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Re: Introducing zsh-hints



Bummer, I get a 404.
I'll check back later.

Steve

On Mar 29, 2014, at 4:28 AM, Joep van Delft <joepvandelft@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Hi there, 
> 
> In order to gradually acquaint myself with zsh's possibilities and
> idioms, I have written a zle function that displays definition files
> nicely under the current buffer with zle -M.  Intended use is to
> provide a quick help on these things that are hard to complete like
> parameter expansion flags. The original idea I found in feh's
> zshrc[1], I tried to make it as generally usable and configurable as
> possible. 
> 
> Because of its intended use is closely tied with zsh itself, I
> decided to {shamelessly,humbly} bring it to your attention. As I am
> pretty new to programming, I would appreciate any comments on style
> and function. 
> 
> You can find the main repository here: 
> https://github.com/joepvd/zsh-hints/settings
> 
> I hope some will find it useful! :) 
> 
> Kind regards, 
> 
> Joep 
> 
> 
> 
> [1] http://git.plenz.com/configs/plain/.zsh/zshrc
> 
> 
> .. code:: zsh
> 
> # zsh-hints
> # Easily display non-completable information below the buffer. 
> # Written by Joep van Delft, 2014. 
> 
> emulate -L zsh
> setopt extended_glob
> 
> name=${WIDGET#zsh-hints-}
> 
> # Locate the library file by explicit setting or guesswork: 
> zstyle -s ":zsh-hints:$name:" file hintfile || {
>    zstyle -s ":zsh-hints:$name:" dir hintdir || \
>        hintdir="${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/zsh"
>    zstyle -s ":zsh-hints:$name:" ext hintext || \
>        hintext="hints"
>    hintfile="$hintdir/${name}${hintext:+.$hintext}"
> }
> if [[ ! -r "$~hintfile" ]]; then
>    print "Library file $~hintfile not found for $WIDGET." >&2
>    return 1
> fi
> 
> # Get the configuration for the styles: 
> zstyle -b ":zsh-hints:$name:" verbose verbose || verbose=yes
> zstyle -s ":zsh-hints:$name:" pri_sep pri_sep || pri_sep='#'
> zstyle -s ":zsh-hints:$name:" sec_sep sec_sep || sec_sep="$pri_sep"
> zstyle -s ":zsh-hints:$name:" margin  margin  || margin=6
> 
> # Establish the available lines for display: 
> if [[ $verbose == "yes" ]]; then
>    dl=$((${LINES}-${margin}-1))
> else
>    dl=$((${LINES}-$margin))
> fi
> 
> # Store the contents of the help file in an array. The reason that
> # this is separated from the output generation, is because the 
> # output depends on the longest 'key', or first word of a line. 
> # As ZSH does not support multidimensional arrays, an emulation
> # of multidimensional arrays is attempted by the names of the
> # keys of the associative array txt, with the keys of the form 
> # 02_03. Pattern matching on the keys makes it work like an 
> # associative array. 
> declare -A txt      # The main data structure. 
> declare -Z 2 i j    # Counters with leading zeros. 
> len_k=0
> i=0
> 
> for line in "${(f)$(<${~hintfile})}"; do
>    i=$(($i+1))
>    for j in {1..${#${(s: :)line}}}; do
>        txt[${i}_${j}]=${${(s: :)line}[$j]}
>    done
>    # Get a reasonable estimate len_k of the maximum length 
>    # of the relevant keys:
>    #print $i, $dl
>    (( $i<=$dl )) && (( $#txt[${i}_01]>$len_k )) &&
> len_k=$#txt[${i}_01] done
> 
> output_txt() {
>    for hint_no in ${(ou)${(k)txt[@]}%_*}; do
>        # Looping over the (unique and ordered) numerical part before 
>        # the underscore of the keys of txt-array. A.K.A. the hint_no
>        # identifying a line. 
>        v=$(($v+1))
>        if (( $v > $dl )); then
>            [[ "$verbose" == "yes" ]] && print "   ...$(( $i-$hint_no
> )) hints omitted." break
>        fi
>        # Get the ordered indexes of words belonging matching the
> current line: for word in ${(oM)${(k)txt[@]}:#$hint_no*}; do
>            if [[ -z ${word:#*01} ]]; then
>                # It is the first word: Special treatment. 
>                printf "%-${len_k}s %s" "$txt[$word]" "$pri_sep"
>                d=$(($len_k+2))
>            elif (( $d+1+$#txt[$word] <= $COLUMNS )); then
>                # It is not a key, and it fits on the current line.
>                printf " %s" "$txt[$word]"
>                d=$(($d+1+$#txt[$word]))
>            else
>                # It is not a key and does not fit on current line.
>                printf "\n%-${len_k}s %s %s" " " "$sec_sep"
> "$txt[$word]" d=$(($len_k+$#txt[$word]))
>                v=$(($v+1))
>            fi
>        done
>        printf "\n"
>    done
> }
> 
> zle -M "$(output_txt)"
> 
> # vim: ft=zsh
> 
> .... end of code
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 



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