Provided by: dte_1.9.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       dterc - Command and configuration language used by dte(1)

SYNOPSIS

       Commands:

       Configuration Commands:
          alias name command
          bind key [command]
          set [-gl] option [value] ...
          setenv name value
          hi name [fg-color [bg-color]] [attribute]...
          ft [-bcfi] filetype string...
          option [-r] filetype option value...
          include [-b] file
          errorfmt [-i] compiler regexp [file|line|column|message]...
          load-syntax filename|filetype

       Editor Commands:
          quit [-fp]
          suspend
          cd directory
          command [text]
          search [-Hnprw] [pattern]
          git-open
          refresh

       Buffer Management Commands:
          open [-g] [-e encoding] [filename]...
          save [-dfup] [-e encoding] [filename]
          close [-fqw]
          next
          prev
          view N|last
          move-tab N|left|right

       Window Management Commands:
          wsplit [-bhr] [file]...
          wclose [-f]
          wnext
          wprev
          wresize [-hv] [N|+N|-- -N]
          wflip
          wswap

       Movement Commands:
          left [-c]
          right [-c]
          up [-cl]
          down [-cl]
          pgup [-cl]
          pgdown [-cl]
          word-fwd [-cs]
          word-bwd [-cs]
          bol [-cs]
          eol [-c]
          bof
          eof
          bolsf
          eolsf
          scroll-up
          scroll-down
          scroll-pgup
          scroll-pgdown
          center-view
          line number
          tag [-r] [tag]
          msg [-np]

       Editing Commands:
          cut
          copy [-k]
          paste [-c]
          undo
          redo [choice]
          clear
          join
          new-line
          delete
          erase
          delete-eol [-n]
          erase-bol
          delete-word [-s]
          erase-word [-s]
          case [-lu]
          insert [-km] text
          replace [-bcgi] pattern replacement
          shift count
          wrap-paragraph [width]
          select [-bkl]
          unselect

       External Commands:
          filter command [parameter]...
          pipe-from [-ms] command [parameter]...
          pipe-to command [parameter]...
          run [-ps] command [parameters]...
          compile [-1ps] errorfmt command [parameters]...
          eval command [parameter]...

       Other Commands:
          repeat count command [parameters]...
          toggle [-gv] option [values]...
          show [-c] type [key]

       Options:

       Global options:
          case-sensitive-search [true]
          display-invisible [false]
          display-special [false]
          esc-timeout [100] 0...2000
          filesize-limit [250]
          lock-files [true]
          newline [unix]
          scroll-margin [0]
          set-window-title [false]
          show-line-numbers [false]
          statusline-left [" %f%s%m%r%s%M"]
          statusline-right [" %y,%X %u %E %n %t %p "]
          tab-bar [horizontal]
          tab-bar-max-components [0]
          tab-bar-width [25]

       Local options:
          brace-indent [false]
          filetype [none]
          indent-regex [""]

       Local and global options:
          auto-indent [true]
          detect-indent [""]
          emulate-tab [false]
          expand-tab [false]
          file-history [true]
          indent-width [8]
          syntax [true]
          tab-width [8]
          text-width [72]
          ws-error [special]

DESCRIPTION

       dterc is the language used in dte(1) configuration files (~/.dte/rc) and also in the
       command mode of the editor (Alt+x). The syntax of the language is quite similar to shell,
       but much simpler.

       Commands are separated either by a newline or ; character. To make a command span multiple
       lines in an rc file, escape the newline (put \ at the end of the line).

       Rc files can contain comments at the start of a line. Comments begin with a # character
       and can be indented, but they can't be put on the same line as a command.

       Commands can contain environment variables. Variables always expand into a single argument
       even if they contain whitespace. Variables inside single or double quotes are NOT
       expanded. This makes it possible to bind keys to commands that contain variables (inside
       single or double quotes), which will be expanded just before the command is executed.

       Example:

              alias x "run chmod 755 $FILE"

       $FILE is expanded when the alias x is executed. The command works even if $FILE contains
       whitespace.

   Special variables
       These variables are always defined and override environment variables of the same name.

       $FILE
              The filename of the current buffer (or an empty string if unsaved).

       $FILETYPE
              The value of the filetype option for the current buffer.

       $LINENO
              The line number of the cursor in the current buffer.

       $WORD
              The selected text or the word under the cursor.

   Single quoted strings
       Single quoted strings can't contain single quotes or escaped characters.

   Double quoted strings
       Double quoted strings may contain the following escapes:

       \a, \b, \t, \n, \v, \f, \r
              Control characters (same as in C)

       \\     Escaped backslash

       \x0a   Hexadecimal byte value 0x0a. Note that \x00 is not supported because strings are
              NUL-terminated.

       \u20ac Four hex digit Unicode code point U+20AC.

       \U000020ac
              Eight hex digit Unicode code point U+20AC.

COMMANDS

   Configuration Commands
       Configuration commands are used to customize certain aspects of the editor, for example
       adding key bindings, setting options, etc. These are the only commands allowed in user
       config files.

       alias name command
              Create an alias name for command.

              Example:

                     alias read 'pipe-from cat'

              Now you can run read file.txt to insert file.txt into the current buffer.

       bind key [command]
              Bind command to key. If no command is given then any existing binding for key is
              removed.

              Special keys:

              • leftrightupdowninsertdeletehomeendpguppgdownentertabspaceF1..F12

              Modifiers:

              Ctrl:  C-X or ^X

              Alt:   M-X

              Shift: S-left

       set [-gl] option [value] ...
              Set value for option. Value can be omitted for boolean option to set it true.
              Multiple options can be set at once but then value must be given for every option.

              There are three kinds of options.

              1. Global options.

              2. Local options. These are file specific options. Each open file has its own
              copies of the option values.

              3. Options that have both global and local values. The Global value is just a
              default local value for opened files and is never used for anything else. Changing
              the global value does not affect any already opened files.

              By default set changes both global and local values.

              -g     Change only global option value

              -l     Change only local option value of current file

              In configuration files only global options can be set (no need to specify the -g
              flag).

              See also: toggle and option commands.

       setenv name value
              Set environment variable.

       hi name [fg-color [bg-color]] [attribute]...
              Set highlight color.

              The name argument can be a token name defined by a dte-syntax(5) file or one of the
              following, built-in highlight names:

              • defaultnontextnolinewserrorselectioncurrentlinelinenumberstatuslinecommandlineerrormsginfomsgtabbaractivetabinactivetab

              The fg-color and bg-color arguments can be one of the following:

              • No value (equivalent to default)
              • A numeric value between -2 and 255
              • A 256-color palette value in R/G/B notation (e.g. 0/3/5)
              • A true color value in CSS-style #RRGGBB notation (e.g. #ab90df)
              • keep (-2)
              • default (-1)
              • black (0)
              • red (1)
              • green (2)
              • yellow (3)
              • blue (4)
              • magenta (5)
              • cyan (6)
              • gray (7)
              • darkgray (8)
              • lightred (9)
              • lightgreen (10)
              • lightyellow (11)
              • lightblue (12)
              • lightmagenta (13)
              • lightcyan (14)
              • white (15)

              Colors 16 to 231 correspond to R/G/B colors. Colors 232 to 255 are grayscale
              values.

              If the terminal has limited support for rendering colors, the fg-color and bg-color
              arguments will fall back to the nearest supported color, which may be less precise
              than the value specified.

              The attribute argument(s) can be any combination of the following:

              • bolddimitalicunderlinestrikethroughblinkreverseinvisiblekeep

              The color and attribute value keep is useful in selected text to keep fg-color and
              attributes and change only bg-color.

              NOTE: Because keep is both a color and an attribute you need to specify both
              fg-color and bg-color if you want to set the keep attribute.

              Unset fg/bg colors are inherited from highlight color default.  If you don't set
              fg/bg for the highlight color default then terminal's default fg/bg is used.

       ft [-bcfi] filetype string...
              Add a filetype association. Filetypes are used to determine which syntax
              highlighter and local options to use when opening files.

              By default string is interpreted as one or more filename extensions.

              -b     Interpret string as a file basename

              -c     Interpret string as a regex pattern and match against the contents of the
                     first line of the file

              -f     Interpret string as a regex pattern and match against the full (absolute)
                     filename

              -i     Interpret string as a command interpretter name and match against the Unix
                     shebang line (after removing any path prefix and/or version suffix)

              Examples:

                     ft c c h
                     ft -b make Makefile GNUmakefile
                     ft -c xml '<\?xml'
                     ft -f mail '/tmpmsg-.*\.txt$'
                     ft -i lua lua luajit

              See also:

              • The option command (below)
              • The filetype option (below)
              • The dte-syntax(5) man page

       option [-r] filetype option value...
              Add automatic option for filetype (as previously registered with the ft command).
              Automatic options are set when files are are opened.

              -r     Interpret filetype argument as a regex pattern instead of a filetype and
                     match against full filenames

       include [-b] file
              Read and execute commands from file.

              -b     Read built-in file instead of reading from the filesystem

              Note: "built-in files" are config files bundled into the program binary.  See the
              -B and -b flags in the dte(1) man page for more information.

       errorfmt [-i] compiler regexp [file|line|column|message]...

              -i     Ignore this error

              See compile and msg commands for more information.

       load-syntax filename|filetype
              Load a dte-syntax(5) file into the editor. If the argument contains a / character
              it's considered a filename.

              Note: this command only loads a syntax file ready for later use. To actually apply
              a syntax highlighter to the current buffer, use the set command to change the
              filetype of the buffer instead, e.g.  set filetype html.

   Editor Commands
       quit [-fp]
              Quit the editor.

              -f     Force quit, even if there are unsaved files

              -p     Prompt for confirmation if there are unsaved files

       suspend
              Suspend the editor (run fg in the shell to resume).

       cd directory
              Change the working directory and update $PWD and $OLDPWD. Running cd - changes to
              the previous directory ($OLDPWD).

       command [text]
              Enter command mode. If text is given then it is written to the command line (see
              the default ^L key binding for why this is useful).

       search [-Hnprw] [pattern]
              If no flags or just -r and no pattern given then dte changes to search mode where
              you can type a regular expression to search.

              -H     Don't add pattern to search history

              -n     Search next

              -p     Search previous

              -r     Start searching backwards

              -w     Search word under cursor

       git-open
              Interactive file opener. Lists all files in a git repository.

              Same keys work as in command mode, but with these changes:

              up     Move up in file list.

              down   Move down in file list.

              enter  Open file.

              ^O     Open file but don't close git-open.

              M-e    Go to end of file list.

              M-t    Go to top of file list.

       refresh
              Trigger a full redraw of the screen.

   Buffer Management Commands
       open [-g] [-e encoding] [filename]...
              Open file. If filename is omitted, a new file is opened.

              -e encoding
                     Set file encoding. See iconv -l for list of supported encodings.

              -g     Perform glob(3) expansion on filename.

       save [-dfup] [-e encoding] [filename]
              Save file. By default line-endings (LF vs CRLF) are preserved.

              -d     Save with DOS/CRLF line-endings

              -f     Force saving read-only file

              -u     Save with Unix/LF line-endings

              -p     Open a command prompt if there's no specified or existing filename

              -e encoding
                     Set file encoding. See iconv -l for list of supported encodings.

       close [-fqw]
              Close file.

              -f     Close file even if it hasn't been saved after last modification

              -q     Quit if closing the last open file

              -w     Close parent window if closing its last contained file

       next
              Display next file.

       prev
              Display previous file.

       view N|last
              Display _N_th or last open file.

       move-tab N|left|right
              Move current tab to position N or 1 position left or right.

   Window Management Commands
       wsplit [-bhr] [file]...
              Like open but at first splits current window vertically.

              -b     Add new window before current instead of after.

              -h     Split horizontally instead of vertically.

              -r     Split root instead of current window.

       wclose [-f]
              Close window.

              -f     Close even if there are unsaved files in the window

       wnext
              Next window.

       wprev
              Previous window.

       wresize [-hv] [N|+N|-- -N]
              If no parameter given, equalize window sizes in current frame.

              -h     Resize horizontally

              -v     Resize vertically

              N      Set size of current window to N characters.

              +N     Increase size of current window by N characters.

              -N     Decrease size of current window by N characters. Use -- to prevent the minus
                     symbol being parsed as an option flag, e.g.  wresize -- -5.

       wflip
              Change from vertical layout to horizontal and vice versa.

       wswap
              Swap positions of this and next frame.

   Movement Commands
       left [-c]
              Move left.

              -c     Select characters

       right [-c]
              Move right.

              -c     Select characters

       up [-cl]
              Move cursor up.

              -c     Select characters

              -l     Select whole lines

       down [-cl]
              Move cursor down.

              -c     Select characters

              -l     Select whole lines

       pgup [-cl]
              Move cursor page up. See also scroll-pgup.

              -c     Select characters

              -l     Select whole lines

       pgdown [-cl]
              Move cursor page down. See also scroll-pgdown.

              -c     Select characters

              -l     Select whole lines

       word-fwd [-cs]
              Move cursor forward one word.

              -c     Select characters

              -s     Skip special characters

       word-bwd [-cs]
              Move cursor backward one word.

              -c     Select characters

              -s     Skip special characters

       bol [-cs]
              Move to beginning of line.

              -c     Select characters

              -s     Move to beginning of indented text or beginning of line, depending on
                     current cursor position.

       eol [-c]
              Move cursor to end of line.

              -c     Select characters

       bof
              Move to beginning of file.

       eof
              Move cursor to end of file.

       bolsf
              Incrementally move cursor to beginning of line, then beginning of screen, then
              beginning of file.

       eolsf
              Incrementally move cursor to end of line, then end of screen, then end of file.

       scroll-up
              Scroll view up one line. Keeps cursor position unchanged if possible.

       scroll-down
              Scroll view down one line. Keeps cursor position unchanged if possible.

       scroll-pgup
              Scroll page up. Cursor position relative to top of screen is maintained. See also
              pgup.

       scroll-pgdown
              Scroll page down. Cursor position relative to top of screen is maintained. See also
              pgdown.

       center-view
              Center view to cursor.

       line number
              Go to line.

       tag [-r] [tag]
              Save current location to stack and go to the location of tag.  Requires tags file
              generated by Exuberant Ctags. If no tag is given then word under cursor is used as
              a tag instead.

              -r     return back to previous location

              Tag files are searched from current working directory and its parent directories.

              See also msg command.

       msg [-np]
              Show latest, next (-n) or previous (-p) message. If its location is known (compile
              error or tag message) then the file will be opened and cursor moved to the
              location.

              -n     Next message

              -p     Previous message

              See also compile and tag commands.

   Editing Commands
       cut
              Cut current line or selection.

       copy [-k]
              Copy current line or selection.

              -k     Keep selection (by default, selections are lost after copying)

       paste [-c]
              Paste text previously copied by the copy or cut commands.

              -c     Paste at the cursor position

       undo
              Undo latest change.

       redo [choice]
              Redo changes done by the undo command. If there are multiple possibilities a
              message is displayed:

                     Redoing newest (2) of 2 possible changes.

              If the change was not the one you wanted, just run undo and then, for example, redo
              1.

       clear
              Clear current line.

       join
              Join selection or next line to current.

       new-line
              Insert empty line under current line.

       delete
              Delete character after cursor (or selection).

       erase
              Delete character before cursor (or selection).

       delete-eol [-n]
              Delete to end of line.

              -n     Delete newline if cursor is at end of line

       erase-bol
              Erase to beginning of line.

       delete-word [-s]
              Delete word after cursor.

              -s     Be more "aggressive"

       erase-word [-s]
              Erase word before cursor.

              -s     Be more "aggressive"

       case [-lu]
              Change text case. The default is to change lower case to upper case and vice versa.

              -l     Lower case

              -u     Upper case

       insert [-km] text
              Insert text into the buffer.

              -k     Insert one character at a time as if it has been typed

              -m     Move after inserted text

       replace [-bcgi] pattern replacement
              Replace all instances of text matching pattern with the replacement text.

              The pattern is a POSIX extended regex(7).

              -b     Use basic instead of extended regex syntax

              -c     Ask for confirmation before each replacement

              -g     Replace all matches for each line (instead of just the first)

              -i     Ignore case

       shift count
              Shift current or selected lines by count indentation levels.  Count is usually -1
              (decrease indent) or 1 (increase indent).

              To specify a negative number, it's necessary to first disable option parsing with
              --, e.g. shift -- -1.

       wrap-paragraph [width]
              Format the current selection or paragraph under the cursor. If paragraph width is
              not given then the text-width option is used.

              This command merges the selection into one paragraph. To format multiple paragraphs
              use the external fmt(1) program with the filter command, e.g. filter fmt -w 60.

       select [-bkl]
              Enter selection mode. All movement commands while in this mode extend the selected
              area.

              Note: A better way to create selections is to hold the Shift key whilst moving the
              cursor. The select command exists mostly as a fallback, for terminals with limited
              key binding support.

              -b     Select block between opening { and closing } curly braces

              -k     Keep existing selections

              -l     Select whole lines

       unselect
              Unselect.

   External Commands
       filter command [parameter]...
              Filter selected text or whole file through external command.

              Example:

                     filter sort -r

              Note that command is executed directly using execvp(3). To use shell features like
              pipes or redirection, use a shell interpreter as the command. For example:

                     filter sh -c 'tr a-z A-Z | sed s/foo/bar/'

       pipe-from [-ms] command [parameter]...
              Run external command and insert its standard output.

              -m     Move after the inserted text

              -s     Strip newline from end of output

       pipe-to command [parameter]...
              Run external command and pipe the selected text (or whole file) to its standard
              input.

              Can be used to e.g. write text to the system clipboard:

                     pipe-to xsel -b

       run [-ps] command [parameters]...
              Run external command.

              -p     Display "Press any key to continue" prompt

              -s     Silent -- both stderr and stdout are redirected to /dev/null

       compile [-1ps] errorfmt command [parameters]...
              Run external command and collect output messages. This can be used to run e.g.
              compilers, build systems, code search utilities, etc. and then jump to a file/line
              position for each message.

              The errorfmt argument corresponds to a regex capture pattern previously specified
              by the errorfmt command. After command exits successfully, parsed messages can be
              navigated using the msg command.

              -1     Read error messages from stdout instead of stderr

              -p     Display "Press any key to continue" prompt

              -s     Silent. Both stderr and stdout are redirected to /dev/null

              See also: errorfmt and msg commands.

       eval command [parameter]...
              Run external command and execute its standard output text as dterc commands.

   Other Commands
       repeat count command [parameters]...
              Run command count times.

       toggle [-gv] option [values]...
              Toggle option. If list of values is not given then the option must be either
              boolean or enum.

              -g     toggle global option instead of local

              -v     display new value

              If option has both local and global values then local is toggled unless -g is used.

       show [-c] type [key]
              Display current values for various configurable types.

              The type argument can be one of:

              alias  show command aliases

              bind   show key bindings

              The key argument is the name of the entry to lookup (i.e. alias name or key
              string). If this argument is specified, the value will be displayed in the status
              line. If omitted, a pager will be opened displaying all entries of the specified
              type.

              -c     write value to command line instead of status line

OPTIONS

       Options can be changed using the set command. Enumerated options can also be toggled. To
       see which options are enumerated, type "toggle " in command mode and press the tab key.
       You can also use the option command to set default options for specific file types.

   Global options
       case-sensitive-search [true]

              false  Search is case-insensitive.

              true   Search is case-sensitive.

              auto   If search string contains an uppercase letter search is case-sensitive,
                     otherwise it is case-insensitive.

       display-invisible [false]
              Display invisible characters.

       display-special [false]
              Display special characters.

       esc-timeout [100] 0...2000
              When single escape is read from the terminal dte waits some time before treating
              the escape as a single keypress. The timeout value is in milliseconds.

              Too long timeout makes escape key feel slow and too small timeout can cause escape
              sequences of for example arrow keys to be split and treated as multiple key
              presses.

       filesize-limit [250]
              Refuse to open any file with a size larger than this value (in mebibytes). Useful
              to prevent accidentally opening very large files, which can take a long time on
              some systems.

       lock-files [true]
              Lock files using $DTE_HOME/file-locks. Only protects from your own mistakes (two
              processes editing same file).

       newline [unix]
              Whether to use LF (unix) or CRLF (dos) line-endings. This is just a default value
              for new files.

       scroll-margin [0]
              Minimum number of lines to keep visible before and after cursor.

       set-window-title [false]
              Set the window title to the filename of the current buffer (if the terminal
              supports it).

       show-line-numbers [false]
              Show line numbers.

       statusline-left [" %f%s%m%r%s%M"]
              Format string for the left aligned part of status line.

              %f     Filename.

              %m     Prints * if file is has been modified since last save.

              %r     Prints RO if file is read-only.

              %y     Cursor row.

              %Y     Total rows in file.

              %x     Cursor display column.

              %X     Cursor column as characters. If it differs from cursor display column then
                     both are shown (e.g. 2-9).

              %p     Position in percentage.

              %E     File encoding.

              %M     Miscellaneous status information.

              %n     Line-ending (LF or CRLF).

              %s     Add separator.

              %t     File type.

              %u     Hexadecimal Unicode value value of character under cursor.

              %%     Literal %.

       statusline-right [" %y,%X %u %E %n %t %p "]
              Format string for the right aligned part of status line.

       tab-bar [horizontal]

              hidden Hide tab bar.

              horizontal
                     Show tab bar on top.

              vertical
                     Show tab bar on left if there's enough space, hide otherwise.

              auto   Show tab bar on left if there's enough space, on top otherwise.

       tab-bar-max-components [0]
              Maximum number of path components displayed in vertical tab bar.  Set to 0 to
              disable.

       tab-bar-width [25]
              Width of vertical tab bar. Note that width of tab bar is automatically reduced to
              keep editing area at least 80 characters wide. Vertical tab bar is shown only if
              there's enough space.

   Local options
       brace-indent [false]
              Scan for { and } characters when calculating indentation size.  Depends on the
              auto-indent option.

       filetype [none]
              Type of file. Value must be previously registered using the ft command.

       indent-regex [""]
              If this regular expression matches current line when enter is pressed and
              auto-indent is true then indentation is increased.  Set to "" to disable.

   Local and global options
       The global values for these options serve as the default values for local (per-file)
       options.

       auto-indent [true]
              Automatically insert indentation when pressing enter.  Indentation is copied from
              previous non-empty line. If also the indent-regex local option is set then
              indentation is automatically increased if the regular expression matches current
              line.

       detect-indent [""]
              Comma-separated list of indent widths (1-8) to detect automatically when a file is
              opened. Set to "" to disable. Tab indentation is detected if the value is not "".
              Adjusts the following options if indentation style is detected: emulate-tab,
              expand-tab, indent-width.

              Example:

                     set detect-indent 2,3,4,8

       emulate-tab [false]
              Make delete, erase and moving left and right inside indentation feel as if there
              were tabs instead of spaces.

       expand-tab [false]
              Convert tab to spaces on insert.

       file-history [true]
              Save line and column for each file to $DTE_HOME/file-history.

       indent-width [8]
              Size of indentation in spaces.

       syntax [true]
              Use syntax highlighting.

       tab-width [8]
              Width of tab. Recommended value is 8. If you use other indentation size than 8 you
              should use spaces to indent.

       text-width [72]
              Preferred width of text. Used as the default argument for the wrap-paragraph
              command.

       ws-error [special]
              Comma-separated list of flags that describe which whitespace errors should be
              highlighted. Set to "" to disable.

              auto-indent
                     If the expand-tab option is enabled then this is the same as
                     tab-after-indent,tab-indent. Otherwise it's the same as space-indent.

              space-align
                     Highlight spaces used for alignment after tab indents as errors.

              space-indent
                     Highlight space indents as errors. Note that this still allows using less
                     than tab-width spaces at the end of indentation for alignment.

              tab-after-indent
                     Highlight tabs used anywhere other than indentation as errors.

              tab-indent
                     Highlight tabs in indentation as errors. If you set this you most likely
                     want to set "tab-after-indent" too.

              special
                     Display all characters that look like regular space as errors.  One of these
                     characters is no-break space (U+00A0), which is often accidentally typed
                     (AltGr+space in some keyboard layouts).

              trailing
                     Highlight trailing whitespace characters at the end of lines as errors.

SEE ALSO

       dte(1), dte-syntax(5)

AUTHORS

       Craig Barnes
       Timo Hirvonen

                                            March 2019                                   DTERC(5)