SPLIT
for one variable only:
args ${=sentence}always returns 8 with the above definition of
args
. (In older
versions of zsh, ${=foo}
toggled SH_WORD_SPLIT
; now it forces it on.)
Note also the "$@"
method of word splitting is always available in zsh
functions and scripts (though strictly this does array splitting, not
word splitting). This is more portable than the $*
, since it
will work regardless of the SH_WORD_SPLIT
setting; the other
difference is that $*
removes empty arguments from the array.
You can fix the first half of that objection by using ${==*}
,
which turns off SH_WORD_SPLIT
for the duration of the expansion.
SH_WORD_SPLIT
is set when zsh is invoked with the names `ksh' or `sh',
or (entirely equivalent) when emulate ksh
or emulate sh
is in
effect.
There used to be another effect of word splitting which differed between ksh
and zsh. In ksh, the builtin commands that declare parameters such
as typeset
and export
force word-splitting not to take place
after on an assignment argument:
typeset param=`echo foo bar`in ksh will create a parameter with value
foo bar
.
zsh used to
create a parameter param
with value foo
and a parameter bar
whose value was empty. Contrast this with a normal assignment (no
typeset
or other command in front), which never causes a word split
unless you have GLOB_ASSIGN
set.
zsh version 4.0.2 and newer creates a single parameter with value
foo bar
, like ksh does, when the option KSH_TYPESET
is set.
This option gets set automatically when in ksh compatibility mode.
zsh 5.1 and newer create a single parameter with value foo bar
by
default, in both compatibility and native modes. The older behaviour
can be obtained with disable -r typeset
.
If the options MAGIC_EQUAL_SUBST
and KSH_TYPESET
are both
set, arguments that look like assignments will not undergo word
splitting, whatever the command name.
When zsh starts up, there are four files you can change which it will
run under various circumstances: .zshenv
, .zprofile
, .zshrc
and .zlogin
. They are usually in your home directory, but the
variable $ZDOTDIR
may be set to alter that. Here are a few simple
hints about how to use them. There are also files which the system
administrator can set for all shells; you can avoid running all except
/etc/zshenv
by starting zsh with the -f
option --- for this
reason it is important for administrators to make sure /etc/zshenv
is as brief as possible.
The order in which the four files are searched (none of them
need to exist) is the one just given. However, .zprofile
and .zlogin
are only run when the shell is a login shell --- when
you first login, of course, and whenever you start zsh with the -l
option. The order is the only difference between those; you should
decide whether you need things set before or after .zshrc
. These
files are a good place to set environment variables (i.e. export
commands), since they are passed on to all shells without you having
to set them again, and also to check that your terminal is set up
properly (except that if you want to change settings for terminal
emulator windows like xterm
you will need to put those in
.zshrc
, since usually you do not get a login shell here).
Login shells are often interactive, but this is not necessarily the case. It is the programme that starts the shell that decides if it is to be a login shell, and it is not required that the shell be run interactively. A possible example is a display manager that starts a shell to initialise your environment before running the window manager to create terminals: it might run this as a login shell but with no terminal, so it is not interactive.
The only file you can alter which is started with every zsh (unless
you use the -f
option) is .zshenv
, so this is a good place to put
things you want even if the shell is non-interactive: options for
changing the syntax, like EXTENDED_GLOB
, any changes to set with
limit
, any more variables you want to make sure are set as for
example $fpath
to find functions. You almost certainly do not
want .zshenv
to produce any output. Some people prefer not to
use .zshenv
for setting options, as this affects scripts; but
making zsh scripts portable usually requires special handling anyway.
Finally, .zshrc
is run for every interactive shell; that includes
login shells, but also any other time you start up a shell, such as
simply by typing zsh
or opening a new terminal emulator window.
This file is the place to change the editing behaviour via options or
bindkey
, control how your history is saved, set aliases unless
you want to use them in scripts too, and for any other clutter which
can't be exported but you only use when interacting directly with the
shell. You probably don't want .zshrc
to produce output, either,
since there are occasions when this can be a problem, such as when
using rsh
from another host. See 3.21 for what to put in .zshrc
to save your history.
ALL_EXPORT
option?
Normally, you would put a variable into the environment by using
export var
. The command setopt allexport
causes all
variables which are subsequently set (N.B. not all the ones which
already exist) to be put into the environment.
This may seem a useful shorthand, but in practice it can have unhelpful side effects:
for
loops. This is probably a waste.
ALL_EXPORT
unless you
have a specific use for it. One safe use is to set it before
creating a list of variables in an initialisation file, then unset
it immediately afterwards. Only those variables will be automatically
exported.
In the first case, you presumably have setopt correctall
in an
initialisation file, so that zsh checks the spelling of each word in
the command line. You probably do not want this behaviour for
commands which do not operate on existing files.
The answer is to alias the offending command to itself with
nocorrect
stuck on the front, e.g.
alias mkdir='nocorrect mkdir'
To turn off globbing, the rationale is identical:
alias mkdir='noglob mkdir'You can have both
nocorrect
and noglob
, if you like, but the
nocorrect
must come first, since it is needed by the line editor,
while noglob
is only handled when the command is examined.
Note also that a shell function won't work: the no... directives must be expanded before the rest of the command line is parsed.
The Meta key isn't present on a lot of keyboards, but on some
the Alt key has the same effect. If a character is typed on the
keyboard while the Meta key is held down, the characters is sent
as terminal input with its eighth bit set. For example, ASCII
A
, hex 65, becomes hex E5. This is sometimes used to provide
extra editing commands.
As stated in the manual, zsh needs to be told about the Meta key by
using bindkey -me
or bindkey -mv
in your .zshrc or on the
command line. You probably also need to tell the terminal driver to
allow the `Meta' bit of the character through; stty pass8
is the
usual incantation. Sample .zshrc entry:
[[ $TERM = "xterm" ]] && stty pass8 && bindkey -meor, on SYSVR4-ish systems without pass8,
[[ $TERM = "xterm" ]] && stty -parenb -istrip cs8 && bindkey -me(disable parity detection, don't strip high bit, use 8-bit characters). Make sure this comes before any bindkey entries in your .zshrc which redefine keys normally defined in the emacs/vi keymap. You may also need to set the
eightBitOutput
resource in your ~/.Xdefaults
file, although this is on by default and it's unlikely anybody will
have tinkered with it.
You don't need the bindkey
to be able to define your own sequences
with the Meta key, though you still need the stty
.
If you are using multibyte input directly from the keyboard you probably don't want to use this feature since the eighth bit in each byte is used to indicate a part of a multibyte character. See chapter 5.
You should use the special function chpwd
, which is called when
the directory changes. The following checks that standard output is
a terminal, then puts the directory in the title bar if the terminal
is an xterm
or some close relative, or a sun-cmd
.
chpwd() { [[ -t 1 ]] || return case $TERM in sun-cmd) print -Pn "\e]l%~\e\\" ;; *xterm*|rxvt|(dt|k|E)term) print -Pn "\e]2;%~\a" ;; esac }
Change %~
if you want the message to be different. (The -P
option interprets such sequences just like in prompts, in this case
producing the current directory; you can of course use $PWD
here,
but that won't use the ~
notation which I find clearer.) Note that
when the xterm
starts up you will probably want to call chpwd
directly: just put chpwd
in .zshrc
after it is defined or autoloaded.
If you are sure your terminal handles this, the easiest way from versions
3.0.6 and 3.1 of the shell is to set the option PRINT_EIGHT_BIT
. In
principle, this will work automatically if your computer uses the
`locale' system and your locale variables are set properly, as zsh
understands this. However, it is quite complicated, so if it isn't
already set up, trying the option is a lot easier. For earlier versions
of zsh 3, you are stuck with trying to understand locales, see the
setlocale(3)
and zshparam(1)
manual pages: the simplest
possibility may be to set LC_ALL=en_US
. For older versions of the
shell, there is no easy way out.
The cursor keys send different codes depending on the terminal; zsh
only binds the most well known versions. If you see these problems,
try putting the following in your .zshrc
:
bindkey "$(echotc kl)" backward-char bindkey "$(echotc kr)" forward-char bindkey "$(echotc ku)" up-line-or-history bindkey "$(echotc kd)" down-line-or-history
If you use vi mode, use vi-backward-char
and vi-forward-char
where appropriate. As of version 4.0.1, zsh attempts to look up these
codes and to set the key bindings for you (both emacs and vi), but in
some circumstances this may not work.
Note, however, that up to version 3.0 binding arbitrary multiple key
sequences can cause problems, so check that this works with your set
up first. Also, from version 3.1.3, more sequences are supported by
default, namely those in the form <ESC>O
followed by A
,
B
, C
or D
, as well as the corresponding set beginning
<ESC>[
, so this may be redundant.
A particular problem which sometimes occurs is that there are two different modes for arrow keys, normal mode and keypad mode, which send different sequences. Although this is largely a historical artifact, it sometimes happens that your terminal can be switched from one mode to the other, for example by a rogue programme that sends the sequence to switch one way, but not the sequence to switch back. Thus you are stuck with the effects. Luckily in this case the arrow key sequences are likely to be standard, and you can simply bind both sets. The following code does this.
bindkey '\e[A' up-line-or-history bindkey '\e[B' down-line-or-history bindkey '\e[C' forward-char bindkey '\e[D' backward-char bindkey '\eOA' up-line-or-history bindkey '\eOB' down-line-or-history bindkey '\eOC' forward-char bindkey '\eOD' backward-charFor most even vaguely VT100-compatible terminals, the above eight instructions are a fairly safe bet for your
.zshrc
. Of course
you can substitute variant functions for the second argument here too.
It should be noted that the O
/ [
confusion can occur
with other keys such as Home and End. Some systems let you query
the key sequences sent by these keys from the system's terminal
database, terminfo. Unfortunately, the key sequences given there
typically apply to the mode that is not the one zsh uses by default (it's
the "application" mode rather than the "raw" mode). Explaining the use
of terminfo is outside the scope of this FAQ, but if you wish to use the
key sequences given there you can tell the line editor to turn on
"application" mode when it starts and turn it off when it stops:
function zle-line-init () { echoti smkx } function zle-line-finish () { echoti rmkx } zle -N zle-line-init zle -N zle-line-finishIf you only have the predecessor to terminfo, called termcap (which is what we used to get the cursor keys above), replace
echoti smkx
with echotc ks
and replace echoti rmkx
with echotc ke
.
If you are using an OpenWindows cmdtool as your terminal, any escape sequences (such as those produced by cursor keys) will be swallowed up and never reach zsh. Either use shelltool or avoid commands with escape sequences. You can also disable scrolling from the cmdtool pane menu (which effectively turns it into a shelltool). If you still want scrolling, try using an xterm with the scrollbar activated.
If that's not the problem, and you are using stty to change some tty settings, make sure you haven't asked zsh to freeze the tty settings: type
ttyctl -ubefore any stty commands you use.
On the other hand, if you aren't using stty and have problems you may
need the opposite: ttyctl -f
freezes the terminal to protect it
from hiccups introduced by other programmes (kermit has been known to
do this).
A problem I have experienced myself (on an AIX 3.2 workstation with
xterm) is that termcap deinitialization sequences sent by `less'
were causing automargins to be turned off --- not actually a shell
problem, but you might have thought it was. The fix is to put `X
'
into the environment variable LESS
to stop the sequences being sent.
Other programs (though not zsh) may also send that sequence.
If that's not the problem, and you are having difficulties with
external commands (not part of zsh), and you think some terminal
setting is wrong (e.g. ^V
is getting interpreted as `literal next
character' when you don't want it to be), try
ttyctl -u STTY='lnext "^-"' commandname(in this example). Note that zsh doesn't reset the terminal completely afterwards: just the modes it uses itself and a number of special processing characters (see the
stty(1)
manual page).
(This information comes from Bart Schaefer and other zsh-workers.)
Emacs 19.29 or thereabouts stopped using a terminal type of "emacs" in shell buffers, and instead sets it to "dumb". Zsh only kicks in its special I'm-inside-emacs initialization when the terminal type is "emacs".
Probably the most reliable way of dealing with this is to look for
the environment variable $EMACS
, which is set to t
in
Emacs' shell mode. Putting
[[ $EMACS = t ]] && unsetopt zlein your .zshrc should be sufficient.
Another method is to put
#!/bin/sh TERM=emacs exec zshinto a file ~/bin/eshell, then
chmod +x ~/bin/eshell
, and
tell emacs to use that as the shell by adding
(setenv "ESHELL" (expand-file-name "~/bin/eshell"))to ~/.emacs.
The problem is that there are two possible ways of autoloading a function (see the AUTOLOADING FUNCTIONS section of the zsh manual page zshmisc for more detailed information):
function foo {
or foo () {
, and consequently no matching }
at the end.
This is the traditional zsh method. The advantage is that the
file is called exactly like a script, so can double as both.
To define a function xhead () { print -n "\033]2;$*\a"; }
,
the file would just contain print -n "\033]2;$*\a"
.
xhead
, the whole of the
usual definition should be in the file.
In old versions of zsh, before 3.0, only the first behaviour was allowed, so you had to make sure the file found for autoload just contained the function body. You could still define other functions in the file with the standard form for definitions, though they would be redefined each time you called the main function.
In version 3.0.x, the second behaviour is activated if the file defines the autoloaded function. Unfortunately, this is incompatible with the old zsh behaviour which allowed you to redefine the function when you called it.
From version 3.1, there is an option KSH_AUTOLOAD
to allow full ksh
compatibility, i.e. the function must be in the second form
above. If that is not set, zsh tries to guess which form you are
using: if the file contains only a complete definition of the
function in the second form, and nothing else apart from comments
and whitespace, it will use the function defined in the file;
otherwise, it will assume the old behaviour. The option is set
if emulate ksh
is in effect, of course.
(A neat trick to autoload all functions in a given directory is to
include a line like autoload ~/fns/*(:t)
in .zshrc; the bit in
parentheses removes the directory part of the filenames, leaving
just the function names.)
The ksh syntax is now understood, i.e.
let 'foo = 16#ff'or equivalently
(( foo = 16#ff ))or even
foo=$((16#ff))The original syntax was
(( foo = [16]ff ))--- this was based on a misunderstanding of the ksh manual page. It still works but its use is deprecated. Then
echo $foogives the answer `255'. It is possible to declare variables explicitly to be integers, via
typeset -i foowhich has a different effect: namely the base used in the first assignment (hexadecimal in the example) is subsequently used whenever `foo' is displayed (although the internal representation is unchanged). To ensure foo is always displayed in decimal, declare it as
typeset -i 10 foowhich requests base 10 for output. You can change the output base of an existing variable in this fashion. Using the
$(( ... ))
method will
always display in decimal, except that in 3.1.9 there is a new feature
for selecting a base for displaying here:
print $(( [#16] 255 ))
You can place a literal newline in quotes, i.e.
PROMPT="Hi Joe, what now?%# "If you have the bad taste to set the option cshjunkiequotes, which inhibits such behaviour, you will have to bracket this with
unsetopt cshjunkiequotes
and setopt cshjunkiequotes
, or put it
in your .zshrc
before the option is set.
In recent versions of zsh (not 3.0), there is a form of quoting which
interprets print sequences like `\n
' but otherwise acts like single
quotes: surround the string with $'...'
. Hence:
PROMPT=$'Hi Joe,\nwhat now?%# 'is a neat way of doing what you want. Note that it is the quotes, not the prompt expansion, which turns the `
\n
' into a newline.
bindkey ^a command-name
or stty intr ^-
do something funny?
You probably have the extendedglob option set in which case ^
and #
are metacharacters. ^a
matches any file except one called a
, so the
line is interpreted as bindkey followed by a list of files. Quote the
^
with a backslash or put quotation marks around ^a
.
See 3.27 if you want to know more about the pattern
character ^
.
\C-s
and \C-q
any more?
The control-s and control-q keys now do flow control by default,
unless you have turned this off with stty -ixon
or redefined the
keys which control it with stty start
or stty stop
. (This is
done by the system, not zsh; the shell simply respects these
settings.) In other words, \C-s
stops all output to the terminal,
while \C-q
resumes it.
There is an option NO_FLOW_CONTROL
to stop zsh from allowing flow
control and hence restoring the use of the keys: put setopt
noflowcontrol
in your .zshrc
file.
foo
within function foo
?
The command command foo
does just that. You don't need this with
aliases, but you do with functions. Note that error messages like
zsh: job table full or recursion limit exceededare a good sign that you tried calling `foo' in function `foo' without using `command'. If
foo
is a builtin rather than an external
command, use builtin foo
instead.
If you have a command like "echo !-2:$ !$
", the first history
substitution then sets a default to which later history substitutions
with single unqualified bangs refer, so that !$ becomes equivalent to
!-2:$
. The option CSH_JUNKIE_HISTORY
makes all single bangs refer
to the last command.
Simple answer: you haven't asked it not to. Zsh (unlike [t]csh) gives
you the option of having background jobs killed or not: the nohup
option exists if you don't want them killed. Note that you can always
run programs with nohup
in front of the pipeline whether or not the
option is set, which will prevent that job from being killed on
logout. (nohup
is actually an external command.)
The disown
builtin is very useful in this respect: if zsh informs
you that you have background jobs when you try to logout, you can
disown
all the ones you don't want killed when you exit. This is
also a good way of making jobs you don't need the shell to know about
(such as commands which create new windows) invisible to the shell.
Likewise, you can start a background job with &!
instead of just
&
at the end, which will automatically disown the job.
Tell zsh to start from entry 1: history 1
. Those entries at the
start which are no longer in memory will be silently omitted.
while {...} {...}
work?
Zsh provides an alternative to the traditional sh-like forms with do
,
while TEST; do COMMANDS; doneallowing you to have the COMMANDS delimited with some other command structure, often
{...}
. The rules are quite complicated and
in most scripts it is probably safer --- and certainly more
compatible --- to stick with the sh-like rules. If you are
wondering, the following is a rough guide.
To make it work you must make sure the TEST itself is clearly delimited. For example, this works:
while (( i++ < 10 )) { echo i is $i; }but this does not:
while let "i++ < 10"; { echo i is $i; } # Wrong!The reason is that after
while
, any sort of command list is valid.
This includes the whole list let "i++ < 10"; { echo i $i; }
;
the parser simply doesn't know when to stop. Furthermore, it is
wrong to miss out the semicolon, as this makes the {...}
part
of the argument to let
. A newline behaves the same as a
semicolon, so you can't put the brace on the next line as in C.
So when using this syntax, the test following the while
must
be wrapped up: any of ((...))
, [[...]]
, {...}
or
(...)
will have this effect. (They have their usual syntactic
meanings too, of course; they are not interchangeable.) Note that
here too it is wrong to put in the semicolon, as then the case
becomes identical to the preceding one:
while (( i++ < 10 )); { echo i is $i; } # Wrong!
The same is true of the if
and until
constructs:
if { true } { echo yes } else { echo no }but with
for
, which only needs a list of words, you can get
away with it:
for foo in a b; { echo foo is $a; bar=$foo; }since the parser knows it only needs everything up to the first semicolon. For the same reason, there is no problem with the
repeat
,
case
or select
constructs; in fact, repeat
doesn't even
need the semicolon since it knows the repeat count is just one word.
This is independent of the behaviour of the SHORTLOOPS option (see manual), which you are in any case encouraged even more strongly not to use in programs as it can be very confusing.
In zsh, you need to set three variables to make sure your history is written out when the shell exits. For example,
HISTSIZE=200 HISTFILE=~/.zsh_history SAVEHIST=200
$HISTSIZE
tells the shell how many lines to keep internally,
$HISTFILE
tells it where to write the history, and $SAVEHIST
,
the easiest one to forget, tells it how many to write out. The
simplest possibility is to set it to the same as $HISTSIZE
as
above. There are also various options affecting history; see the
manual.
The problem is that you have a variable $E
containing the string
EDITOR
, and a variable $EDITOR
containing the string emacs
,
or something such. How do you get from $E
to emacs in one easy
stage?
There is no standard single-stage way of doing this. However, there is a zsh idiom (available in all versions of zsh since 3.0) for this:
print ${(e)E:+\$$E}Ignore the
(e)
for now. The :+
means: if the variable
$E
is set, substitute the following, i.e. \$$E
. This is
expanded to $EDITOR
by the normal rules. Finally, the (e)
means
`evaluate the expression you just made'. This gives emacs
.
For a standard shell way of doing this, you are stuck with eval
:
eval echo \$$Eproduces the same result.
Versions since 3.1.6 allow you to do this directly with a new flag;
${(P)E}
.
As a slight aside, sometimes people note that the syntax ${${E}}
is valid and expect it to have this effect. It probably ought to, but
in the early days of zsh it was found convenient to have this way of
producing different substitutions on the same parameter; for example,
${${file##**/}%.*}
removes everything up to the last slash in
$file
, then everything from the last dot on, inclusive (try
it, this works). So in ${${E}}
, the internal ${...}
actually does nothing.
The problem is normally limited to zsh versions prior to 4.3.0 due to the advent of the PROMPT_SP option (which is enabled by default, and eliminates this problem for most terminals). An example of the overwriting is:
% echo -n foo %This shows a case where the word
foo
was output without a newline, and
then overwritten by the prompt line %
. The reason this happens is that
the option PROMPT_CR
is enabled by default, and it outputs a carriage
return before the prompt in order to ensure that the line editor knows what
column it is in (this is needed to position the right-side prompt correctly
($RPROMPT
, $RPS1
) and to avoid screen corruption when performing
line editing). If you add unsetopt promptcr
to your .zshrc
, you
will see any partial output, but your screen may look weird until you press
return or refresh the screen.
A better solution than disabling PROMPT_CR (for most terminals) is adding a simpler version of the PROMPT_SP functionality to an older zsh using a custom precmd function, like this one:
# Skip defining precmd if the PROMPT_SP option is available. if ! eval '[[ -o promptsp ]] 2>/dev/null'; then function precmd { # Output an inverse char and a bunch spaces. We include # a CR at the end so that any user-input that gets echoed # between this output and the prompt doesn't cause a wrap. print -nP "%B%S%#%s%b${(l:$((COLUMNS-1)):::):-}\r" } fiThat precmd function will only bump the screen down to a new line if there was output on the prompt line, otherwise the extra chars get removed by the PROMPT_CR action. Although this typically looks fine, it may result in the spaces preceding the prompt being included when you select a line of preserved text with the mouse.
One final alternative is to put a newline in your prompt -- see question 3.13 for that.
On the majority of modern UNIX systems, cutting text from one window and pasting it into another should work fine. On a few, however, there are problems due to issues about how the terminal is handled: most programs expect the terminal to be in `canonical input mode', which means that the program is passed a whole line of input at a time, while for editing the shell needs a single character at a time and must be in `non-canonical input mode'. On the systems in question, input can be lost or re-ordered when the mode changes. There are actually two slightly different problems:
However, if you have problems you can trick it: type `{
' on a line
by itself, then paste the input, then type `}
' on a line by
itself. The shell will not execute anything until the final brace is
read; all input is read as continuation lines (this may require the
fixes referred to above in order to be reliable).
As of 5.1, this trick is not necessary on terminal emulators that
support the bracketed paste feature (this includes most modern
terminal emulators). See the description of $zle_bracketed_paste
in the zshparam
manual page for details.
(Or `color xterm', if you're reading this in black and white.)
Versions of the shell starting with the 4.3 series have this built in. Use
PS1='%K{white}%F{red}<red on white>%f%k<default colours>'to change the prompt. Names are only usable for the colours black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan and white, understood by most terminals, but if you happen to know the details of how your terminal implements colours you can specify a number, e.g.
%20F
to turn the foreground into colour number 20. echotc
Co
will often output the number of colours the terminal supports.
(Careful: echotc co
is different; it also outputs a number
but it's the number of columns in the terminal.) If this is 8
then probably you have the named colours and nothing more.
In older versions of the shell you need to find the sequences which
generate the various colours from the manual for your terminal
emulator; these are ANSI standard on those I know about which support
colour. With a recent (post 3.1.6) distribution of zsh, there is a
theme system to handle this for you; even if you don't see that, the
installed function `colors
' (meaning `colours', if you're not
reading this in black and white) gives the escape sequences. You will
end up with code looking like this (borrowed from Oliver Kiddle):
PS1=$'%{\e[1;31m%}<the rest of your prompt here>%{\e[0m%}'The
$'
form of quoting turns the `\e
' into a real escape
character; this only works from about version 3.1.4, so if you're using
3.0.x, you need to do something like
PS1="$(print '%{\e[1;31m%}<the rest goes here>%{\e[0m%}')"The `
%{...%}
' is used in prompts for strings which will
not appear as characters, so that the prompt code doesn't miscalculate the
length of the prompt which would have a bad effect on editing. The
resulting `<ESC>[1;31m
' makes the prompt red, and the
`<ESC>[0m
' puts printing back to normal so that the rest of the line
is unchanged.
foo 2>&1 >foo.out | bar
'?
This is a slightly unexpected effect of the option MULTIOS
, which is
set by default. Let's look more closely:
foo 2>&1 >foo.out | barWhat you're probably expecting is that the command
foo
sends its
standard output to the pipe and so to the input of the command bar
,
while it sends its standard error to the file foo.out
. What you
actually see is that the output is going both to the pipe and into the
file. To be more explicit, here's the same example with real commands:
% { print output; print error >&2 } 2>&1 >foo.out | sed 's/error/erratic/' erratic output % cat foo.out outputand you can see `
output
' appears twice.
It becomes clearer what's going on if we write:
% print output >foo1.out >foo2.out % cat foo1.out output % cat foo2.out outputYou might recognise this as a standard feature of zsh, called `
multios
'
and controlled by the option of the same name, whereby output is copied
to both files when the redirector appears twice. What's going on in the
first example is exactly the same, however the second redirector is
disguised as a pipe. So if you want to turn this effect off, you need
to unset the option MULTIOS
, or alternatively write the following:
% { print output; print error >&2 } 2>&1 >&- >foo.out | sed 's/error/erratic/' erraticBy closing stdout with
>&-
, we're cancelling the previous redirections
(to the pipe) and start anew with >foo.out
instead of adding it as a
redirection target to stdout.
The characters ^
and ~
are active when the option
EXTENDED_GLOB
is set. Both are used to exclude patterns, i.e. to
say `match something other than ...'. There are some confusing
differences, however. Here are the descriptions for ^
and ~
.
^
means `anything except the pattern that follows'. You can
think of the combination ^
pat as being like a *
except
that it doesn't match pat. So, for example, myfile^.txt
matches anything that begins with myfile
except myfile.txt
.
Because it works with patterns, not just strings, myfile^*.c
matches anything that begins with myfile
unless it ends with
.c
, whatever comes in the middle --- so it matches myfile1.h
but not myfile1.c
.
Also like *
, ^
doesn't match across directories if you're
matching files when `globbing', i.e. when you use an unquoted pattern
in an ordinary command line to generate file names. So
^dir1/^file1
matches any subdirectory of the current directory
except one called dir1
, and within any directory it matches it
picks any file except one called file1
. So the overall pattern
matches dir2/file2
but not dir1/file1
nor dir1/file2
nor
dir2/file1
. (The rule that all the different bits of the pattern
must match is exactly the same as for any other pattern character,
it's just a little confusing that what does match in each bit is
found by telling the shell not to match something or other.)
As with any other pattern, a ^
expression doesn't treat the
character `/
' specially if it's not matching files, for example
when pattern matching in a command like [[ $string = ^pat1/pat2 ]]
.
Here the whole string pat1/pat2
is treated as the argument that
follows the ^
. So anything matches but that one string
pat1/pat1
.
It's not obvious what something like [[ $string = ^pat1^pat2 ]]
means. You won't often have cause to use it, but the rule is that
each ^
takes everything that follows as an argument (unless
it's already inside parentheses --- I'll explain this below). To see
this more clearly, put those arguments in parentheses: the pattern is
equivalent to ^(pat1^(pat2))
. where now you can see exactly what
each ^
takes as its argument. I'll leave it as an exercise for
you to work out what this does and doesn't match.
~
is always used between two patterns --- never right at the
beginning or right at the end. Note that the other special meaning of
~
, at the start of a filename to refer to your home directory or
to another named directory, doesn't require the option
EXTENDED_GLOB
to be set. (At the end of an argument ~
is
never special at all. This is useful if you have Emacs backup files.)
It means `match what's in front of the tilde, but only if it doesn't
match what's after the tilde'. So *.c~f*
matches any file
ending in .c
except one that begins with f
. You'll see that,
unlike ^
, the parts before and after the ~
both refer
separately to the entire test string.
For matching files by globbing, ~
is the only globbing operator
to have a lower precedence than /
. In other words, when you
have /a/path/to/match~/a/path/not/to/match
the ~
considers
what's before as a complete path to a file name, and what's after as a
pattern to match against that file. You can put any other pattern
characters in the expressions before and after the ~
, but as I
said the pattern after the ~
is really just a single pattern to
match against the name of every file found rather than a pattern to
generate a file. That means, for example, that a *
after the
~
will match a /
. If that's confusing, you can think of
how ~
works like this: take the pattern on the left, use it as
normal to make a list of files, then for each file found see if it
matches the pattern on the right and if it does take that file out of
the list. Note, however, that this removal of files happens
immediately, before anything else happens to the file list --- before
any glob qualifiers are applied, for example.
One rule that is common to both ^
and ~
is that they can
be put inside parentheses and the arguments to them don't extend past
the parentheses. So (^README).txt
matches any file ending in
.txt
unless the string before that was README
, the same as
*.txt~README.txt
or (*~README).txt
. In fact, you can
always turn ^something
into (*~something)
, where
something
mustn't contain /
if the pattern is being used for
globbing.
Likewise, abc+(<->~<10-100>).txt
matches a file consisting of
abc
, then some digits, then .txt
, unless the digits happen to
match a number from 10 to 100 inclusive (remember the handy <->
pattern for matching integers with optional limits to the range). So
this pattern matches abc1.txt
or abc200.txt
but not
abc20.txt
nor abc100.txt
nor even abc0030.txt
. However,
if you're matching files by globbing note you can't put /
s
inside the parentheses since the groups can't stretch across multiple
directories. (You can do that, of course, whenever the character
/
isn't special.) This means that you need to take care when
using exclusions across multiple directories; see some examples below.
You may like to know that from zsh 5.0.3 you can disable any pattern
character separately. So if you find ^
gets in your way and
you're happy using ~
, put disable -p "^"
in ~/.zshrc
.
You still need to turn on EXTENDED_GLOB
; the disable
command
only deactivates things that would otherwise be active, you can't
specially enable something not allowed by the syntax options in effect.
Here are some examples with files to illustrate the points. We'll
assume the option EXTENDED_GLOB
is set and none of the pattern
characters is disabled.
**/foo~*bar*
matches any file called foo
in any
subdirectory, except where bar
occurred somewhere in the path.
For example, users/barstaff/foo
will be excluded by the ~
operator. As the **
operator cannot be grouped (inside
parentheses it is treated as *
), this is one way to exclude some
subdirectories from matching a **
. Note that this can be quite
inefficient because the shell performs a complete search for
**/foo
before it uses the pattern after the ~
to exclude
files from the match. The file is excluded if bar
occurs
anywhere, in any directory segment or the final file name.
(^foo/)#
can be used to match any hierarchy of
directories where none of the path components is foo
. For
example, (^CVS/)#
selects all subdirectories to any depth
except where one component is named CVS
. (The form
(pat/)#
is very useful in other cases; for example,
(../)#.cvsignore
finds the file .cvsignore
if it exists
in the current directory or any parent.)
When typing a long command interactively, it's possible to edit it in $EDITOR
before execution by using the edit-command-line
ZLE widget. For example,
after putting
autoload -U edit-command-line; zle -N edit-command-line; bindkey '^Fc' edit-command-line;in your
~/.zshrc
, typing ^F c
will open the entered-so-far
command-line for editing. The command will not be automatically executed;
quitting the editor will only return to zsh's command-line editing mode.
The issue is that if you run:
which non-existent-commandthe error message goes, unusually, to standard output rather than to standard error. Other shells send this message to standard error, as they would if the command was about to be executed but could not be found.
The original reason for this is that this behaviour is inherited from
previous versions of `which
', a builtin in later versions of csh,
the C shell, as well as tcsh, an adaptation of the C Shell with better
editing, and is also available as a separate script sometimes still
found in certain distributions. Other shells had equivalent commands,
`whence
' and `type
, that zsh has also adopted. So in fact
this has always been a feature of `which
'. (It would be possible
to change this in emulation modes; however, so far this possibility
has been seen as more of an additional confusion than a help.)
If you want some further rationalisation, you might note that
`which
' is designed as a way of outputting information about a
command. So `this command can be found in ...' and `this command
can't be found' are both bits of information here, unlike the case
where the command is to be executed. So although it differs from
other Bourne-style shells it is in fact self-consistent. Note that
the exit status does reflect the fact the command can't be found.
*.{tex,aux,pdf}
do what I expect?Based on the behaviour of some other shells, you might guess that the following expression:
echo *.{tex,aux,pdf}would be the way to echo any files ending in
.tex
, .aux
or
.pdf
in the current directory. Depending on your settings for
matching (see 2.1, in particular NO_NOMATCH
), you may
see something else, in particular an error about (say) *.aux
if
there were no files ending .aux
.
The reason for this is that the brace expansion isn't actually a form of pattern matching. Instead, the line above is equivalent to
echo *.tex *.aux *.pdfgiving you three separate patterns. With the default
NOMATCH
behaviour in effect, any pattern that fails to match is an error.
However, there is a way of doing exactly what you want, using parentheses instead of braces:
echo *.(tex|aux|pdf)This is now a pattern matching expression, so is considered as a single pattern. Now any file that exists will suppress the
NOMATCH
behaviour, but you'll still get all the files that do
match.
This use of parentheses is special to zsh. Modern Bourne-like shells
have a syntax like this, too, but with an @
in front of the
parentheses: again, see 2.1, and search for @(
.
This is harder for the user to remember but easier for the shell to
parse!