145 lines
		
	
	
		
			5.2 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			145 lines
		
	
	
		
			5.2 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
Z(1)                             User Commands                            Z(1)
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NAME
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       z - jump around
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SYNOPSIS
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       z [-chlrtx] [regex1 regex2 ... regexn]
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AVAILABILITY
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       bash, zsh
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DESCRIPTION
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       Tracks your most used directories, based on 'frecency'.
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       After  a  short  learning  phase, z will take you to the most 'frecent'
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       directory that matches ALL of the regexes given on the command line, in
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       order.
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       For example, z foo bar would match /foo/bar but not /bar/foo.
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OPTIONS
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       -c     restrict matches to subdirectories of the current directory
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       -h     show a brief help message
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       -l     list only
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       -r     match by rank only
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       -t     match by recent access only
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       -x     remove the current directory from the datafile
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EXAMPLES
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       z foo         cd to most frecent dir matching foo
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       z foo bar     cd to most frecent dir matching foo, then bar
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       z -r foo      cd to highest ranked dir matching foo
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       z -t foo      cd to most recently accessed dir matching foo
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       z -l foo      list all dirs matching foo (by frecency)
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NOTES
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   Installation:
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       Put something like this in your $HOME/.bashrc or $HOME/.zshrc:
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              . /path/to/z.sh
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       cd around for a while to build up the db.
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       PROFIT!!
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       Optionally:
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              Set $_Z_CMD to change the command name (default z).
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              Set $_Z_DATA to change the datafile (default $HOME/.z).
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              Set $_Z_NO_RESOLVE_SYMLINKS to prevent symlink resolution.
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              Set $_Z_NO_PROMPT_COMMAND to handle PROMPT_COMMAND/precmd  your-
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              self.
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              Set $_Z_EXCLUDE_DIRS to an array of directory trees to  exclude.
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              Set $_Z_OWNER to allow usage when in 'sudo -s' mode.
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              (These  settings  should  go  in  .bashrc/.zshrc before the line
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              added above.)
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              Install   the   provided   man   page   z.1    somewhere    like
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              /usr/local/man/man1.
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   Aging:
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       The rank of directories maintained by z undergoes aging based on a sim-
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       ple formula. The rank of each entry is incremented  every  time  it  is
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       accessed.  When the sum of ranks is over 9000, all ranks are multiplied
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       by 0.99. Entries with a rank lower than 1 are forgotten.
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   Frecency:
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       Frecency is a portmanteau of 'recent' and 'frequency'. It is a weighted
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       rank  that depends on how often and how recently something occurred. As
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       far as I know, Mozilla came up with the term.
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       To z, a directory that has low ranking but has been  accessed  recently
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       will  quickly  have  higher rank than a directory accessed frequently a
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       long time ago.
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       Frecency is determined at runtime.
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   Common:
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       When multiple directories match all queries, and they all have a common
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       prefix, z will cd to the shortest matching directory, without regard to
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       priority.  This has been in effect, if  undocumented,  for  quite  some
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       time, but should probably be configurable or reconsidered.
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   Tab Completion:
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       z  supports tab completion. After any number of arguments, press TAB to
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       complete on directories that match each argument. Due to limitations of
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       the  completion  implementations,  only  the last argument will be com-
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       pleted in the shell.
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       Internally, z decides you've requested a completion if the  last  argu-
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       ment  passed  is  an  absolute  path to an existing directory. This may
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       cause unexpected behavior if the last argument to z begins with /.
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ENVIRONMENT
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       A function _z() is defined.
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       The contents of the variable $_Z_CMD is aliased to _z 2>&1. If not set,
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       $_Z_CMD defaults to z.
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       The  environment  variable $_Z_DATA can be used to control the datafile
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       location. If it is not defined, the location defaults to $HOME/.z.
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       The environment variable $_Z_NO_RESOLVE_SYMLINKS can be set to  prevent
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       resolving  of  symlinks.  If  it  is  not  set,  symbolic links will be
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       resolved when added to the datafile.
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       In bash, z appends a command to the PROMPT_COMMAND environment variable
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       to maintain its database. In zsh, z appends a function _z_precmd to the
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       precmd_functions array.
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       The environment variable $_Z_NO_PROMPT_COMMAND can be set if  you  want
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       to handle PROMPT_COMMAND or precmd yourself.
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       The  environment  variable  $_Z_EXCLUDE_DIRS  can be set to an array of
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       directory trees to exclude from tracking.  $HOME  is  always  excluded.
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       Directories must be full paths without trailing slashes.
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       The  environment  variable  $_Z_OWNER  can  be set to your username, to
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       allow usage of z when your sudo environment keeps $HOME set.
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FILES
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       Data is stored in $HOME/.z. This  can  be  overridden  by  setting  the
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       $_Z_DATA  environment variable. When initialized, z will raise an error
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       if this path is a directory, and not function correctly.
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       A man page (z.1) is provided.
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SEE ALSO
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       regex(7), pushd, popd, autojump, cdargs
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       Please file bugs at https://github.com/rupa/z/
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z                                January 2013                             Z(1)
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