dotfiles/.config/blesh/init.sh

1307 lines
52 KiB
Bash

# -*- mode: sh; mode: sh-bash -*-
## This is a template for "~/.blerc".
##
## To use ble.sh in bash, please set up "~/.bashrc" as follows:
##
## ```bash
## # bashrc
##
## # Please put the following line in the beginning of .bashrc
## # Note: Please replace $HOME/.local/share/blesh with the path to your ble.sh
## [[ $- == *i* ]] && "$HOME/.local/share/blesh/ble.sh" --noattach
##
## # Your bashrc contents should come between the two lines.
##
## # Please put the following line in the end of .bashrc
## [[ ${BLE_VERSION-} ]] && ble-attach
## ```
##
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Basic settings
## The following setting specifies the input encoding. Currently only "UTF-8"
## and "C" is available.
#bleopt input_encoding=UTF-8
## The following setting specifies the pager used by ble.sh. This is used to
## show the help of commands (f1).
#bleopt pager=less
## The following setting specifies the editor used by ble.sh. This is used for
## the widget edit-and-execute (C-x C-e) and editor for a large amount of
## command line texts. Possible values include, for example, "vim", "emacs
## -nw" and "nano".
#bleopt editor=vim
## The following settings sets the behavior of visible bells (vbell).
## "vbell_duration" sets the time duration to show the vbell. "vbell_align"
## controls the position of vbell. The value "left" (default) specifies that
## the vbell should be shown up on the top left corner of the terminal. The
## values "center" and "right" specify that the vbell is shown on the top
## center and the top right corner, respectively.
#bleopt vbell_default_message=' Wuff, -- Wuff!! '
#bleopt vbell_duration=2000
#bleopt vbell_align=right
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Line editor settings
## The following settings turns on/off the audible bells and visible bells for
## errors while user edit. The non-empty value turns on the bells.
#bleopt edit_abell=1
#bleopt edit_vbell=
## The following setting turns on the delayed load of history when an non-empty
## value is set.
#bleopt history_lazyload=1
## The following setting turns on the delete selection mode when an non-empty
## value is set. When the mode is turned on the selection is removed when a
## user inserts a character.
#bleopt delete_selection_mode=1
## The following settings control the indentation. "indent_offset" sets the
## indent width. "indent_tabs" controls if tabs can be used for indentation or
## not. If "indent_tabs" is set to 0, tabs will never be used. Otherwise
## indentation is made with tabs and spaces.
#bleopt indent_offset=4
#bleopt indent_tabs=1
## "undo_point" controls the cursor position after "undo". When "beg" or "end"
## is specified, the cursor will be moved to the beginning or the end of the
## dirty section, respectively. When other values are specified, the original
## cursor position is reproduced.
#bleopt undo_point=end
## The following setting controls forced layout calculations before graphical
## operations. When a non-empty value is specified, the forced calculations are
## enabled. When an empty string is set, the operations are switched to logical
## ones.
#bleopt edit_forced_textmap=1
## The following option controls the interpretation of lines when going to the
## beginning or the end of the current line. When the value `logical` is
## specified, the logical line is used, i.e., the beginning and the end of the
## line is determined based on the newline characters in the edited text. When
## the value `graphical` is specified, the graphical line is used, i.e., the
## beginning and the end of the displayed line in the terminal is used.
#bleopt edit_line_type=graphical
## The following option specifies the set of expansions performed by
## magic-space with a colon-separated list of expansion types. "history",
## "sabbrev", and "alias" can be specified.
#bleopt edit_magic_expand=history:sabbrev
## This option configures the detailed behavior of the widget "magic-space"
## with a colon-separated list. If the field "inline-sabbrev-no-insert" is
## specified, the insertion of "SP" is skipped when the inline sabbrev is
## performed by "magic-space".
#bleopt edit_magic_opts=
## The following option controls the position of the info pane where completion
## menu, mode names, and other information are shown. When the value "top" is
## specified, the info pane is shown just below the command line. When the
## value "bottom" is specified, the info pane is shown at the bottom of the
## terminal. The default is "top".
#bleopt info_display=top
## The following settings controls the prompt after the cursor left the command
## line. "prompt_ps1_final" contains a prompt string. "prompt_ps1_transient"
## is a colon-separated list of fields "always", "same-dir" and "trim". The
## prompt is replaced by "prompt_ps1_final" if it has a non-empty value.
## Otherwise, the prompt is trimmed leaving the last line if
## "prompt_ps1_transient" has a field "trim". Otherwise, the prompt vanishes
## if "prompt_ps1_transient" has a non-empty value. When
## "prompt_ps1_transient" contains a field "same-dir", the setting of
## "prompt_ps1_transient" is effective only when the current working directory
## did not change since the last command line.
#bleopt prompt_ps1_final=
#bleopt prompt_ps1_transient=trim
## The following settings controls the right prompt. "prompt_rps1" specifies
## the contents of the right prompt in the format of PS1. When the cursor
## leaves the current command line, the right prompt is replaced by
## "prompt_rps1_final" if it has a non-empty value, or otherwise, the right
## prompt vanishes if "prompt_rps1_transient" is set to a non-empty value,
#bleopt prompt_rps1='\w'
#bleopt prompt_rps1_final=
#bleopt prompt_rps1_transient=''
## The following settings specify the content of terminal titles and status
## lines. "prompt_xterm_title" specifies the terminal title which can be set
## by "OSC 0 ; ... BEL". "prompt_screen_title" is effective inside terminal
## multiplexers such as GNU screen and tmux and specifies the window title of
## the terminal multiplexer which can be set by "ESC k ... ST".
## "prompt_term_status" is only effective when terminfo entries "tsl" and "fsl"
## (or termcap entries "ts" and "ds") are available, and specifies the content
## of the status line which can be set by the terminfo entries. When each
## setting has non-empty value, the content of corresponding title or status
## line is replaced just before PS1 is shown.
#bleopt prompt_xterm_title=
#bleopt prompt_screen_title=
#bleopt prompt_term_status=
## The following settings control the status line. "prompt_status_line"
## specifies the content of the status line. If its value is empty, the status
## line is not shown. "prompt_status_align" controls the position of the
## content in the status line.
#bleopt prompt_status_line=
#bleopt prompt_status_align=left
## "prompt_eol_mark" specifies the contents of the mark used to indicate the
## command output is not ended with newlines. The value can contain ANSI escape
## sequences.
#bleopt prompt_eol_mark=$'\e[94m[ble: EOF]\e[m'
## "prompt_ruler" specifies the ruler between the previous command and the
## prompt (like powerlevel10k
## "POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_{ADD_NEWLINE,SHOW_RULER,RULER_*}"). When the empty
## value is specified, the ruler is disabled. This is the default. When the
## value "empty-line" is specified, an empty line is inserted between the
## command and the prompt. When the other values are specified, the value is
## interpreted as an ANSI sequences, and the result is repeated to fill a line.
#bleopt prompt_ruler= # no ruler (default)
#bleopt prompt_ruler=empty-line # empty line
#bleopt prompt_ruler=$'\e[94m-' # blue line
## "prompt_command_changes_layout" specifies whether the commands called from
## the blehook PRECMD or the variable PROMPT_COMMAND output texts to the
## terminal and changes the layout. When a non-empty value is specified,
## ble.sh resets the layout before running the hooks PRECMD and PROMPT_COMMAND
## and restores the layout after running the hooks. When a empty value is
## specified, ble.sh assumes that these hooks do not output texts to the
## terminal and do not changes the cursor positions and skip the special
## treatment.
#bleopt prompt_command_changes_layout= # PRECMD/PROMPT_COMMAND not output
#bleopt prompt_command_changes_layout=1 # PRECMD/PROMPT_COMMAND may output
## "exec_restore_pipestatus" controls whether ble.sh restores PIPESTATUS of the
## previous user command. When this option is set to a non-empty value,
## PIPESTATUS is restored. This feature is turned off by default because it
## adds extra execution costs. Note that the values of PIPESTATUS of the
## previous command are always available with the array BLE_PIPESTATUS
## regardless of this setting.
#bleopt exec_restore_pipestatus=1 # restores PIPESTATUS
## "exec_errexit_mark" specifies the format of the mark to show the exit status
## of the command when it is non-zero. If this setting is an empty string the
## exit status will not be shown. The value can contain ANSI escape sequences.
#bleopt exec_errexit_mark=$'\e[91m[ble: exit %d]\e[m'
## "exec_elapsed_mark" specifies the format of the command execution time
## report. It takes two arguments: the first is the string that explains the
## elapsed time, and the second is a number that represents the percentage of
## CPU core usage. "exec_elapsed_enabled" specifies the condition that the
## command execution time report is displayed after the command execution. The
## condition is expressed by an arithmetic expression, where a non-zero result
## causes displaying the report. In the arithmetic expression, variables
## "real", "{usr,sys}{,_self,_child}", and "cpu" can be used. "real"
## represents the elapsed time. "usr" and "sys" represent the user and system
## time, respectively. The suffixes "_self" and "_child" represent the part
## consumed in the main shell process and the other child processes including
## subshells and external programs, respectively. "cpu" represents the
## percentage of the CPU core usage in integer, which can be calculated by
## "(usr+sys)*100/real". The other values are all in unit of milliseconds.
#bleopt exec_elapsed_mark=$'\e[94m[ble: elapsed %s (CPU %s%%)]\e[m'
#bleopt exec_elapsed_enabled='usr+sys>=10000'
## The following setting controls the exit when jobs are remaining. When an
## empty string is set, the shell will never exit with remaining jobs through
## widgets. When an non-empty value is set, the shell will exit when exit is
## attempted twice consecutively.
#bleopt allow_exit_with_jobs=
## The following setting controls the cursor position after the move to other
## history entries. When non-empty values are specified, the offset of the
## cursor from the beginning of the command line is preserved. When an empty
## value is specified the cursor position is the beginning or the end of the
## command lines when the move is to a newer or older entry, respectively.
#bleopt history_preserve_point=
## The following setting controls the history sharing. If it has non-empty
## value, the history sharing is enabled. With the history sharing, the command
## history is shared with the other Bash ble.sh sessions with the history
## sharing turned on.
#bleopt history_share=
## This option controls the target range in the command history for
## "erasedups", which is performed when it is specified in "HISTCONTROL". When
## this option has an empty value, the target range is the entire history as in
## the plain Bash. When this option evaluates to a positive integer "count",
## the target range is the last "n" entries in the command history. When this
## option evaluates to a non-positive integer "offset", "offset" specifies the
## beginning of the target range relative to the history count at the session
## start. The end of the target range is always the end of the command
## history.
#bleopt history_erasedups_limit= # entire history
#bleopt history_erasedups_limit=0 # only new items added in this session
#bleopt history_erasedups_limit=-1000 # new items and 1000 prev-session items
#bleopt history_erasedups_limit=1000 # last 1000 items
## The following setting controls the behavior of the widget
## "accept-single-line-or-newline" in the single-line editing mode. The value
## is a subject of arithmetic evaluation. When it evaluates to negative
## integers, the line is always accepted. When it evaluates to 0, it enters the
## multiline editing mode when there is any unprocessed user inputs, or
## otherwise the line is accepted. When it evaluates to a positive integer "n",
## it enters the multiline editing mode when there is more than "n"unprocessed
## user inputs.
#bleopt accept_line_threshold=5
## The following option controls the behavior when the number of characters
## exceeds the capacity specified by `line_limit_length`. The value `none`
## means that the number of characters will not be checked. The value
## `discard` means that the characters cannot be inserted when the number of
## characters exceeds the capacity. The value `truncate` means that the
## command line is truncated from its end to fit into the capacity. The value
## `editor` means that the widget `edit-and-execute` will be invoked to open an
## editor to edit the command line contents.
#bleopt line_limit_type=none
## The following option specifies the capacity of the command line in the
## number of characters. The number 0 or negative numbers means the unlimited
## capacity.
#bleopt line_limit_length=10000
## The following option specifies the maximal number of characters which can be
## appended into the history. When this option has a positive value, commands
## with the length longer than the value is not appended to the history. When
## this option has a non-positive value, commands are always appended to the
## history regardless of their length.
#bleopt history_limit_length=10000
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Terminal state control
## The following setting specifies the cursor type when commands are executed.
## The cursor type is specified by the argument of the control function
## DECSCUSR.
#bleopt term_cursor_external=0
## The following settings, external and internal, specify the "modifyOtherKeys"
## states [the control function SM(>4)] when commands are executed and when
## ble.sh has control, respectively.
#bleopt term_modifyOtherKeys_external=auto
#bleopt term_modifyOtherKeys_internal=auto
## The following setting controls whether the kitty-keyboard-protocol sequences
## should pass-through the terminal multiplexers when the outermost terminal is
## kitty. When this option has a non-empty string, the pass-through kitty
## protocol sequences are enabled.
##
## * This is intended to be used with tmux-3.4+. This works with tmux-3.3a and
## below as far as the user does not enable CapsLock or NumLock. Note that
## this might cause problems of keyboard inputs after detaching from tmux;
## You might lose the control of the terminal applications that do not
## support extended keys outside the terminal multiplexers.
##
## * This will cause the same problems when used with multiple windows in GNU
## screen. You will lose the control of the terminal applications without
## the support for extended keys when there are more than one ble.sh session
## or when there is at least one foreground ble.sh session in GNU screen.
#bleopt term_modifyOtherKeys_passthrough_kitty_protocol=1
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Rendering options
## "tab_width" specifies the width of TAB on the command line. When an empty
## value is specified, the width in terminfo (tput it) is used.
#bleopt tab_width=
## "char_width_mode" specifies the width of East_Asian_Width=A characters.
## When the value "east" is specified, the width is 2. When the value "west" is
## specified, the width is 1. When the value "emacs" is specified, the width
## table (depending on characters) used in Emacs is used. When the value
## "musl" is specified, the table for "wcwidth" of the musl C library in 2014
## is used [Note: recent versions of musl library is more conforming to Unicode
## so favor "west" or "east"]. When "auto" is specified, the character width
## mode is automatically selected based on interactions with the terminal.
#bleopt char_width_mode=auto
## "char_width_version" specifies the Unicode version that char width
## determination bases on. When "auto" is specified, ble.sh automatically
## tests the behavior of the terminal on startup and try to determine the
## appropriate version. Supported versions are "4.1", "5.0", "5.2", "6.0",
## "6.1", "6.2", "6.3", "7.0", "8.0", "9.0", "10.0", "11.0", "12.0", "12.1",
## "13.0", "14.0", and "15.0". The default value is "auto".
#bleopt char_width_version=auto
## "emoji_width" specifies the width of emoji characters. If an empty value is
## specified, special treatment of emoji is disabled.
#bleopt emoji_width=2
## "emoji_version" specifies the version of Unicode Emoji. Available values
## are 0.6, 0.7, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, 11.0, 12.0, 12.1, 13.0, 13.1, 14.0,
## and 15.0.
#bleopt emoji_version=13.1
## "emoji_opts" is a colon-separated list that represents the terminal
## capability for emojis. When "tpvs" and "epvs" are specified, TPVS and EPVS
## (text/emoji presentation variation selectors), respectively, can be used to
## change he representation of emoji characters. When "zwj" is specified, the
## emoji ZWJ sequences are supported. When "ri" is specified, the flag emojis
## formed by two Regional_Indicators are supported. When "unqualified" is
## specified, unqualified emojis are treated as emojis as well as the qualified
## emojis.
#bleopt emoji_opts=ri
## This option specifies the type of the supported grapheme cluster of the
## terminal. The empty string indicates that the terminal does not support the
## grapheme clusters. The values "extended" and "legacy" indicate that the
## terminal supports the extended and legacy grapheme clusters, respectively.
#bleopt grapheme_cluster=extended
## This option controls the behavior when ble.sh receives SIGWINCH.
## * When the value "redraw-safe" is specified, ble.sh redraws the new prompt
## starting from the line of the current cursor position.
## * When the value "redraw-prev" is specified, ble.sh tries to go to the
## beginning of the current prompt and overwrite the current one. This is
## similar to the behavior of GNU Readline. This possibly erase the output
## of the previous command because ble.sh tries to go to the beginning of the
## current prompt assuming that the number of lines in the prompt does not
## change by the terminal resizing.
## * When the value "redraw-here" is specified, ble.sh tries to determine the
## number of lines that can be safely erased and go to the beginning of the
## safe lines before the redraw. This is the default behavior. In
## principle, this can also erase the previous outputs, but it would be
## supposed to be rarely happen as far as the text reflowing of the terminal
## behaves in a reasonable way.
## * When the value "clear" is specified, the terminal content is erased and
## the new prompt will be drawn at the top of the terminal. The previous
## terminal contents including the command outputs will be lost.
#bleopt canvas_winch_action=redraw-here
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## User input settings
## The following setting sets the default keymap. The value "emacs" specifies
## that the emacs keymap should be used. The value "vi" specifies that the vi
## keymap (insert mode) should be used as the default. The value "auto"
## specifies that the keymap should be automatically selected from "emacs" or
## "vi" according to the current readline state "set -o emacs" or "set -o vi".
#bleopt default_keymap=auto
## The following setting controls the treatment of isolated ESCs. The value
## "esc" indicates that it should be treated as ESC. The value "meta"
## indicates that it should be treated as Meta modifier. The value "auto"
## indicates that the behavior will be switched to an appropriate side of "esc"
## or "meta" depending on the current keymap.
#bleopt decode_isolated_esc=esc
## The following setting specifies the byte code used to abort the currently
## processed inputs. The default value 28 corresponds to "C-\".
#bleopt decode_abort_char=28
## The following settings sets up the behavior for errors while user input
## decoding. "error_char" is the decoding error for the current character
## encoding. "error_cseq" indicates the unrecognized CSI sequences.
## "error_kseq" indicates the unbound key sequences. "abell" and "vbell" turn
## on/off the audible bells and visible bells on errors. If the variable is
## empty the bells are turned off, or otherwise turned on. "discard" controls
## if the chars/sequences will be discarded or processed in later stage. If a
## non-empty value is given, chars/sequences are discarded.
#bleopt decode_error_char_abell=
#bleopt decode_error_char_vbell=1
#bleopt decode_error_char_discard=
#bleopt decode_error_cseq_abell=
#bleopt decode_error_cseq_vbell=1
#bleopt decode_error_cseq_discard=1
#bleopt decode_error_kseq_abell=1
#bleopt decode_error_kseq_vbell=1
#bleopt decode_error_kseq_discard=1
## This variable sets the limit to the count of recursive calls of keyboard
## macros.
#bleopt decode_macro_limit=1024
## When a non-empty value is specified to this settings, the terminal's
## Bracketed Paste Mode (DEC mode 2004) is enabled. This setting is
## synchronized with the readline variable "enable-bracketed-paste".
#bleopt term_bracketed_paste_mode=on
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Settings for completion
## The following settings turn on/off the corresponding functionalities. When
## non-empty strings are set, the functionality is enabled. Otherwise, the
## functionality is inactive.
#bleopt complete_auto_complete=1
#bleopt complete_menu_complete=1
#bleopt complete_menu_filter=1
## If "complete_ambiguous" has non-empty values, ambiguous completion
## candidates are generated for completion.
#bleopt complete_ambiguous=1
## If "complete_contract_function_names" has non-empty values, the function
## name candidates are grouped by prefixes of the directory-like form "*/".
#bleopt complete_contract_function_names=1
## By default, ble.sh does not allow rewriting the existing text if non-unique
## candidates does not contain the existing text. If this setting has
## non-empty values, ble.sh rewrites the existing text.
#bleopt complete_allow_reduction=1
## This option specifies the threshold to simplify the quotation type of the
## inserted word. This option is evaluated as an arithmetic expression. When
## this option evaluates to a negative value, the simplification of the
## quotation is disabled. Otherwise, when the number of characters will be
## reduced by at least the specified value, the quotation is simplified. The
## default is 0, which means that the quotation is simplified unless the number
## of characters increases by the simplification.
#bleopt complete_requote_threshold=0
## If "complete_auto_history" has non-empty values, auto-complete searches
## matching command lines from history.
#bleopt complete_auto_history=1
## The following setting controls the delay of auto-complete after the last
## user input. The unit is millisecond.
#bleopt complete_auto_delay=100
## The setting "complete_auto_wordbreaks" is used as the delimiters for
## identifying words for M-right (auto-complete/insert-word). The default
## value is $' \t\n'. If the empty value is set, the default value is used.
#bleopt complete_auto_wordbreaks=$' \t\n/'
## The setting "complete_auto_complete_opts" is a colon-separated list of
## options:
##
## - The option "suppress-after-complete" controls whether auto-complete is
## enabled after TAB completions. If "suppress-after-complete" is included,
## auto-complete is enabled after TAB completions. Otherwise, auto-complete
## is disabled after TAB completions.
#bleopt complete_auto_complete_opts=suppress-after-complete
## The setting "complete_auto_menu" controls the delay of "auto-menu". When a
## non-empty string is set, auto-menu is enabled. The string is evaluated as
## an arithmetic expression to give the delay in milliseconds. ble.sh will
## automatically show the menu of completions after the idle time (for which
## user input does not arrive) reaches the delay.
#bleopt complete_auto_menu=500
## When there are user inputs while generating completion candidates, the
## candidates generation will be canceled to process the user inputs. The
## following setting controls the interval of checking user inputs while
## generating completion candidates.
#bleopt complete_polling_cycle=50
## A hint on the maximum acceptable size of any data structure generated during
## the completion process, beyond which the completion may be prematurely
## aborted to avoid excessive processing time. "complete_limit" is used for
## TAB completion. When its value is empty, the size checks are disabled.
## "complete_limit_auto" is used for auto-completion. When its value is empty,
## the setting "complete_limit" is used instead. "complete_limit_auto_menu" is
## used for auto-menu.
#bleopt complete_limit=500
#bleopt complete_limit_auto=200
#bleopt complete_limit_auto_menu=100
## The following setting controls the timeout for the pathname expansions
## performed in auto-complete. When the word contains a glob pattern that
## takes a long time to evaluate the pathname expansion, auto-complete based on
## the filename is canceled based on the timeout setting. The value specifies
## the timeout duration in milliseconds. When the value is empty, the
## timeout is disabled.
#bleopt complete_timeout_auto=5000
## The following setting controls the timeout for the pathname expansions to
## prepare COMP_WORDS and COMP_LINE for progcomp. When the word contains a
## glob pattern that takes a long time to evaluate, the pathname expansion is
## canceled, and a noglob expansion is used to construct COMP_WORDS and
## COMP_LINE. The value specifies ## the timeout duration in milliseconds.
## When the value is empty, the timeout is disabled.
#bleopt complete_timeout_compvar=200
## The following setting specifies the style of the menu to show completion
## candidates. The value "dense" and "dense-nowrap" shows candidates separated
## by spaces. "dense-nowrap" is different from "dense" in the behavior that it
## inserts a new line before the candidates that does not fit into the
## remaining part of the current line. The value "align" and "align-nowrap"
## aligns the candidates. The value "linewise" shows a candidate per line. The
## value "desc" and "desc-text" shows a candidate per line with description for
## each. "desc-text" is different from "desc" in the behavior that it does not
## interprets ANSI escape sequences in the descriptions.
#bleopt complete_menu_style=align-nowrap
## When a non-empty value is specified to this setting, the matching text on
## the right of the cursor is removed on the insertion of the completion. This
## setting is synchronized with the readline variable "skip-completed-text".
#bleopt complete_skip_matched=on
## The following setting controls the detailed behavior of menu-complete with a
## colon-separated list of options:
##
## - When the option "insert-selection" is specified, the currently selected
## menu item is temporarily inserted in the command line.
#bleopt complete_menu_complete_opts=insert-selection
## When a non-empty value is specified to this setting, the highlighting of the
## menu items is enabled. This setting is synchronized with the readline
## variable "colored-stats".
#bleopt complete_menu_color=on
## When a non-empty value is specified to this setting, the part of the menu
## items matching with the already input text is highlighted. This setting is
## synchronized with the readline variable "colored-completion-prefix".
#bleopt complete_menu_color_match=on
## The following settings specify the maximal and minimal align widths for
## complete_menu_style="align" and "align-nowrap".
#bleopt menu_align_min=4
#bleopt menu_align_max=20
## The following setting specifies the maximal height of the menu. When this
## value is evaluated to be a positive integer, the maximal line number of the
## menu is limited to that value.
#bleopt complete_menu_maxlines=10
## The following settings specify the prefix of the menu items. "menu_prefix"
## specifies the default prefix for any menu-style.
## "menu_{align,desc,linewise,dense}_prefix" specify the prefixes in the
## respective menu-styles. The value is specified by a printf format, where
## the first argument is the index of the candidate. ANSI escape sequences can
## also be used. For example, the candidate index can be shown by setting the
## value '%d '. The default value is empty.
#bleopt menu_align=
#bleopt menu_align_prefix='\e[1m%d:\e[m '
#bleopt menu_desc_prefix='\e[1m%d.\e[m '
#bleopt menu_linewise_prefix='\e[1;36m%d:\e[m '
#bleopt menu_dense_prefix='\e[1;32m>\e[m '
## The following setting specifies the minimum column width for the multicolumn
## description for `complete_menu_style=desc'. When the empty value is
## specified, the multicolumn mode is disabled.
#bleopt menu_desc_multicolumn_width=65
## When this Readline setting is enabled, the cases of alphabets are ignored on
## completion generation.
#bind 'set completion-ignore-case off'
## When this Readline setting is turned on, suffixes are added to the filename
## completions in the menu. The characters "@", "/" and "*" are added to
## symbolic links, directories and executables, respectively.
#bind 'set visible-stats off'
## When this Readline setting is turned on, the suffix "/" is inserted after
## the insertion of directory names.
#bind 'set mark-directories on'
## When this Readline setting is turned on, the suffix "/" is inserted after
## symbolic links pointing to directories.
#bind 'set mark-symlinked-directories on'
## When this Readline setting is turned on, the filenames starting with "." is
## also generated as possible completions.
#bind 'set match-hidden-files on'
## By default, when filenames of the form "dir/file*" is shown in the menu, the
## part of the directory name "dir/" is omitted. When this Readline setting is
## turned on, the directory name of filename completions are not omitted.
#bind 'set menu-complete-display-prefix off'
## This option specifies a colon-separated list of glob patterns of sabbrev
## names ignored in generating the sabbrev completion candidates.
#bleopt complete_source_sabbrev_ignore=
## This is a colon-separated list of options. When the field
## `no-empty-completion` is specified, the sabbrev completion candidates are
## not generated when the word to complete is empty.
#bleopt complete_source_sabbrev_opts=no-empty-completion
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Color settings
## The setting "term_index_colors" specifies the number of index colors used to
## specify colors in the terminal. The value "auto" means that the use of
## index colors are determined based on the terminfo database and the value of
## TERM shell variable. Otherwise, the value is evaluated as an arithmetic
## expression. When it is evaluated to 256, the index colors are assumed to be
## xterm 256-color palette (16 basic + 6x6x6 color cube + 24 gray scale). When
## it is evaluated to 88, the index colors are assumed to be xterm 88-color
## palette (16 basic + 4x4x4 color cube + 8 gray scale). When it is evaluated
## to 0, ble.sh will never use the index colors to set colors. When it is
## evaluated to other integers, the value specifies the maximum available
## index.
#bleopt term_index_colors=256
## The setting "term_true_colors" specifies the format of 24-bit color escape
## sequences supported by your terminal. The value "semicolon" indicates the
## format "CSI 3 8 ; 2 ; R ; G ; B m". The value "colon" indicates the format
## "CSI 3 8 : 2 : R : G : B m". The other value implies that the terminal does
## not support 24-bit color sequences. In this case, ble.sh tries to output
## indexed color sequences or basic color sequences with properly reduced
## colors.
#bleopt term_true_colors=semicolon
## The setting "filename_ls_colors" can be used to import the filename coloring
## scheme by the environment variable LS_COLORS.
#bleopt filename_ls_colors="$LS_COLORS"
## The following settings enable or disable the syntax highlighting. When the
## setting "highlight_syntax" has a non-empty value, the syntax highlighting is
## enabled. When the setting "highlight_filename" has a non-empty value, the
## highlighting based on the filename and the command name is enabled during
## the process of the syntax highlighting. Similarly, when the setting
## "highlight_variable" has a non-empty value, the highlighting based on the
## variable type is enabled. All of these settings have non-empty values by
## default.
#bleopt highlight_syntax=
#bleopt highlight_filename=
#bleopt highlight_variable=
## The following settings control the timeout and user-input cancellation of
## the pathname expansions performed in the syntax highlighting. When the word
## contains a glob pattern that takes a long time to evaluate the pathname
## expansion, the syntax highlighting based on the filename is canceled based
## on the timeouts specified by these settings. "highlight_timeout_sync" /
## "highlight_timeout_async" specify the timeout durations in milliseconds to
## be used for the foreground / background syntax highlighting, respectively.
## When the timeout occurred in the foreground, the syntax highlighting will be
## deferred to the background syntax highlighting. When the timeout occurred
## in the background, the syntax highlighting for the filename is canceled.
## When the value is empty, the corresponding timeout is disabled.
## "syntax_eval_polling_interval" specifies the maximal interval between the
## user-input checking.
#bleopt highlight_timeout_sync=500
#bleopt highlight_timeout_async=5000
#bleopt syntax_eval_polling_interval=50
## The following settings specify graphic styles of each faces.
#ble-face -s region fg=white,bg=60
#ble-face -s region_insert fg=blue,bg=252
#ble-face -s region_match fg=white,bg=55
#ble-face -s region_target fg=black,bg=153
#ble-face -s disabled fg=242
#ble-face -s overwrite_mode fg=black,bg=51
ble-color-setface auto_complete fg=240
#ble-face -s menu_filter_fixed bold
#ble-face -s menu_filter_input fg=16,bg=229
#ble-face -s vbell reverse
#ble-face -s vbell_erase bg=252
#ble-face -s vbell_flash fg=green,reverse
#ble-face -s prompt_status_line fg=231,bg=240
#ble-face -s syntax_default none
#ble-face -s syntax_command fg=brown
#ble-face -s syntax_quoted fg=green
#ble-face -s syntax_quotation fg=green,bold
#ble-face -s syntax_escape fg=magenta
#ble-face -s syntax_expr fg=navy
ble-color-setface syntax_error fg=203
#ble-face -s syntax_varname fg=202
#ble-face -s syntax_delimiter bold
#ble-face -s syntax_param_expansion fg=purple
#ble-face -s syntax_history_expansion bg=94,fg=231
#ble-face -s syntax_function_name fg=92,bold
#ble-face -s syntax_comment fg=gray
#ble-face -s syntax_glob fg=198,bold
#ble-face -s syntax_brace fg=37,bold
#ble-face -s syntax_tilde fg=navy,bold
#ble-face -s syntax_document fg=94
#ble-face -s syntax_document_begin fg=94,bold
#ble-face -s command_builtin_dot fg=red,bold
#ble-face -s command_builtin fg=red
#ble-face -s command_alias fg=teal
#ble-face -s command_function fg=92 # fg=purple
#ble-face -s command_file fg=green
#ble-face -s command_keyword fg=blue
#ble-face -s command_jobs fg=red,bold
#ble-face -s command_directory fg=navy,underline
#ble-face -s argument_option fg=teal
#ble-face -s argument_option fg=black,bg=225
#ble-face -s filename_directory underline,fg=26
#ble-face -s filename_directory_sticky underline,fg=white,bg=26
#ble-face -s filename_link underline,fg=teal
#ble-face -s filename_orphan underline,fg=teal,bg=224
#ble-face -s filename_setuid underline,fg=black,bg=220
#ble-face -s filename_setgid underline,fg=black,bg=191
#ble-face -s filename_executable underline,fg=green
#ble-face -s filename_other underline
#ble-face -s filename_socket underline,fg=cyan,bg=black
#ble-face -s filename_pipe underline,fg=lime,bg=black
#ble-face -s filename_character underline,fg=white,bg=black
#ble-face -s filename_block underline,fg=yellow,bg=black
#ble-face -s filename_warning underline,fg=red
#ble-face -s filename_url underline,fg=blue
#ble-face -s filename_ls_colors underline
#ble-face -s varname_array fg=orange,bold
#ble-face -s varname_empty fg=31
#ble-face -s varname_export fg=200,bold
#ble-face -s varname_expr fg=92,bold
#ble-face -s varname_hash fg=70,bold
#ble-face -s varname_number fg=64
#ble-face -s varname_readonly fg=200
#ble-face -s varname_transform fg=29,bold
#ble-face -s varname_unset fg=124
#ble-face -s cmdinfo_cd_cdpath fg=26,bg=155
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Keybindings
## The default mapping of <SP> in ble.sh is magic-space which performs history
## and sabbrev expansion before inserting a space. If you want to insert just
## a space without expansions as Bash's default, use the following setting:
#ble-bind -f 'SP' 'self-insert'
## The default mapping of `/' (<slash>) in ble.sh is magic-slash which performs
## sabbrev expansions of the name ` ~*'. If you want to insert just a slash
## without expansions as Bash's default, use the following setting:
#ble-bind -f '/' 'self-insert'
## If you want to search the already input string using <up> and <down> keys,
## use the following setting:
#ble-bind -f up 'history-search-backward'
#ble-bind -f down 'history-search-forward'
## If you want to immediately run the matched command by RET, you can specify
## the option "immediate-accept" to nsearch widgets:
#ble-bind -f up 'history-search-backward immediate-accept'
#ble-bind -f down 'history-search-forward immediate-accept'
## If you want to kill/copy words including the spaces preceding them, you can
## use the following keybindings:
#ble-bind -f C-w 'kill-region-or kill-uword'
#ble-bind -f M-w 'copy-region-or copy-uword'
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Settings for Emacs mode
function blerc/emacs-load-hook {
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Settings for the mode indicator
## The following option specifies the content of the mode indicator shown in
## the info line as a prompt sequence.
#bleopt prompt_emacs_mode_indicator='\q{keymap:emacs/mode-indicator}'
## The following option specifies the multiline mode name used in the prompt
## sequence \q{keymap:emacs/mode-indicator} in the multiline editing mode.
# default
#bleopt keymap_emacs_mode_string_multiline=$'\e[1m-- MULTILINE --\e[m'
# do not show the mode name
#bleopt keymap_emacs_mode_string_multiline=
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Keybindings
## The default mapping of RET and C-m inserts newline with multiline commands
## or incomplete commands. With the following setting, RET and C-m always
## causes the execution of the command even in the multiline mode or when the
## command is not syntactically completed.
#ble-bind -f 'C-m' accept-line
#ble-bind -f 'RET' accept-line
## With the following settings, M-backspace (whose actual key sequence
## depends on your terminal) will kill the backward word as in the default
## readline.
#ble-bind -f 'M-C-?' kill-backward-cword
#ble-bind -f 'M-DEL' kill-backward-cword
#ble-bind -f 'M-C-h' kill-backward-cword
#ble-bind -f 'M-BS' kill-backward-cword
return 0
}
blehook/eval-after-load keymap_emacs blerc/emacs-load-hook
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Settings for Vim mode
function blerc/vim-load-hook {
((_ble_bash>=40300)) && builtin bind 'set keyseq-timeout 1'
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Settings for the mode indicator
## The following option specifies the content of the mode indicator shown in
## the info line as a prompt sequence.
#bleopt prompt_vi_mode_indicator='\q{keymap:vi/mode-indicator}'
## The following option controls whether the prompt sequence
## \q{keymap:vi/mode-indicator} is activated. When this option has a
## non-empty value, \q{keymap:vi/mode-indicator} is expanded to the mode
## indicator. Otherwise, \q{keymap:vi/mode-indicator} is expanded to the
## empty string.
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_show=1
## The following options specify the name of modes in
## \q{keymap:vi/mode-indicator}.
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_name_insert=INSERT
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_name_replace=REPLACE
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_name_vreplace=VREPLACE
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_name_visual=VISUAL
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_name_select=SELECT
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_name_linewise=LINE
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_name_blockwise=BLOCK
## This option specifies the result of \q{keymap:vi/mode-indicator} in the
## normal mode. For example, if you want to show an explicit name of the
## normal mode like in other modes, please use the following setting:
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_string_nmap:=$'\e[1m-- NORMAL --\e[m'
## This option specifies that all the prompts should be recalculated on the
## mode change. When this option has a non-empty value, the prompt will be
## recalculated.
#bleopt keymap_vi_mode_update_prompt=
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Keybindings
## The following setting sets up the keymap settings with Meta modifiers.
## With this setting, M-RET can be used to insert a newline in the
## commandline.
#ble-decode/keymap:vi_imap/define-meta-bindings
## In this case, C-RET can be optionally configured so that it forcibly
## executes the command.
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'C-RET' 'accept-line'
## The default mapping of <M-backspace> (whose actual key sequence depends on
## your terminal) copies the previous shell word in the kill ring. Instead,
## the following settings will kill the backward word as in the default
## readline.
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'M-C-?' kill-backward-cword
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'M-DEL' kill-backward-cword
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'M-C-h' kill-backward-cword
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'M-BS' kill-backward-cword
## The default mapping of RET and C-m in the insert mode inserts newline with
## multiline commands or incomplete commands. They moves the cursor position
## to the next line in the normal mode. Instead, with the following setting,
## RET and C-m always causes the execution of the command even in the
## multiline mode or when the command is not syntactically completed.
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'C-m' accept-line
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'RET' accept-line
#ble-bind -m vi_nmap -f 'C-m' accept-line
#ble-bind -m vi_nmap -f 'RET' accept-line
## The default mapping of C-o is vi_imap/single-command-mode. If you want to
## execute the current command line and load the next history entry with
## <C-o>, use the following setting:
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'C-o' 'accept-and-next'
## The default mapping of C-k is kill-forward-line. If you want to input
## digraphs with <C-k>{char1}{char2}, use the following setting:
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'C-k' 'vi_imap/insert-digraph'
## The default mapping of C-c is vi_imap/normal-mode-without-insert-leave
## (imap), vi-command/cancel (nmap). If you instead want to discard the
## current line and go to the next line, you can bind C-c to 'discard-line':
#ble-bind -m vi_imap -f 'C-c' discard-line
#ble-bind -m vi_nmap -f 'C-c' discard-line
## The default mapping of 'g g' and G moves the current position in the
## command history. If you would like to move the cursor position in the
## current command entry, you can overwrite the bindings as follows.
#ble-bind -m vi_nmap -f 'g g' vi-command/first-nol
#ble-bind -m vi_omap -f 'g g' vi-command/first-nol
#ble-bind -m vi_xmap -f 'g g' vi-command/first-nol
#ble-bind -m vi_nmap -f 'G' vi-command/last-line
#ble-bind -m vi_omap -f 'G' vi-command/last-line
#ble-bind -m vi_xmap -f 'G' vi-command/last-line
## The default mapping of 'C-r' in the normal mode is "vi_nmap/redo". If you
## want to use the incremental search mode from Emacs in the Vim mode (as in
## Readline), please use the following keybinding.
#ble-bind -m vi_nmap -f 'C-r' history-isearch-backward
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Cursor shapes and other terminal settings
## Cursor settings
#ble-bind -m vi_nmap --cursor 2
#ble-bind -m vi_imap --cursor 5
#ble-bind -m vi_omap --cursor 4
#ble-bind -m vi_xmap --cursor 2
#ble-bind -m vi_smap --cursor 2
#ble-bind -m vi_cmap --cursor 0
## DECSCUSR setting
##
## If you don't have the entry Ss in terminfo, yet your terminal supports
## DECSCUSR, please comment out the following line to enable DECSCUSR.
##
#_ble_term_Ss=$'\e[@1 q'
## Control sequences that will be output on entering each mode
#bleopt term_vi_nmap=
#bleopt term_vi_imap=
#bleopt term_vi_omap=
#bleopt term_vi_xmap=
#bleopt term_vi_smap=
#bleopt term_vi_cmap=
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Miscellaneous settings
## This option controls the frequency of recording "undo". When the value
## "more" is specified, "undo" will be recorded for various operations in
## "vi_imap".
#bleopt keymap_vi_imap_undo=
## This option controls the behavior of motion in select mode. The value is
## a list of words separated by commas. When the word "stopsel" is contained
## in this option, ble.sh exits the select mode with a motion in select mode.
#bleopt keymap_vi_keymodel=
## This option sets the upper limit of the maximal depth of recurrence of
## replaying keyboard macros.
#bleopt keymap_vi_macro_depth=64
## This option specifies the operator name when the user input "g@" in normal
## mode. The function "ble/keymap:vi/operator:$value", where "$value" is the
## value of this setting, is used as the implementation of the operator.
#bleopt keymap_vi_operatorfunc=
## When this option has a non-empty value, "/", "?", "n", "N" search the word
## on the current position. When this option has the empty value, these keys
## follows the behavior of `vim`.
#bleopt keymap_vi_search_match_current=
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# plugins
## vim-surround
#ble-import vim-surround
#bleopt vim_surround_45:=$'$( \r )'
#bleopt vim_surround_61:=$'$(( \r ))'
## vim-arpeggio
#ble-import vim-arpeggio
#bleopt vim_arpeggio_timeoutlen=10
#ble/lib/vim-arpeggio.sh/bind -s jk 'hello'
## vim-airline
#ble-import vim-airline
#bleopt vim_airline_theme=light
#bleopt vim_airline_section_a='\e[1m\q{lib/vim-airline/mode}'
#bleopt vim_airline_section_b='\q{lib/vim-airline/gitstatus}'
#bleopt vim_airline_section_c='\w'
#bleopt vim_airline_section_x='bash'
#bleopt vim_airline_section_y='$_ble_util_locale_encoding[unix]'
#bleopt vim_airline_section_z=' \q{history-percentile} \e[1m!\q{history-index}/\!\e[22m \q{position}'
#bleopt vim_airline_left_sep=$'\uE0B0'
#bleopt vim_airline_left_alt_sep=$'\uE0B1'
#bleopt vim_airline_right_sep=$'\uE0B2'
#bleopt vim_airline_right_alt_sep=$'\uE0B3'
#bleopt vim_airline_symbol_branch=$'\uE0A0'
#bleopt vim_airline_symbol_dirty=$'\u26A1'
}
blehook/eval-after-load keymap_vi blerc/vim-load-hook
##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Internal settings
## This option sets the interval of checking new user inputs. The value is
## evaluated as an arithmetic expression. On the evaluation, a shell variable
## "ble_util_idle_elapsed" is provided for the time since the last user input
## in millisecond. This option is used for the polling for the background
## execution when there is no user inputs.
#bleopt idle_interval='ble_util_idle_elapsed>600000?500:(ble_util_idle_elapsed>60000?200:(ble_util_idle_elapsed>5000?100:20))'
## This option specifies a colon-separated list of custom search paths of "ble-import".
#bleopt import_path="${XDG_DATA_HOME:-$HOME/.local/share}/blesh/local"
## When a non-empty value is specified to this option, displays the internal
## syntax analysis information and the syntax tree. This is only effective in
## devel versions.
#bleopt syntax_debug=
## When the option "debug_xtrace" contains a non-empty value, xtrace (set -x)
## is enabled for the internal processing of ble.sh. The value is used for the
## xtrace output log filename. [ Caution: The file size of the log file can
## soon grow up to hundred megabytes or to gigabytes. ] The option
## "debug_xtrace_ps4" specifies the value of PS4 for xtrace enabled by
## "debug_xtrace".
#bleopt debug_xtrace=~/blesh.xtrace
#bleopt debug_xtrace_ps4='+ '
## When the option "debug_idle" contains a non-empty value, the background
## tasks currently running are shown in the info panel.
#bleopt debug_idle=1
## [The setting "openat_base" needs to be set before ble.sh is loaded or
## specified in the source options. Therefore the value should be assigned
## directly to the shell variable "bleopt_openat_base" instead of using
## "bleopt" command.]
##
## This setting "openat_base" specifies the starting number of the file
## descriptors which ble.sh internally uses in Bash 4.0 or lower. The value of
## this setting is used as the number for the first file descriptor of internal
## use, and the next value is used for the second file descriptor, and so on.
## When you want to use the default value 30 and succeeding number 31, 32,
## etc. for other purposes, please set to this settings another value which
## does not conflict with file descriptors of other purposes.
# echo "usage: e.g. source out/ble.sh -o openat_base=30"
## It specifies the context of the command execution. The value "gexec"
## specifies that the user command is evaluated in global contexts. The value
## "exec" (ble-0.3 and before) specified that the user command is evaluated in
## a function, but the support is removed in ble-0.4 because this is only
## remained for a debugging purpose and not tested well.
#bleopt internal_exec_type=gexec
## This option sets the message that Bash outputs when "C-d" is input by user.
## This value is used to detect that the user inputs "C-d" in Bash 3.
#bleopt internal_ignoreeof_trap='Use "exit" to leave the shell.'
## This option controls the output of stack dump when assertion is failed in
## ble.sh. When the value is evaluated to be non-zero, the stack dump is
## printed for assertion failures.
#bleopt internal_stackdump_enabled=0
## When a non-empty value is specified to this option, the standard output and
## standard error from Bash is not output to the terminal. When the value is
## empty, ble.sh tries to realize the line editing allowing Bash to output its
## own standard output and error. This setting has a flickering problem and
## only left for debugging purpose, so it is not tested. Normally a non-empty
## value should be specified so as to suppress the standard output and error
## from Bash.
#bleopt internal_suppress_bash_output=1