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kakoune/doc/manpages/commands.asciidoc
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kakoune(k)
==========
NAME
----
commands - a
Primitives
----------
Some commands take an exclamation mark (*!*), which can be used to force
the execution of the command (i.e. to quit a modified buffer, the
command *q!* has to be used). Aliases are mentionned below each commands.
*change-directory* [<directory>]::
*alias* cd +
change the current directory to *directory*, or the home directory if
unspecified
*doc* <topic>::
*alias* help +
display documentation about a topic. The completion list displays the
available topics
*edit[!]* <filename> [<line> [<column>]]::
*alias* e +
open buffer on file, go to given line and column. If file is already
opened, just switch to this file. Use edit! to force reloading
*write[!]* [<filename>]::
*alias* w +
write buffer to <filename> or use its name if filename is not
given. If the file is write-protected, its permissions are temporarily
changed to allow saving the buffer and restored afterwards when
the write! command is used.
*write-all*::
*alias* wa +
write all buffers that are associated to a file
*quit!* [<exit status>]::
*alias* q +
exit Kakoune, use quit! to force quitting even if there is some
unsaved buffers remaining. If specified, the client exit status
will be set to <exit status>
*write-all-quit* [<exit status>]::
*alias* waq +
write all buffers and quit. If specified, the client exit status
will be set to <exit status>
*kill[!]*::
terminate the current session, all the clients as well as the server
*buffer* <name>::
*alias* b +
switch to buffer <name>
*buffer-next*::
*alias* bn +
switch to the next buffer
*buffer-prev*::
*alias* bp +
switch to the previous buffer
*delete-buffer[!]* [<name>]::
*alias* db +
delete the buffer <name>
*source* <filename>::
execute commands in <filename>
*colorscheme* <name>::
load named colorscheme
*rename-client* <name>::
*alias* nc +
set current client name
*rename-buffer* <name>::
set current buffer name
*rename-session* <name>::
set current session name
*echo* [options] <text>::
show *text* in status line, with the following *options*:
*-markup*:::
expand the markup strings in *text* (c.f. the 'expansions' documentation page)
*-debug*:::
print the given text to the *\*debug** buffer
*nop*::
does nothing, but arguments will be evaluated (e.g. shell expansion)
*declare-option* [-hidden] <type> <name> [<value>]::
*alias* decl +
declare a new option, the -hidden hides the option in completion
suggestions (c.f. the 'options' documentation page)
*set-option* <scope> <name> <value>::
*alias* set +
change the value of an option (c.f. the 'options' documentation page),
note that the name of a particular buffer can be specified when the
target *scope* is 'buffer', e.g. set buffer=/path/to/buffer foo "bar";
the scope can also take the `current` special value, which will automatically
point to the narrowest scope available in the current context
*unset-option* <scope> <name>::
*alias* unset +
unset the value of an option (c.f. the 'options' documentation page)
*update-option* <scope> <name>::
update the value of an option if its type supports that operation
(c.f. the 'options' documentation page)
*alias* <scope> <name> <command>::
define a new alias, within the context of a scope
*unalias* <scope> <name> [<command>]::
remove an alias if its current value is the same as the one passed
as an optional parameter, remove it unconditionally otherwise
*set-face* <name> <facespec>::
*alias* face +
define a face (c.f. the 'faces' documentation page)
*exec* [<flags>] <key> ...::
execute a series of keys, as if they were hit (c.f. the 'execeval'
documentation page)
*eval* [<flags>] <command> ...::
execute commands, as if they were entered in the command prompt
(c.f. the 'execeval' documentation page)
*define-command* [<flags>] <name> <command>::
*alias* def +
define a new command (c.f. the 'Declaring new commands' section below)
*map* <scope> <mode> <key> <keys>::
bind a list of keys to a combination (c.f. the 'mapping' documentation
page)
*unmap* <scope> <mode> <key> [<expected>]::
unbind a key combination (c.f. the 'mapping' documentation page)
*hook* [-group <group>] <scope> <hook_name> <filtering_regex> <command>::
execute a command whenever an event is triggered (c.f. the 'hooks'
documentation page)
*remove-hooks* <scope> <group>::
*alias* rmhooks +
remove every hooks in *scope* that are part of the given *group*
(c.f. the 'hooks' documentation page)
*add-highlighter* [<flags>] <highlighter_name> <highlighter_parameters> ...::
*alias* addhl +
add a highlighter to the current window (c.f. the 'highlighters'
documentation page)
*remove-highlighter* <highlighter_id>::
*alias* rmhl +
remove the highlighter whose id is *highlighter_id* (c.f. the
'highlighters' documentation page)
Helpers
-------
Kakoune provides some helper commands that can be used to define composite
commands:
*prompt* <prompt> <command>::
prompt the user for a string, when the user validates, executes the
command. The entered text is available in the `text` value accessible
through `$kak_text` in shells or `%val{text}` in commands.
The *-init <str>* switch allows setting initial content, the
*-password* switch hides the entered text and clears the register
after command execution.
The *-on-change* and *-on-abort* switches, followed by a command
will have this command executed whenever the prompt content changes
or the prompt is aborted, respectively.
*on-key* <command>::
wait for next key from user, then execute <command>, the key is
available through the `key` value, accessible through `$kak_key`
in shells, or `%val{key}` in commands.
*menu* <label1> <commands1> <label2> <commands2> ...::
display a menu using labels, the selected labels commands are
executed. The *menu* command can take an *-auto-single* argument, to automatically
run commands when only one choice is provided, and a *-select-cmds*
argument, in which case menu takes three argument per item, the
last one being a command to execute when the item is selected (but
not validated)
*info* [options] <text>::
display text in an information box with the following *options*:
*-anchor* <line>.<column>:::
print the text at the given coordinates
*-placement* {above,below}:::
set the placement relative to the anchor
*-title* <text>:::
set the title of the message box
*try* <commands> catch <on_error_commands>::
prevent an error in *commands* from aborting the whole command
execution, execute *on_error_commands* instead. If nothing is to be
done on error, the catch part can be omitted
*set-register* <name> <content>::
*alias* reg +
set register *name* to *content*
*select* <anchor_line>.<anchor_column>,<cursor_line>.<cursor_column>:...::
replace the current selections with the one described in the argument
*debug* {info,buffers,options,memory,shared-strings,profile-hash-maps,faces}::
print some debug information in the *\*debug** buffer
Note that those commands are also available in the interactive mode, but
are not really useful in that context.
Multiple commands
-----------------
Commands (c.f. previous sections) can be chained, by being separated either
by new lines or by semicolons, as such a semicolon must be escaped with a
backslash (\;) to be considered as a literal semicolon argument
Declaring new commands
----------------------
New commands can be defined using the *define-command* command:
*define-command* [flags] <command_name> <commands>::
*commands* is a string containing the commands to execute, and *flags*
can be any combination of the following parameters:
*-params* <num>:::
the command accepts a *num* parameter, which can be either a number,
or of the form <min>..<max>, with both <min> and <max> omittable
*-file-completion*:::
try file completion on any parameter passed to this command
*-client-completion*:::
try client name completion on any parameter passed to this command
*-buffer-completion*:::
try buffer name completion on any parameter passed to this command
*-shell-completion*:::
following string is a shell command which takes parameters as
positional params and output one completion candidate per line
*-allow-override*:::
allow the new command to replace an existing one with the same name
*-hidden*:::
do not show the command in command name completions
*-docstring*:::
define the documentation string for the command
Using shell expansion allows defining complex commands or accessing
Kakoune's state:
--------------------------------------------------------
def " print_selection %{ echo %sh{ ${kak_selection} } }"
--------------------------------------------------------