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NAMEcomplete - edit command-specific tab-completions SYNOPSIScomplete ((-c | --command) | (-p | --path)) COMMAND [OPTIONS] complete (-C | --do-complete) [--escape] STRING DESCRIPTIONcomplete defines, removes or lists completions for a command. For an introduction to writing your own completions, see Writing your own completions in the fish manual. The following options are available:
Command-specific tab-completions in fish are based on the notion of options and arguments. An option is a parameter which begins with a hyphen, such as -h, -help or --help. Arguments are parameters that do not begin with a hyphen. Fish recognizes three styles of options, the same styles as the GNU getopt library. These styles are:
Multiple commands and paths can be given in one call to define the same completions for multiple commands. Multiple command switches and wrapped commands can also be given to define multiple completions in one call. Invoking complete multiple times for the same command adds the new definitions on top of any existing completions defined for the command. When -a or --arguments is specified in conjunction with long, short, or old-style options, the specified arguments are only completed as arguments for any of the specified options. If -a or --arguments is specified without any long, short, or old-style options, the specified arguments are used when completing non-option arguments to the command (except when completing an option argument that was specified with -r or --require-parameter). Command substitutions found in ARGUMENTS should return a newline-separated list of arguments, and each argument may optionally have a tab character followed by the argument description. Description given this way override a description given with -d or --description. Descriptions given with --description are also used to group options given with -s, -o or -l. Options with the same (non-empty) description will be listed as one candidate, and one of them will be picked. If the description is empty or no description was given this is skipped. The -w or --wraps options causes the specified command to inherit completions from another command, "wrapping" the other command. The wrapping command can also have additional completions. A command can wrap multiple commands, and wrapping is transitive: if A wraps B, and B wraps C, then A automatically inherits all of C's completions. Wrapping can be removed using the -e or --erase options. Wrapping only works for completions specified with -c or --command and are ignored when specifying completions with -p or --path. When erasing completions, it is possible to either erase all completions for a specific command by specifying complete -c COMMAND -e, or by specifying a specific completion option to delete. When complete is called without anything that would define or erase completions (options, arguments, wrapping, ...), it shows matching completions instead. So complete without any arguments shows all loaded completions, complete -c foo shows all loaded completions for foo. Since completions are autoloaded, you will have to trigger them first. EXAMPLESThe short-style option -o for the gcc command needs a file argument: complete -c gcc -s o -r The short-style option -d for the grep command requires one of read, skip or recurse: complete -c grep -s d -x -a "read skip recurse" The su command takes any username as an argument. Usernames are given as the first colon-separated field in the file /etc/passwd. This can be specified as: complete -x -c su -d "Username" -a "(cat /etc/passwd | cut -d : -f 1)" The rpm command has several different modes. If the -e or --erase flag has been specified, rpm should delete one or more packages, in which case several switches related to deleting packages are valid, like the nodeps switch. This can be written as: complete -c rpm -n "__fish_contains_opt -s e erase" -l nodeps -d "Don't check dependencies" where __fish_contains_opt is a function that checks the command line buffer for the presence of a specified set of options. To implement an alias, use the -w or --wraps option: complete -c hub -w git Now hub inherits all of the completions from git. Note this can also be specified in a function declaration (function thing -w otherthing). complete -c git Shows all completions for git. Any command foo that doesn't support grouping multiple short options in one string (not supporting -xf as short for -x -f) or a short option and its value in one string (not supporting -d9 instead of -d 9) should be specified as a single-character old-style option instead of as a short-style option; for example, complete -c foo -o s; complete -c foo -o v would never suggest foo -ov but rather foo -o -v. COPYRIGHT2024, fish-shell developers
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