bash alias with argument and autocompletion
I have a bunch of scripts in directory that exists on the path, so I can access each wherever I am. Sometime those are very simple util scripts that "vims" the file. From time to time I would like to quickly see the content of script file and see path to file the script opens (then make cat, grep ...).
I would like to make an alias which will "cat" given script wherever I am.
Given one is not working:
alias a="cat `which \$1`"
If I place script name instead of parameter number($1) it works fine. But
with parameter not.
The second question (I wish life be so so beautiful!) would be getting auto-completion of script name for that alias.
Using a script that coul开发者_高级运维d exist in my "bin" directory would another approach which I can take.If your function is called "foo" then your completion function could look like this:
If you have the Bash completion package installed:
_foo () { local cur; cur=$(_get_cword); COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -c -- $cur ) ); return 0; }
If you don't:
_foo () { local cur; cur=${COMP_WORDS[$COMP_CWORD]}; COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -c -- $cur ) ); return 0; }
Then to enable it:
complete -F _foo foo
The command compgen -c
will cause the completions to include all commands on your system.
Your function "foo" could look like this:
foo () { cat $(type -P "$@"; }
which would cat
one or more files whose names are passed as arguments.
For the alias with argument, use function instead of aliases :
a() { cat `which $1` ;}
Or if you do it on more than one line, skip th semicolon :
a() {
cat `which $1`
}
You can enter it interactively at the shell prompt :
shell:>a() {
>cat `which $1`
>}
shell:>
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