Provided by: zsh-common_5.4.2-3ubuntu3.2_all bug

NAME

       zshoptions - zsh options

SPECIFYING OPTIONS

       Options  are  primarily  referred  to  by  name.   These  names  are  case insensitive and
       underscores are ignored.  For example, `allexport' is equivalent to `A__lleXP_ort'.

       The sense of an option name may be inverted by preceding it with `no', so `setopt No_Beep'
       is  equivalent to `unsetopt beep'.  This inversion can only be done once, so `nonobeep' is
       not a synonym for `beep'.   Similarly,  `tify'  is  not  a  synonym  for  `nonotify'  (the
       inversion of `notify').

       Some  options  also  have  one  or more single letter names.  There are two sets of single
       letter options: one used by default, and another used to emulate  sh/ksh  (used  when  the
       SH_OPTION_LETTERS  option  is  set).   The  single letter options can be used on the shell
       command line, or with the set, setopt  and  unsetopt  builtins,  as  normal  Unix  options
       preceded by `-'.

       The  sense of the single letter options may be inverted by using `+' instead of `-'.  Some
       of the single letter option names refer  to  an  option  being  off,  in  which  case  the
       inversion of that name refers to the option being on.  For example, `+n' is the short name
       of `exec', and `-n' is the short name of its inversion, `noexec'.

       In strings of single letter options supplied to the shell at startup, trailing  whitespace
       will  be  ignored;  for  example the string `-f    ' will be treated just as `-f', but the
       string `-f i' is an error.   This  is  because  many  systems  which  implement  the  `#!'
       mechanism for calling scripts do not strip trailing whitespace.

DESCRIPTION OF OPTIONS

       In  the following list, options set by default in all emulations are marked <D>; those set
       by default only in csh, ksh, sh, or zsh emulations  are  marked  <C>,  <K>,  <S>,  <Z>  as
       appropriate.   When listing options (by `setopt', `unsetopt', `set -o' or `set +o'), those
       turned  on  by  default  appear  in  the  list  prefixed   with   `no'.    Hence   (unless
       KSH_OPTION_PRINT  is  set), `setopt' shows all options whose settings are changed from the
       default.

   Changing Directories
       AUTO_CD (-J)
              If a command is issued that can't be executed as a normal command, and the  command
              is  the name of a directory, perform the cd command to that directory.  This option
              is only applicable if the option SHIN_STDIN is set, i.e. if commands are being read
              from standard input.  The option is designed for interactive use; it is recommended
              that cd be used explicitly in scripts to avoid ambiguity.

       AUTO_PUSHD (-N)
              Make cd push the old directory onto the directory stack.

       CDABLE_VARS (-T)
              If the argument to a cd command (or an implied cd with the AUTO_CD option  set)  is
              not  a  directory, and does not begin with a slash, try to expand the expression as
              if it were preceded by a `~' (see the section `Filename Expansion').

       CHASE_DOTS
              When changing to a directory containing a path segment `..' which  would  otherwise
              be  treated as canceling the previous segment in the path (in other words, `foo/..'
              would be removed from the path, or if `..' is the first part of the path, the  last
              part  of  the current working directory would be removed), instead resolve the path
              to the physical directory.  This option is overridden by CHASE_LINKS.

              For example, suppose /foo/bar is a link to the directory  /alt/rod.   Without  this
              option set, `cd /foo/bar/..' changes to /foo; with it set, it changes to /alt.  The
              same applies if the current directory is /foo/bar and `cd ..' is used.   Note  that
              all other symbolic links in the path will also be resolved.

       CHASE_LINKS (-w)
              Resolve symbolic links to their true values when changing directory.  This also has
              the effect of CHASE_DOTS, i.e. a `..' path segment will be treated as referring  to
              the physical parent, even if the preceding path segment is a symbolic link.

       POSIX_CD <K> <S>
              Modifies the behaviour of cd, chdir and pushd commands to make them more compatible
              with the POSIX standard. The behaviour with the option unset is  described  in  the
              documentation  for  the  cd  builtin  in zshbuiltins(1).  If the option is set, the
              shell does not test for directories beneath the local directory (`.')  until  after
              all directories in cdpath have been tested.

              Also,  if  the  option  is set, the conditions under which the shell prints the new
              directory after changing to it  are  modified.   It  is  no  longer  restricted  to
              interactive  shells  (although  printing of the directory stack with pushd is still
              limited to interactive shells); and any use of a component of CDPATH,  including  a
              `.'  but  excluding an empty component that is otherwise treated as `.', causes the
              directory to be printed.

       PUSHD_IGNORE_DUPS
              Don't push multiple copies of the same directory onto the directory stack.

       PUSHD_MINUS
              Exchanges the meanings of `+' and  `-'  when  used  with  a  number  to  specify  a
              directory in the stack.

       PUSHD_SILENT (-E)
              Do not print the directory stack after pushd or popd.

       PUSHD_TO_HOME (-D)
              Have pushd with no arguments act like `pushd $HOME'.

   Completion
       ALWAYS_LAST_PROMPT <D>
              If  unset,  key functions that list completions try to return to the last prompt if
              given a numeric argument. If set these functions try to return to the  last  prompt
              if given no numeric argument.

       ALWAYS_TO_END
              If  a  completion is performed with the cursor within a word, and a full completion
              is inserted, the cursor is moved to the end of the word.  That is,  the  cursor  is
              moved  to  the  end  of  the  word  if  either  a  single match is inserted or menu
              completion is performed.

       AUTO_LIST (-9) <D>
              Automatically list choices on an ambiguous completion.

       AUTO_MENU <D>
              Automatically  use  menu  completion  after  the  second  consecutive  request  for
              completion,  for  example  by  pressing  the  tab  key  repeatedly.  This option is
              overridden by MENU_COMPLETE.

       AUTO_NAME_DIRS
              Any parameter that is set to the absolute name of a directory immediately becomes a
              name  for  that  directory,  that  will  be  used  by  the  `%~' and related prompt
              sequences, and will be available when completion is performed on  a  word  starting
              with `~'.  (Otherwise, the parameter must be used in the form `~param' first.)

       AUTO_PARAM_KEYS <D>
              If  a  parameter  name  was  completed and a following character (normally a space)
              automatically inserted, and the next character typed is one of those that  have  to
              come  directly  after  the  name  (like  `}',  `:',  etc.), the automatically added
              character is deleted, so that the  character  typed  comes  immediately  after  the
              parameter  name.   Completion in a brace expansion is affected similarly: the added
              character is a `,', which will be removed if `}' is typed next.

       AUTO_PARAM_SLASH <D>
              If a parameter is completed whose content is the name of a directory,  then  add  a
              trailing slash instead of a space.

       AUTO_REMOVE_SLASH <D>
              When  the  last  character  resulting  from  a  completion  is a slash and the next
              character typed is a word delimiter, a slash, or a character that  ends  a  command
              (such as a semicolon or an ampersand), remove the slash.

       BASH_AUTO_LIST
              On an ambiguous completion, automatically list choices when the completion function
              is called twice in succession.  This takes precedence over AUTO_LIST.  The  setting
              of  LIST_AMBIGUOUS is respected.  If AUTO_MENU is set, the menu behaviour will then
              start with the third press.  Note that this will not work with MENU_COMPLETE, since
              repeated completion calls immediately cycle through the list in that case.

       COMPLETE_ALIASES
              Prevents  aliases  on  the  command  line  from being internally substituted before
              completion is attempted.  The effect is to make the alias a  distinct  command  for
              completion purposes.

       COMPLETE_IN_WORD
              If  unset,  the  cursor  is  set  to  the end of the word if completion is started.
              Otherwise it stays there and completion is done from both ends.

       GLOB_COMPLETE
              When the current word has a glob pattern, do not insert  all  the  words  resulting
              from  the  expansion  but generate matches as for completion and cycle through them
              like MENU_COMPLETE. The matches are generated as if a `*' was added to the  end  of
              the  word,  or  inserted at the cursor when COMPLETE_IN_WORD is set.  This actually
              uses pattern matching, not globbing, so it works not only for  files  but  for  any
              completion, such as options, user names, etc.

              Note  that  when  the  pattern  matcher  is  used,  matching  control (for example,
              case-insensitive or anchored  matching)  cannot  be  used.   This  limitation  only
              applies   when  the  current  word  contains  a  pattern;  simply  turning  on  the
              GLOB_COMPLETE option does not have this effect.

       HASH_LIST_ALL <D>
              Whenever a command completion or spelling correction is attempted,  make  sure  the
              entire  command  path  is hashed first.  This makes the first completion slower but
              avoids false reports of spelling errors.

       LIST_AMBIGUOUS <D>
              This option works when AUTO_LIST or BASH_AUTO_LIST is also set.   If  there  is  an
              unambiguous prefix to insert on the command line, that is done without a completion
              list being displayed; in other words, auto-listing behaviour only takes place  when
              nothing would be inserted.  In the case of BASH_AUTO_LIST, this means that the list
              will be delayed to the third call of the function.

       LIST_BEEP <D>
              Beep on an ambiguous completion.   More  accurately,  this  forces  the  completion
              widgets  to  return  status 1 on an ambiguous completion, which causes the shell to
              beep if the option BEEP is also set; this may be modified if completion  is  called
              from a user-defined widget.

       LIST_PACKED
              Try  to  make  the  completion  list smaller (occupying less lines) by printing the
              matches in columns with different widths.

       LIST_ROWS_FIRST
              Lay out the matches in completion lists sorted horizontally, that  is,  the  second
              match is to the right of the first one, not under it as usual.

       LIST_TYPES (-X) <D>
              When listing files that are possible completions, show the type of each file with a
              trailing identifying mark.

       MENU_COMPLETE (-Y)
              On an ambiguous completion, instead of listing possibilities or beeping, insert the
              first match immediately.  Then when completion is requested again, remove the first
              match and insert the second match, etc.  When there are no more matches, go back to
              the first one again.  reverse-menu-complete may be used to loop through the list in
              the other direction. This option overrides AUTO_MENU.

       REC_EXACT (-S)
              If the string on the command line exactly matches one of the possible  completions,
              it  is  accepted,  even  if  there  is  another  completion  (i.e. that string with
              something else added) that also matches.

   Expansion and Globbing
       BAD_PATTERN (+2) <C> <Z>
              If a pattern for filename generation is badly formed, print an error message.   (If
              this option is unset, the pattern will be left unchanged.)

       BARE_GLOB_QUAL <Z>
              In  a  glob pattern, treat a trailing set of parentheses as a qualifier list, if it
              contains no `|', `(' or (if special) `~' characters.   See  the  section  `Filename
              Generation'.

       BRACE_CCL
              Expand expressions in braces which would not otherwise undergo brace expansion to a
              lexically ordered list of all the characters.  See the section `Brace Expansion'.

       CASE_GLOB <D>
              Make globbing (filename generation) sensitive to case.  Note  that  other  uses  of
              patterns are always sensitive to case.  If the option is unset, the presence of any
              character which is special  to  filename  generation  will  cause  case-insensitive
              matching.  For example, cvs(/) can match the directory CVS owing to the presence of
              the globbing flag (unless the option BARE_GLOB_QUAL is unset).

       CASE_MATCH <D>
              Make regular expressions using the zsh/regex module  (including  matches  with  =~)
              sensitive to case.

       CSH_NULL_GLOB <C>
              If  a  pattern  for filename generation has no matches, delete the pattern from the
              argument list; do not report an error unless all the patterns in a command have  no
              matches.  Overrides NOMATCH.

       EQUALS <Z>
              Perform = filename expansion.  (See the section `Filename Expansion'.)

       EXTENDED_GLOB
              Treat  the `#', `~' and `^' characters as part of patterns for filename generation,
              etc.  (An initial unquoted `~' always produces named directory expansion.)

       FORCE_FLOAT
              Constants in arithmetic evaluation will be treated as floating point  even  without
              the  use  of  a decimal point; the values of integer variables will be converted to
              floating point when used in arithmetic expressions.  Integers in any base  will  be
              converted.

       GLOB (+F, ksh: +f) <D>
              Perform filename generation (globbing).  (See the section `Filename Generation'.)

       GLOB_ASSIGN <C>
              If  this  option  is  set, filename generation (globbing) is performed on the right
              hand side of scalar parameter assignments of the form `name=pattern (e.g. `foo=*').
              If  the result has more than one word the parameter will become an array with those
              words as arguments. This option  is  provided  for  backwards  compatibility  only:
              globbing  is  always  performed  on the right hand side of array assignments of the
              form `name=(value)' (e.g. `foo=(*)') and this form is recommended for clarity; with
              this  option set, it is not possible to predict whether the result will be an array
              or a scalar.

       GLOB_DOTS (-4)
              Do not require a leading `.' in a filename to be matched explicitly.

       GLOB_STAR_SHORT
              When this option is set and the  default  zsh-style  globbing  is  in  effect,  the
              pattern  `**/*'  can  be  abbreviated  to  `**'  and  the  pattern  `***/*'  can be
              abbreviated to ***.  Hence `**.c' finds a file ending in .c  in  any  subdirectory,
              and  `***.c'  does  the  same while also following symbolic links.  A / immediately
              after the `**' or `***' forces the pattern to be treated as the unabbreviated form.

       GLOB_SUBST <C> <K> <S>
              Treat any characters resulting from  parameter  expansion  as  being  eligible  for
              filename  expansion  and  filename  generation,  and  any characters resulting from
              command substitution as being eligible for filename generation.  Braces (and commas
              in between) do not become eligible for expansion.

       HIST_SUBST_PATTERN
              Substitutions  using  the  :s  and  :& history modifiers are performed with pattern
              matching instead of string matching.  This occurs wherever  history  modifiers  are
              valid,  including  glob  qualifiers  and  parameters.  See the section Modifiers in
              zshexpn(1).

       IGNORE_BRACES (-I) <S>
              Do not perform brace expansion.  For historical  reasons  this  also  includes  the
              effect of the IGNORE_CLOSE_BRACES option.

       IGNORE_CLOSE_BRACES
              When neither this option nor IGNORE_BRACES is set, a sole close brace character `}'
              is syntactically significant at any point on a command line.  This has  the  effect
              that  no  semicolon or newline is necessary before the brace terminating a function
              or current shell construct.   When  either  option  is  set,  a  closing  brace  is
              syntactically  significant  only  in  command position.  Unlike IGNORE_BRACES, this
              option does not disable brace expansion.

              For example, with both options unset a function may be  defined  in  the  following
              fashion:

                     args() { echo $# }

              while  if  either option is set, this does not work and something equivalent to the
              following is required:

                     args() { echo $#; }

       KSH_GLOB <K>
              In pattern matching, the interpretation of parentheses is affected by  a  preceding
              `@', `*', `+', `?' or `!'.  See the section `Filename Generation'.

       MAGIC_EQUAL_SUBST
              All  unquoted  arguments  of  the  form  `anything=expression'  appearing after the
              command name have filename expansion (that is, where expression has a  leading  `~'
              or `=') performed on expression as if it were a parameter assignment.  The argument
              is not otherwise treated specially; it  is  passed  to  the  command  as  a  single
              argument,  and  not  used  as an actual parameter assignment.  For example, in echo
              foo=~/bar:~/rod, both occurrences of ~ would be replaced.  Note that  this  happens
              anyway with typeset and similar statements.

              This  option  respects  the  setting of the KSH_TYPESET option.  In other words, if
              both options are in effect, arguments looking like  assignments  will  not  undergo
              word splitting.

       MARK_DIRS (-8, ksh: -X)
              Append  a  trailing  `/'  to all directory names resulting from filename generation
              (globbing).

       MULTIBYTE <D>
              Respect multibyte characters when found in  strings.   When  this  option  is  set,
              strings  are  examined  using the system library to determine how many bytes form a
              character, depending on the current locale.  This affects the  way  characters  are
              counted in pattern matching, parameter values and various delimiters.

              The  option  is  on  by  default  if the shell was compiled with MULTIBYTE_SUPPORT;
              otherwise it is off by default and has no effect if turned on.

              If the option is off a single byte is always treated as a single  character.   This
              setting  is  designed  purely  for  examining strings known to contain raw bytes or
              other values that may not be characters in the current locale.  It is not necessary
              to  unset  the  option merely because the character set for the current locale does
              not contain multibyte characters.

              The option does not affect the shell's editor,  which always  uses  the  locale  to
              determine multibyte characters.  This is because the character set displayed by the
              terminal emulator is independent of shell settings.

       NOMATCH (+3) <C> <Z>
              If a pattern for filename generation has no matches, print  an  error,  instead  of
              leaving  it unchanged in the argument list.  This also applies to file expansion of
              an initial `~' or `='.

       NULL_GLOB (-G)
              If a pattern for filename generation has no matches, delete the  pattern  from  the
              argument list instead of reporting an error.  Overrides NOMATCH.

       NUMERIC_GLOB_SORT
              If  numeric  filenames  are  matched  by  a  filename  generation pattern, sort the
              filenames numerically rather than lexicographically.

       RC_EXPAND_PARAM (-P)
              Array expansions of the form `foo${xx}bar', where the parameter xx is set to  (a  b
              c),  are  substituted with `fooabar foobbar foocbar' instead of the default `fooa b
              cbar'.  Note that an empty array will therefore cause all arguments to be removed.

       REMATCH_PCRE
              If set, regular expression matching with the =~ operator will  use  Perl-Compatible
              Regular   Expressions  from  the  PCRE  library.   (The  zsh/pcre  module  must  be
              available.)  If not set, regular expressions will use the  extended  regexp  syntax
              provided by the system libraries.

       SH_GLOB <K> <S>
              Disables  the  special  meaning of `(', `|', `)' and '<' for globbing the result of
              parameter and command substitutions, and in  some  other  places  where  the  shell
              accepts  patterns.   If  SH_GLOB  is  set but KSH_GLOB is not, the shell allows the
              interpretation of subshell expressions enclosed in parentheses in some cases  where
              there is no space before the opening parenthesis, e.g. !(true) is interpreted as if
              there were a space after the !.  This option is set by default if zsh is invoked as
              sh or ksh.

       UNSET (+u, ksh: +u) <K> <S> <Z>
              Treat unset parameters as if they were empty when substituting.  Otherwise they are
              treated as an error.

       WARN_CREATE_GLOBAL
              Print a warning message when a global parameter is created  in  a  function  by  an
              assignment  or in math context.  This often indicates that a parameter has not been
              declared local when it should have been.   Parameters  explicitly  declared  global
              from within a function using typeset -g do not cause a warning.  Note that there is
              no warning when a local parameter is assigned to in a nested  function,  which  may
              also indicate an error.

       WARN_NESTED_VAR
              Print  a  warning  message  when  an  existing parameter from an enclosing function
              scope, or global, is set in a  function  by  an  assignment  or  in  math  context.
              Assignment  to  shell  special  parameters  does  not cause a warning.  This is the
              companion to WARN_CREATE_GLOBAL as in this case the warning is only printed when  a
              parameter  is  not created.  Where possible, use of typeset -g to set the parameter
              suppresses the error, but note that this needs to be used every time the  parameter
              is  set.   To  restrict  the  effect of this option to a single function scope, use
              `functions -W'.

              For example, the following code produces a warning for the  assignment  inside  the
              function nested as that overrides the value within toplevel

                     toplevel() {
                       local foo="in fn"
                       nested
                     }
                     nested() {
                          foo="in nested"
                     }
                     setopt warn_nested_var
                     toplevel

   History
       APPEND_HISTORY <D>
              If  this  is  set, zsh sessions will append their history list to the history file,
              rather than replace it. Thus, multiple parallel zsh sessions will all have the  new
              entries  from their history lists added to the history file, in the order that they
              exit.  The file will still be periodically re-written to trim it when the number of
              lines   grows   20%   beyond  the  value  specified  by  $SAVEHIST  (see  also  the
              HIST_SAVE_BY_COPY option).

       BANG_HIST (+K) <C> <Z>
              Perform textual history expansion, csh-style, treating the character `!' specially.

       EXTENDED_HISTORY <C>
              Save each command's beginning timestamp  (in  seconds  since  the  epoch)  and  the
              duration (in seconds) to the history file.  The format of this prefixed data is:

              `: <beginning time>:<elapsed seconds>;<command>'.

       HIST_ALLOW_CLOBBER
              Add  `|'  to output redirections in the history.  This allows history references to
              clobber files even when CLOBBER is unset.

       HIST_BEEP <D>
              Beep in ZLE when a widget attempts to access a history entry which isn't there.

       HIST_EXPIRE_DUPS_FIRST
              If the internal history needs to be  trimmed  to  add  the  current  command  line,
              setting  this option will cause the oldest history event that has a duplicate to be
              lost before losing a unique event from the list.  You should be  sure  to  set  the
              value  of  HISTSIZE to a larger number than SAVEHIST in order to give you some room
              for  the  duplicated  events,  otherwise  this  option  will   behave   just   like
              HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS once the history fills up with unique events.

       HIST_FCNTL_LOCK
              When writing out the history file, by default zsh uses ad-hoc file locking to avoid
              known problems with locking on some operating systems.  With this option locking is
              done  by  means  of  the  system's  fcntl call, where this method is available.  On
              recent operating  systems  this  may  provide  better  performance,  in  particular
              avoiding history corruption when files are stored on NFS.

       HIST_FIND_NO_DUPS
              When searching for history entries in the line editor, do not display duplicates of
              a line previously found, even if the duplicates are not contiguous.

       HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS
              If a new command line being added to the history list duplicates an older one,  the
              older command is removed from the list (even if it is not the previous event).

       HIST_IGNORE_DUPS (-h)
              Do  not  enter  command  lines  into the history list if they are duplicates of the
              previous event.

       HIST_IGNORE_SPACE (-g)
              Remove command lines from the history list when the first character on the line  is
              a space, or when one of the expanded aliases contains a leading space.  Only normal
              aliases (not global or suffix aliases) have this behaviour.  Note that the  command
              lingers  in  the  internal  history  until  the  next  command is entered before it
              vanishes, allowing you to briefly reuse or edit the line.  If you want to  make  it
              vanish right away without entering another command, type a space and press return.

       HIST_LEX_WORDS
              By  default,  shell  history  that is read in from files is split into words on all
              white space.  This means that arguments with quoted whitespace  are  not  correctly
              handled,  with  the consequence that references to words in history lines that have
              been read from a file may be inaccurate.  When this option is set,  words  read  in
              from  a  history  file  are divided up in a similar fashion to normal shell command
              line handling.  Although this produces more accurately delimited words, if the size
              of  the  history  file  is large this can be slow.  Trial and error is necessary to
              decide.

       HIST_NO_FUNCTIONS
              Remove function definitions from the history list.  Note that the function  lingers
              in  the  internal  history  until  the  next command is entered before it vanishes,
              allowing you to briefly reuse or edit the definition.

       HIST_NO_STORE
              Remove the history (fc -l) command from the history list when invoked.   Note  that
              the  command  lingers  in  the  internal  history until the next command is entered
              before it vanishes, allowing you to briefly reuse or edit the line.

       HIST_REDUCE_BLANKS
              Remove superfluous blanks from each command line being added to the history list.

       HIST_SAVE_BY_COPY <D>
              When the history file is re-written, we normally write out a copy of the file named
              $HISTFILE.new  and  then  rename  it  over the old one.  However, if this option is
              unset, we instead truncate the old history file  and  write  out  the  new  version
              in-place.  If one of the history-appending options is enabled, this option only has
              an effect when the enlarged history file needs to be re-written to trim it down  to
              size.   Disable  this only if you have special needs, as doing so makes it possible
              to lose history entries if zsh gets interrupted during the save.

              When writing out a  copy  of  the  history  file,  zsh  preserves  the  old  file's
              permissions  and  group  information, but will refuse to write out a new file if it
              would change the history file's owner.

       HIST_SAVE_NO_DUPS
              When writing out the history file, older commands that  duplicate  newer  ones  are
              omitted.

       HIST_VERIFY
              Whenever  the  user  enters  a  line with history expansion, don't execute the line
              directly; instead, perform history expansion and reload the line into  the  editing
              buffer.

       INC_APPEND_HISTORY
              This  options  works like APPEND_HISTORY except that new history lines are added to
              the $HISTFILE incrementally (as soon as they  are  entered),  rather  than  waiting
              until  the  shell exits.  The file will still be periodically re-written to trim it
              when the number of lines grows 20% beyond the value  specified  by  $SAVEHIST  (see
              also the HIST_SAVE_BY_COPY option).

       INC_APPEND_HISTORY_TIME
              This  option  is  a  variant  of  INC_APPEND_HISTORY  in which, where possible, the
              history entry is written out to the file after the command is finished, so that the
              time   taken  by  the  command  is  recorded  correctly  in  the  history  file  in
              EXTENDED_HISTORY format.  This means that the history entry will not  be  available
              immediately from other instances of the shell that are using the same history file.

              This  option is only useful if INC_APPEND_HISTORY and SHARE_HISTORY are turned off.
              The three options should be considered mutually exclusive.

       SHARE_HISTORY <K>

              This option both imports new commands from the history file, and also  causes  your
              typed  commands  to  be appended to the history file (the latter is like specifying
              INC_APPEND_HISTORY, which should be turned off if this option is in  effect).   The
              history  lines are also output with timestamps ala EXTENDED_HISTORY (which makes it
              easier to find the  spot  where  we  left  off  reading  the  file  after  it  gets
              re-written).

              By default, history movement commands visit the imported lines as well as the local
              lines, but you can toggle this on and off with the set-local-history  zle  binding.
              It  is  also  possible  to  create a zle widget that will make some commands ignore
              imported commands, and some include them.

              If you find that you want more control over when commands  get  imported,  you  may
              wish  to turn SHARE_HISTORY off, INC_APPEND_HISTORY or INC_APPEND_HISTORY_TIME (see
              above) on, and then manually import commands whenever you need them using `fc -RI'.

   Initialisation
       ALL_EXPORT (-a, ksh: -a)
              All parameters subsequently defined are automatically exported.

       GLOBAL_EXPORT <Z>
              If this option is set, passing the -x flag to the builtins declare, float, integer,
              readonly  and  typeset (but not local) will also set the -g flag;  hence parameters
              exported to the environment will not be  made  local  to  the  enclosing  function,
              unless  they  were  already  or  the flag +g is given explicitly.  If the option is
              unset, exported parameters will be made local in just the same  way  as  any  other
              parameter.

              This  option  is  set  by default for backward compatibility; it is not recommended
              that its behaviour be relied upon.  Note that the builtin export always  sets  both
              the -x and -g flags, and hence its effect extends beyond the scope of the enclosing
              function; this is the most portable way to achieve this behaviour.

       GLOBAL_RCS (-d) <D>
              If this option is  unset,  the  startup  files  /etc/zsh/zprofile,  /etc/zsh/zshrc,
              /etc/zsh/zlogin  and  /etc/zsh/zlogout  will  not  be  run.  It can be disabled and
              re-enabled at any time, including inside local startup files (.zshrc, etc.).

       RCS (+f) <D>
              After /etc/zsh/zshenv is sourced on startup, source the .zshenv, /etc/zsh/zprofile,
              .zprofile, /etc/zsh/zshrc, .zshrc, /etc/zsh/zlogin, .zlogin, and .zlogout files, as
              described in the section `Files'.  If this option  is  unset,  the  /etc/zsh/zshenv
              file is still sourced, but any of the others will not be; it can be set at any time
              to prevent the remaining startup files after the currently executing one from being
              sourced.

   Input/Output
       ALIASES <D>
              Expand aliases.

       CLOBBER (+C, ksh: +C) <D>
              Allows  `>' redirection to truncate existing files.  Otherwise `>!' or `>|' must be
              used to truncate a file.

              If the option is not set, and the option APPEND_CREATE is also not  set,  `>>!'  or
              `>>|' must be used to create a file.  If either option is set, `>>' may be used.

       CORRECT (-0)
              Try  to correct the spelling of commands.  Note that, when the HASH_LIST_ALL option
              is not set or when some directories in the path are not readable, this may  falsely
              report spelling errors the first time some commands are used.

              The  shell variable CORRECT_IGNORE may be set to a pattern to match words that will
              never be offered as corrections.

       CORRECT_ALL (-O)
              Try to correct the spelling of all arguments in a line.

              The shell variable CORRECT_IGNORE_FILE may be set to a pattern to match file  names
              that will never be offered as corrections.

       DVORAK Use  the  Dvorak  keyboard  instead  of the standard qwerty keyboard as a basis for
              examining spelling mistakes  for  the  CORRECT  and  CORRECT_ALL  options  and  the
              spell-word editor command.

       FLOW_CONTROL <D>
              If  this  option  is  unset, output flow control via start/stop characters (usually
              assigned to ^S/^Q) is disabled in the shell's editor.

       IGNORE_EOF (-7)
              Do not exit on end-of-file.  Require the use of exit or logout  instead.   However,
              ten  consecutive  EOFs  will  cause  the  shell  to exit anyway, to avoid the shell
              hanging if its tty goes away.

              Also, if this option is set and the Zsh Line Editor is used, widgets implemented by
              shell  functions  can  be  bound  to  EOF (normally Control-D) without printing the
              normal warning message.  This works only for normal  widgets,  not  for  completion
              widgets.

       INTERACTIVE_COMMENTS (-k) <K> <S>
              Allow comments even in interactive shells.

       HASH_CMDS <D>
              Note  the  location  of  each  command  the  first time it is executed.  Subsequent
              invocations of the same command will  use  the  saved  location,  avoiding  a  path
              search.   If  this  option is unset, no path hashing is done at all.  However, when
              CORRECT is set, commands whose names do not appear in the functions or aliases hash
              tables are hashed in order to avoid reporting them as spelling errors.

       HASH_DIRS <D>
              Whenever a command name is hashed, hash the directory containing it, as well as all
              directories that occur earlier in the path.  Has no effect if neither HASH_CMDS nor
              CORRECT is set.

       HASH_EXECUTABLES_ONLY
              When  hashing  commands  because  of HASH_CMDS, check that the file to be hashed is
              actually an executable.  This option is unset by default as if the path contains  a
              large  number  of  commands, or consists of many remote files, the additional tests
              can take a long time.  Trial and  error  is  needed  to  show  if  this  option  is
              beneficial.

       MAIL_WARNING (-U)
              Print  a  warning  message  if  a  mail file has been accessed since the shell last
              checked.

       PATH_DIRS (-Q)
              Perform a path search even  on  command  names  with  slashes  in  them.   Thus  if
              `/usr/local/bin'  is  in  the  user's  path,  and  he or she types `X11/xinit', the
              command `/usr/local/bin/X11/xinit' will be executed (assuming it exists).  Commands
              explicitly  beginning  with  `/', `./' or `../' are not subject to the path search.
              This also applies to the `.' and source builtins.

              Note  that  subdirectories  of  the  current  directory  are  always  searched  for
              executables  specified  in this form.  This takes place before any search indicated
              by this option, and regardless of whether `.' or the current  directory  appear  in
              the command search path.

       PATH_SCRIPT <K> <S>
              If  this option is not set, a script passed as the first non-option argument to the
              shell must contain the name of the file to open.  If this option is  set,  and  the
              script  does  not  specify  a directory path, the script is looked for first in the
              current directory, then in the command path.  See the section INVOCATION in zsh(1).

       PRINT_EIGHT_BIT
              Print eight bit characters literally in completion lists, etc.  This option is  not
              necessary if your system correctly returns the printability of eight bit characters
              (see ctype(3)).

       PRINT_EXIT_VALUE (-1)
              Print the exit value of programs with non-zero exit status.  This is only available
              at the command line in interactive shells.

       RC_QUOTES
              Allow  the  character  sequence `''' to signify a single quote within singly quoted
              strings.  Note this does not apply in quoted strings using the format $'...', where
              a backslashed single quote can be used.

       RM_STAR_SILENT (-H) <K> <S>
              Do not query the user before executing `rm *' or `rm path/*'.

       RM_STAR_WAIT
              If querying the user before executing `rm *' or `rm path/*', first wait ten seconds
              and ignore anything typed in that time.  This avoids  the  problem  of  reflexively
              answering  `yes'  to  the query when one didn't really mean it.  The wait and query
              can always be avoided by expanding the `*' in ZLE (with tab).

       SHORT_LOOPS <C> <Z>
              Allow the short forms of for, repeat, select, if, and function constructs.

       SUN_KEYBOARD_HACK (-L)
              If a line ends with a backquote, and there are an odd number of backquotes  on  the
              line,  ignore  the  trailing backquote.  This is useful on some keyboards where the
              return key is too small, and the backquote key lies annoyingly close to it.  As  an
              alternative the variable KEYBOARD_HACK lets you choose the character to be removed.

   Job Control
       AUTO_CONTINUE
              With  this  option  set,  stopped jobs that are removed from the job table with the
              disown builtin command are automatically sent a CONT signal to make them running.

       AUTO_RESUME (-W)
              Treat single word simple commands without redirection as candidates for  resumption
              of an existing job.

       BG_NICE (-6) <C> <Z>
              Run all background jobs at a lower priority.  This option is set by default.

       CHECK_JOBS <Z>
              Report  the status of background and suspended jobs before exiting a shell with job
              control; a second attempt to exit the shell will succeed.   NO_CHECK_JOBS  is  best
              used only in combination with NO_HUP, else such jobs will be killed automatically.

              The  check is omitted if the commands run from the previous command line included a
              `jobs' command, since it is assumed the user is aware that there are background  or
              suspended jobs.  A `jobs' command run from one of the hook functions defined in the
              section SPECIAL FUNCTIONS in zshmisc(1) is not counted for this purpose.

       HUP <Z>
              Send the HUP signal to running jobs when the shell exits.

       LONG_LIST_JOBS (-R)
              List jobs in the long format by default.

       MONITOR (-m, ksh: -m)
              Allow job control.  Set by default in interactive shells.

       NOTIFY (-5, ksh: -b) <Z>
              Report the status of background jobs immediately, rather than  waiting  until  just
              before printing a prompt.

       POSIX_JOBS <K> <S>
              This option makes job control more compliant with the POSIX standard.

              When  the  option is not set, the MONITOR option is unset on entry to subshells, so
              that job control is no longer active.  When the option is set, the  MONITOR  option
              and  job  control  remain active in the subshell, but note that the subshell has no
              access to jobs in the parent shell.

              When the option is not set, jobs put in the background or foreground with bg or  fg
              are  displayed  with the same information that would be reported by jobs.  When the
              option is set, only the text is printed.   The  output  from  jobs  itself  is  not
              affected by the option.

              When  the  option  is  not  set, job information from the parent shell is saved for
              output within a subshell (for example, within a pipeline).  When the option is set,
              the output of jobs is empty until a job is started within the subshell.

              In  previous  versions of the shell, it was necessary to enable POSIX_JOBS in order
              for the builtin command wait to return the  status  of  background  jobs  that  had
              already exited.  This is no longer the case.

   Prompting
       PROMPT_BANG <K>
              If  set,  `!'  is  treated  specially in prompt expansion.  See EXPANSION OF PROMPT
              SEQUENCES in zshmisc(1).

       PROMPT_CR (+V) <D>
              Print a carriage return just before printing a prompt in the line editor.  This  is
              on  by default as multi-line editing is only possible if the editor knows where the
              start of the line appears.

       PROMPT_SP <D>
              Attempt to preserve a partial line (i.e. a line that did not end  with  a  newline)
              that  would  otherwise  be  covered  up  by the command prompt due to the PROMPT_CR
              option.  This works by  outputting  some  cursor-control  characters,  including  a
              series  of  spaces,  that  should  make  the  terminal wrap to the next line when a
              partial line is present (note that this is only successful  if  your  terminal  has
              automatic margins, which is typical).

              When a partial line is preserved, by default you will see an inverse+bold character
              at the end of the partial line:  a `%' for a normal user or a  `#'  for  root.   If
              set,  the  shell  parameter PROMPT_EOL_MARK can be used to customize how the end of
              partial lines are shown.

              NOTE: if the PROMPT_CR option is not set, enabling this option will have no effect.
              This option is on by default.

       PROMPT_PERCENT <C> <Z>
              If  set,  `%'  is  treated  specially in prompt expansion.  See EXPANSION OF PROMPT
              SEQUENCES in zshmisc(1).

       PROMPT_SUBST <K> <S>
              If set, parameter expansion, command  substitution  and  arithmetic  expansion  are
              performed  in  prompts.   Substitutions  within  prompts  do not affect the command
              status.

       TRANSIENT_RPROMPT
              Remove any right prompt from display when accepting a command line.   This  may  be
              useful with terminals with other cut/paste methods.

   Scripts and Functions
       ALIAS_FUNC_DEF <S>
              By  default,  zsh  does  not  allow the definition of functions using the `name ()'
              syntax if name was expanded as an alias: this causes an error.  This is usually the
              desired behaviour, as otherwise the combination of an alias and a function based on
              the same definition can easily cause problems.

              When this option is set, aliases can be used for defining functions.

              For example, consider the following definitions as they might occur  in  a  startup
              file.

                     alias foo=bar
                     foo() {
                       print This probably does not do what you expect.
                     }

              Here,  foo  is  expanded  as  an  alias to bar before the () is encountered, so the
              function defined would be named bar.  By default this is instead an error in native
              mode.   Note  that  quoting  any  part  of  the function name, or using the keyword
              function, avoids the problem, so is recommended when the function name can also  be
              an alias.

       C_BASES
              Output  hexadecimal numbers in the standard C format, for example `0xFF' instead of
              the usual `16#FF'.  If the option OCTAL_ZEROES is also set (it is not by  default),
              octal  numbers  will  be  treated  similarly  and  hence appear as `077' instead of
              `8#77'.  This option has no effect on the choice of the output  base,  nor  on  the
              output  of bases other than hexadecimal and octal.  Note that these formats will be
              understood on input irrespective of the setting of C_BASES.

       C_PRECEDENCES
              This alters the precedence of arithmetic operators to be  more  like  C  and  other
              programming  languages;  the  section  ARITHMETIC  EVALUATION  in zshmisc(1) has an
              explicit list.

       DEBUG_BEFORE_CMD <D>
              Run the DEBUG trap before each command; otherwise it is  run  after  each  command.
              Setting  this  option  mimics  the  behaviour  of ksh 93; with the option unset the
              behaviour is that of ksh 88.

       ERR_EXIT (-e, ksh: -e)
              If a command has a non-zero exit status, execute the ZERR trap, if set,  and  exit.
              This is disabled while running initialization scripts.

              The  behaviour  is  also  disabled  inside DEBUG traps.  In this case the option is
              handled  specially:  it  is  unset  on  entry  to  the   trap.    If   the   option
              DEBUG_BEFORE_CMD  is  set, as it is by default, and the option ERR_EXIT is found to
              have been set on exit, then the command for which the DEBUG trap is being  executed
              is skipped.  The option is restored after the trap exits.

              Non-zero  status  in a command list containing && or || is ignored for commands not
              at the end of the list.  Hence

                     false && true

              does not trigger exit.

              Exiting due to ERR_EXIT has certain interactions with asynchronous  jobs  noted  in
              the section JOBS in zshmisc(1).

       ERR_RETURN
              If  a  command  has  a  non-zero exit status, return immediately from the enclosing
              function.  The logic is similar to that  for  ERR_EXIT,  except  that  an  implicit
              return  statement is executed instead of an exit.  This will trigger an exit at the
              outermost level of a non-interactive script.

              Normally this option inherits the behaviour of ERR_EXIT that code followed by  `&&'
              `||' does not trigger a return.  Hence in the following:

                     summit || true

              no return is forced as the combined effect always has a zero return status.

              Note.  however,  that  if  summit  in  the above example is itself a function, code
              inside it is considered separately: it may force a return from summit (assuming the
              option  remains  set  within  summit),  but  not  from the enclosing context.  This
              behaviour is different from ERR_EXIT which is unaffected by function scope.

       EVAL_LINENO <Z>
              If set, line numbers of expressions evaluated using the builtin  eval  are  tracked
              separately of the enclosing environment.  This applies both to the parameter LINENO
              and the line number output by the prompt escape %i.  If  the  option  is  set,  the
              prompt  escape %N will output the string `(eval)' instead of the script or function
              name as an indication.    (The  two  prompt  escapes  are  typically  used  in  the
              parameter  PS4  to  be  output  when  the option XTRACE is set.)  If EVAL_LINENO is
              unset, the line number of the surrounding script or function is retained during the
              evaluation.

       EXEC (+n, ksh: +n) <D>
              Do execute commands.  Without this option, commands are read and checked for syntax
              errors, but not executed.  This option cannot  be  turned  off  in  an  interactive
              shell, except when `-n' is supplied to the shell at startup.

       FUNCTION_ARGZERO <C> <Z>
              When  executing  a  shell  function or sourcing a script, set $0 temporarily to the
              name of the function/script.  Note that toggling FUNCTION_ARGZERO from  on  to  off
              (or  off to on) does not change the current value of $0.  Only the state upon entry
              to the function or script has an effect.  Compare POSIX_ARGZERO.

       LOCAL_LOOPS
              When this option is not  set,  the  effect  of  break  and  continue  commands  may
              propagate  outside  function scope, affecting loops in calling functions.  When the
              option is set in a calling function, a break or  a  continue  that  is  not  caught
              within  a  called  function  (regardless  of  the setting of the option within that
              function) produces a warning and the effect is cancelled.

       LOCAL_OPTIONS <K>
              If this option is set at the point of return from a shell  function,  most  options
              (including  this  one) which were in force upon entry to the function are restored;
              options that are not restored are PRIVILEGED and RESTRICTED.  Otherwise, only  this
              option,  and  the  LOCAL_LOOPS,  XTRACE  and PRINT_EXIT_VALUE options are restored.
              Hence if this is explicitly unset by a shell function the other options in force at
              the  point  of return will remain so.  A shell function can also guarantee itself a
              known shell configuration  with  a  formulation  like  `emulate  -L  zsh';  the  -L
              activates LOCAL_OPTIONS.

       LOCAL_PATTERNS
              If  this  option  is set at the point of return from a shell function, the state of
              pattern disables, as set with the builtin command `disable -p', is restored to what
              it  was  when the function was entered.  The behaviour of this option is similar to
              the effect of LOCAL_OPTIONS on options; hence `emulate -L sh' (or indeed any  other
              emulation with the -L option) activates LOCAL_PATTERNS.

       LOCAL_TRAPS <K>
              If  this  option  is  set  when  a  signal  trap is set inside a function, then the
              previous status of the trap for that signal will  be  restored  when  the  function
              exits.  Note that this option must be set prior to altering the trap behaviour in a
              function; unlike LOCAL_OPTIONS, the value on exit from the function is  irrelevant.
              However, it does not need to be set before any global trap for that to be correctly
              restored by a function.  For example,

                     unsetopt localtraps
                     trap - INT
                     fn() { setopt localtraps; trap '' INT; sleep 3; }

              will restore normal handling of SIGINT after the function exits.

       MULTI_FUNC_DEF <Z>
              Allow definitions of multiple functions at once in the form `fn1 fn2...()'; if  the
              option  is  not  set,  this causes a parse error.  Definition of multiple functions
              with the function keyword is always allowed.  Multiple function definitions are not
              often used and can cause obscure errors.

       MULTIOS <Z>
              Perform  implicit  tees  or  cats when multiple redirections are attempted (see the
              section `Redirection').

       OCTAL_ZEROES <S>
              Interpret any  integer  constant  beginning  with  a  0  as  octal,  per  IEEE  Std
              1003.2-1992  (ISO  9945-2:1993).   This  is  not  enabled  by  default as it causes
              problems with parsing of, for example, date and time strings with leading zeroes.

              Sequences of digits indicating a numeric base such as the `08' component in `08#77'
              are always interpreted as decimal, regardless of leading zeroes.

       PIPE_FAIL
              By  default,  when  a  pipeline  exits  the  exit  status recorded by the shell and
              returned by the shell variable $? reflects that  of  the  rightmost  element  of  a
              pipeline.   If  this  option is set, the exit status instead reflects the status of
              the rightmost element of the pipeline that was non-zero, or zero  if  all  elements
              exited with zero status.

       SOURCE_TRACE
              If set, zsh will print an informational message announcing the name of each file it
              loads.  The format of the output is similar to that for the XTRACE option, with the
              message  <sourcetrace>.  A file may be loaded by the shell itself when it starts up
              and shuts down (Startup/Shutdown Files) or by the use of  the  `source'  and  `dot'
              builtin commands.

       TYPESET_SILENT
              If this is unset, executing any of the `typeset' family of commands with no options
              and a list of parameters that have no values to be assigned but already exist  will
              display  the value of the parameter.  If the option is set, they will only be shown
              when parameters are selected with the `-m' option.  The option  `-p'  is  available
              whether or not the option is set.

       VERBOSE (-v, ksh: -v)
              Print shell input lines as they are read.

       XTRACE (-x, ksh: -x)
              Print commands and their arguments as they are executed.  The output is preceded by
              the value of $PS4, formatted as  described  in  the  section  EXPANSION  OF  PROMPT
              SEQUENCES in zshmisc(1).

   Shell Emulation
       APPEND_CREATE <K> <S>
              This option only applies when NO_CLOBBER (-C) is in effect.

              If this option is not set, the shell will report an error when a append redirection
              (>>) is used on a file that does not already exists (the traditional zsh  behaviour
              of NO_CLOBBER).  If the option is set, no error is reported (POSIX behaviour).

       BASH_REMATCH
              When  set,  matches  performed with the =~ operator will set the BASH_REMATCH array
              variable, instead of the default MATCH and match variables.  The first  element  of
              the BASH_REMATCH array will contain the entire matched text and subsequent elements
              will contain extracted substrings.  This option makes more sense when KSH_ARRAYS is
              also  set,  so  that  the entire matched portion is stored at index 0 and the first
              substring is at index 1.  Without this option,  the  MATCH  variable  contains  the
              entire matched text and the match array variable contains substrings.

       BSD_ECHO <S>
              Make  the  echo  builtin  compatible  with  the BSD echo(1) command.  This disables
              backslashed escape sequences in echo strings unless the -e option is specified.

       CONTINUE_ON_ERROR
              If a fatal error is encountered (see the section ERRORS  in  zshmisc(1)),  and  the
              code  is running in a script, the shell will resume execution at the next statement
              in the script at the top level, in other  words  outside  all  functions  or  shell
              constructs  such as loops and conditions.  This mimics the behaviour of interactive
              shells, where the shell returns to the line editor to read a new  command;  it  was
              the normal behaviour in versions of zsh before 5.0.1.

       CSH_JUNKIE_HISTORY <C>
              A  history  reference  without an event specifier will always refer to the previous
              command.  Without this option, such a history reference refers to the same event as
              the  previous  history  reference  on  the  current command line, defaulting to the
              previous command.

       CSH_JUNKIE_LOOPS <C>
              Allow loop bodies to take the form `list; end' instead of `do list; done'.

       CSH_JUNKIE_QUOTES <C>
              Changes the rules for single- and double-quoted text to match that of  csh.   These
              require  that embedded newlines be preceded by a backslash; unescaped newlines will
              cause an error message.  In double-quoted strings, it is made impossible to  escape
              `$',  ``'  or `"' (and `\' itself no longer needs escaping).  Command substitutions
              are only expanded once, and cannot be nested.

       CSH_NULLCMD <C>
              Do not use the values of NULLCMD and READNULLCMD when running redirections with  no
              command.  This make such redirections fail (see the section `Redirection').

       KSH_ARRAYS <K> <S>
              Emulate  ksh  array  handling as closely as possible.  If this option is set, array
              elements are numbered from zero, an array parameter without subscript refers to the
              first  element  instead  of  the  whole array, and braces are required to delimit a
              subscript (`${path[2]}' rather than just `$path[2]') or to apply modifiers  to  any
              parameter (`${PWD:h}' rather than `$PWD:h').

       KSH_AUTOLOAD <K> <S>
              Emulate  ksh  function autoloading.  This means that when a function is autoloaded,
              the corresponding file is merely executed, and must  define  the  function  itself.
              (By  default,  the  function  is defined to the contents of the file.  However, the
              most common ksh-style case - of the file containing only a simple definition of the
              function - is always handled in the ksh-compatible manner.)

       KSH_OPTION_PRINT <K>
              Alters  the  way options settings are printed: instead of separate lists of set and
              unset options, all options are shown, marked `on' if they are  in  the  non-default
              state, `off' otherwise.

       KSH_TYPESET
              This  option  is  now  obsolete:  a better appropximation to the behaviour of other
              shells is obtained with the reserved word  interface  to  declare,  export,  float,
              integer,  local,  readonly  and typeset.  Note that the option is only applied when
              the reserved word interface is not in use.

              Alters the way arguments to the typeset  family  of  commands,  including  declare,
              export,  float,  integer,  local and readonly, are processed.  Without this option,
              zsh will perform normal word splitting after command  and  parameter  expansion  in
              arguments  of  an  assignment; with it, word splitting does not take place in those
              cases.

       KSH_ZERO_SUBSCRIPT
              Treat use of a subscript of  value  zero  in  array  or  string  expressions  as  a
              reference  to the first element, i.e. the element that usually has the subscript 1.
              Ignored if KSH_ARRAYS is also set.

              If neither this option nor KSH_ARRAYS is set, accesses to an element of an array or
              string with subscript zero return an empty element or string, while attempts to set
              element zero of an array or string are treated as an error.  However,  attempts  to
              set  an  otherwise  valid  subscript  range  that  includes zero will succeed.  For
              example, if KSH_ZERO_SUBSCRIPT is not set,

                     array[0]=(element)

              is an error, while

                     array[0,1]=(element)

              is not and will replace the first element of the array.

              This option is for compatibility with older  versions  of  the  shell  and  is  not
              recommended in new code.

       POSIX_ALIASES <K> <S>
              When this option is set, reserved words are not candidates for alias expansion:  it
              is still possible to declare any of them as an alias, but the alias will  never  be
              expanded.    Reserved  words  are  described  in  the  section  RESERVED  WORDS  in
              zshmisc(1).

              Alias expansion takes place while text is being read; hence when this option is set
              it  does not take effect until the end of any function or other piece of shell code
              parsed as one unit.  Note this may cause differences from other  shells  even  when
              the  option  is  in  effect.  For example, when running a command with `zsh -c', or
              even `zsh -o posixaliases -c', the entire command argument is parsed as  one  unit,
              so  aliases  defined within the argument are not available even in later lines.  If
              in doubt, avoid use of aliases in non-interactive code.

       POSIX_ARGZERO
              This option may be used to temporarily disable FUNCTION_ARGZERO and thereby restore
              the  value  of $0 to the name used to invoke the shell (or as set by the -c command
              line option).  For compatibility with previous versions of  the  shell,  emulations
              use  NO_FUNCTION_ARGZERO  instead  of POSIX_ARGZERO, which may result in unexpected
              scoping of $0 if the emulation mode is changed inside a  function  or  script.   To
              avoid this, explicitly enable POSIX_ARGZERO in the emulate command:

                     emulate sh -o POSIX_ARGZERO

              Note  that  NO_POSIX_ARGZERO  has  no  effect  unless  FUNCTION_ARGZERO was already
              enabled upon entry to the function or script.

       POSIX_BUILTINS <K> <S>
              When this option is set the command builtin can be used to  execute  shell  builtin
              commands.   Parameter  assignments  specified  before  shell  functions and special
              builtins are kept after  the  command  completes  unless  the  special  builtin  is
              prefixed  with  the  command  builtin.  Special builtins are ., :, break, continue,
              declare, eval, exit, export, integer, local, readonly, return, set, shift,  source,
              times, trap and unset.

              In  addition,  various  error conditions associated with the above builtins or exec
              cause a non-interactive shell to exit and an interactive shell  to  return  to  its
              top-level processing.

              Furthermore,  functions  and  shell builtins are not executed after an exec prefix;
              the command to be executed must be an external command found in the path.

              Furthermore, the getopts builtin behaves in a POSIX-compatible fashion in that  the
              associated variable OPTIND is not made local to functions.

       POSIX_IDENTIFIERS <K> <S>
              When this option is set, only the ASCII characters a to z, A to Z, 0 to 9 and _ may
              be used in identifiers (names of shell parameters and modules).

              In addition, setting this option limits the effect of parameter  substitution  with
              no  braces,  so  that  the  expression  $#  is  treated as the parameter $# even if
              followed by a valid parameter name.  When it is unset, zsh  allows  expressions  of
              the  form  $#name  to refer to the length of $name, even for special variables, for
              example in expressions such as $#- and $#*.

              Another difference is that with the option set assignment to an unset  variable  in
              arithmetic  context  causes  the  variable  to be created as a scalar rather than a
              numeric type.  So after `unset t; (( t = 3 ))'. without POSIX_IDENTIFIERS set t has
              integer type, while with it set it has scalar type.

              When  the  option  is  unset and multibyte character support is enabled (i.e. it is
              compiled in and the option MULTIBYTE is set), then  additionally  any  alphanumeric
              characters  in  the  local  character  set  may  be used in identifiers.  Note that
              scripts and functions written with this feature are not  portable,  and  also  that
              both  options  must  be  set  before the script or function is parsed; setting them
              during execution is not sufficient as the syntax variable=value  has  already  been
              parsed as a command rather than an assignment.

              If  multibyte  character  support  is  not  compiled  into the shell this option is
              ignored; all octets with the top bit set may  be  used  in  identifiers.   This  is
              non-standard but is the traditional zsh behaviour.

       POSIX_STRINGS <K> <S>
              This  option  affects  processing of quoted strings.  Currently it only affects the
              behaviour of null characters, i.e.  character  0  in  the  portable  character  set
              corresponding to US ASCII.

              When  this  option  is not set, null characters embedded within strings of the form
              $'...' are treated as ordinary characters. The entire string is  maintained  within
              the  shell  and  output to files where necessary, although owing to restrictions of
              the library interface the string is truncated at the null character in file  names,
              environment variables, or in arguments to external programs.

              When  this option is set, the $'...' expression is truncated at the null character.
              Note that remaining parts of the same string beyond the termination of  the  quotes
              are not truncated.

              For  example, the command line argument a$'b\0c'd is treated with the option off as
              the characters a, b, null, c, d, and with the option on as the characters a, b, d.

       POSIX_TRAPS <K> <S>
              When this option is set, the usual zsh behaviour of executing  traps  for  EXIT  on
              exit  from  shell  functions  is suppressed.  In that case, manipulating EXIT traps
              always alters the global trap for exiting the  shell;  the  LOCAL_TRAPS  option  is
              ignored for the EXIT trap.  Furthermore, a return statement executed in a trap with
              no argument passes back from the function the value from the  surrounding  context,
              not from code executed within the trap.

       SH_FILE_EXPANSION <K> <S>
              Perform  filename expansion (e.g., ~ expansion) before parameter expansion, command
              substitution, arithmetic expansion and brace expansion.  If this option  is  unset,
              it   is   performed   after  brace  expansion,  so  things  like  `~$USERNAME'  and
              `~{pfalstad,rc}' will work.

       SH_NULLCMD <K> <S>
              Do not use the values of NULLCMD and READNULLCMD when doing redirections,  use  `:'
              instead (see the section `Redirection').

       SH_OPTION_LETTERS <K> <S>
              If this option is set the shell tries to interpret single letter options (which are
              used with set and setopt) like ksh does.  This also affects  the  value  of  the  -
              special parameter.

       SH_WORD_SPLIT (-y) <K> <S>
              Causes field splitting to be performed on unquoted parameter expansions.  Note that
              this option has nothing to do with word splitting.   (See  the  section  `Parameter
              Expansion'.)

       TRAPS_ASYNC
              While  waiting  for  a  program  to exit, handle signals and run traps immediately.
              Otherwise the trap is run after a child process has exited.   Note  this  does  not
              affect  the  point at which traps are run for any case other than when the shell is
              waiting for a child process.

   Shell State
       INTERACTIVE (-i, ksh: -i)
              This is an interactive shell.  This  option  is  set  upon  initialisation  if  the
              standard  input is a tty and commands are being read from standard input.  (See the
              discussion of SHIN_STDIN.)  This heuristic may be overridden by specifying a  state
              for  this option on the command line.  The value of this option can only be changed
              via flags supplied at invocation of the shell.  It cannot be changed  once  zsh  is
              running.

       LOGIN (-l, ksh: -l)
              This  is  a login shell.  If this option is not explicitly set, the shell becomes a
              login shell if the first character of the argv[0] passed to the shell is a `-'.

       PRIVILEGED (-p, ksh: -p)
              Turn on privileged mode. Typically this is used when  script  is  to  be  run  with
              elevated  privileges. This should be done as follows directly with the -p option to
              zsh so that it takes effect during startup.

                     #!/bin/zsh -p

              The option is enabled automatically on startup if the effective user (group) ID  is
              not  equal to the real user (group) ID. In this case, turning the option off causes
              the effective user and group IDs to be set to the real user and group IDs. Be aware
              that if that fails the shell may be running with different IDs than was intended so
              a script should check for failure and act accordingly, for example:

                     unsetopt privileged || exit

              The PRIVILEGED option disables sourcing user startup files.  If zsh is  invoked  as
              `sh'   or   `ksh'  with  this  option  set,  /etc/suid_profile  is  sourced  (after
              /etc/profile on interactive  shells).  Sourcing  ~/.profile  is  disabled  and  the
              contents of the ENV variable is ignored. This option cannot be changed using the -m
              option of setopt and unsetopt, and changing it inside a function always changes  it
              globally regardless of the LOCAL_OPTIONS option.

       RESTRICTED (-r)
              Enables restricted mode.  This option cannot be changed using unsetopt, and setting
              it inside a function always changes it globally  regardless  of  the  LOCAL_OPTIONS
              option.  See the section `Restricted Shell'.

       SHIN_STDIN (-s, ksh: -s)
              Commands  are  being read from the standard input.  Commands are read from standard
              input if no command is specified with -c and no file of commands is specified.   If
              SHIN_STDIN is set explicitly on the command line, any argument that would otherwise
              have been taken as a file to run will instead be treated  as  a  normal  positional
              parameter.  Note that setting or unsetting this option on the command line does not
              necessarily affect the state the option will have while the shell is running - that
              is  purely  an  indicator  of  whether or not commands are actually being read from
              standard input.  The value of this option can only be changed via flags supplied at
              invocation of the shell.  It cannot be changed once zsh is running.

       SINGLE_COMMAND (-t, ksh: -t)
              If  the  shell  is reading from standard input, it exits after a single command has
              been executed.  This also makes the shell non-interactive, unless  the  INTERACTIVE
              option is explicitly set on the command line.  The value of this option can only be
              changed via flags supplied at invocation of the shell.  It cannot be  changed  once
              zsh is running.

   Zle
       BEEP (+B) <D>
              Beep on error in ZLE.

       COMBINING_CHARS
              Assume that the terminal displays combining characters correctly.  Specifically, if
              a base alphanumeric character is followed by one  or  more  zero-width  punctuation
              characters,   assume   that   the   zero-width  characters  will  be  displayed  as
              modifications to the base character within  the  same  width.   Not  all  terminals
              handle  this.   If  this  option  is  not  set, zero-width characters are displayed
              separately with special mark-up.

              If this option is set, the pattern test [[:WORD:]] matches a zero-width punctuation
              character  on  the assumption that it will be used as part of a word in combination
              with a word  character.   Otherwise  the  base  shell  does  not  handle  combining
              characters specially.

       EMACS  If ZLE is loaded, turning on this option has the equivalent effect of `bindkey -e'.
              In addition, the VI option is unset.  Turning it off has  no  effect.   The  option
              setting  is  not guaranteed to reflect the current keymap.  This option is provided
              for compatibility; bindkey is the recommended interface.

       OVERSTRIKE
              Start up the line editor in overstrike mode.

       SINGLE_LINE_ZLE (-M) <K>
              Use single-line command line editing instead of multi-line.

              Note that although this is  on  by  default  in  ksh  emulation  it  only  provides
              superficial compatibility with the ksh line editor and reduces the effectiveness of
              the zsh line editor.  As it has no effect on shell syntax, many users may  wish  to
              disable this option when using ksh emulation interactively.

       VI     If ZLE is loaded, turning on this option has the equivalent effect of `bindkey -v'.
              In addition, the EMACS option is unset.  Turning it off has no effect.  The  option
              setting  is  not guaranteed to reflect the current keymap.  This option is provided
              for compatibility; bindkey is the recommended interface.

       ZLE (-Z)
              Use the zsh line editor.  Set by default  in  interactive  shells  connected  to  a
              terminal.

OPTION ALIASES

       Some  options have alternative names.  These aliases are never used for output, but can be
       used just like normal option names when specifying options to the shell.

       BRACE_EXPAND
              NO_IGNORE_BRACES (ksh and bash compatibility)

       DOT_GLOB
              GLOB_DOTS (bash compatibility)

       HASH_ALL
              HASH_CMDS (bash compatibility)

       HIST_APPEND
              APPEND_HISTORY (bash compatibility)

       HIST_EXPAND
              BANG_HIST (bash compatibility)

       LOG    NO_HIST_NO_FUNCTIONS (ksh compatibility)

       MAIL_WARN
              MAIL_WARNING (bash compatibility)

       ONE_CMD
              SINGLE_COMMAND (bash compatibility)

       PHYSICAL
              CHASE_LINKS (ksh and bash compatibility)

       PROMPT_VARS
              PROMPT_SUBST (bash compatibility)

       STDIN  SHIN_STDIN (ksh compatibility)

       TRACK_ALL
              HASH_CMDS (ksh compatibility)

SINGLE LETTER OPTIONS

   Default set
       -0     CORRECT
       -1     PRINT_EXIT_VALUE
       -2     NO_BAD_PATTERN
       -3     NO_NOMATCH
       -4     GLOB_DOTS
       -5     NOTIFY
       -6     BG_NICE
       -7     IGNORE_EOF
       -8     MARK_DIRS
       -9     AUTO_LIST
       -B     NO_BEEP
       -C     NO_CLOBBER
       -D     PUSHD_TO_HOME
       -E     PUSHD_SILENT
       -F     NO_GLOB
       -G     NULL_GLOB
       -H     RM_STAR_SILENT
       -I     IGNORE_BRACES
       -J     AUTO_CD
       -K     NO_BANG_HIST
       -L     SUN_KEYBOARD_HACK
       -M     SINGLE_LINE_ZLE
       -N     AUTO_PUSHD
       -O     CORRECT_ALL
       -P     RC_EXPAND_PARAM
       -Q     PATH_DIRS
       -R     LONG_LIST_JOBS
       -S     REC_EXACT
       -T     CDABLE_VARS
       -U     MAIL_WARNING
       -V     NO_PROMPT_CR
       -W     AUTO_RESUME
       -X     LIST_TYPES
       -Y     MENU_COMPLETE
       -Z     ZLE
       -a     ALL_EXPORT
       -e     ERR_EXIT
       -f     NO_RCS
       -g     HIST_IGNORE_SPACE
       -h     HIST_IGNORE_DUPS
       -i     INTERACTIVE
       -k     INTERACTIVE_COMMENTS
       -l     LOGIN
       -m     MONITOR
       -n     NO_EXEC
       -p     PRIVILEGED
       -r     RESTRICTED
       -s     SHIN_STDIN
       -t     SINGLE_COMMAND
       -u     NO_UNSET
       -v     VERBOSE
       -w     CHASE_LINKS
       -x     XTRACE
       -y     SH_WORD_SPLIT

   sh/ksh emulation set
       -C     NO_CLOBBER
       -T     TRAPS_ASYNC
       -X     MARK_DIRS
       -a     ALL_EXPORT
       -b     NOTIFY
       -e     ERR_EXIT
       -f     NO_GLOB
       -i     INTERACTIVE
       -l     LOGIN
       -m     MONITOR
       -n     NO_EXEC
       -p     PRIVILEGED
       -r     RESTRICTED
       -s     SHIN_STDIN
       -t     SINGLE_COMMAND
       -u     NO_UNSET
       -v     VERBOSE
       -x     XTRACE

   Also note
       -A     Used by set for setting arrays
       -b     Used on the command line to specify end of option processing
       -c     Used on the command line to specify a single command
       -m     Used by setopt for pattern-matching option setting
       -o     Used in all places to allow use of long option names
       -s     Used by set to sort positional parameters