Provided by: elvish_0.18.0-4_amd64 bug

Overview

   Modes and Submodules
       The  Elvish  editor  has different modes, and exactly one mode is active at the same time.
       Each mode has its own UI and keybindings.  For instance, the default insert mode lets  you
       modify  the  current command.  The completion mode (triggered by Tab by default) shows you
       all candidates for completion, and you can use arrow keys to navigate those candidates.

       Each mode has its  own  submodule  under  edit:.   For  instance,  builtin  functions  and
       configuration  variables  for  the  completion  mode  can be found in the edit:completion:
       module.

       The primary modes supported now are  insert,  command,  completion,  navigation,  history,
       histlist,  location, and lastcmd.  The last 4 are “listing modes”, and their particularity
       is documented below.

   Prompts
       Elvish has two prompts: the (normal) left-hand prompt and the right-side prompt (rprompt).
       Most  of this section only documents the left-hand prompt, but API for rprompt is the same
       other than the variable name: just replace prompt with rprompt.

       To customize the prompt, assign a function to edit:prompt.  The function may  write  value
       outputs or byte outputs:

       • Value  outputs may be either strings or styled values; they are joiend with no spaces in
         between.

       • Byte outputs are output  as-is,  including  any  newlines.   Any  SGR  escape  sequences
         (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#SGR_parameters)  included  in  the  byte
         outputs will be parsed, but any other escape sequences  or  control  character  will  be
         removed.

       If you mix value and byte outputs, the order in which they appear is non-deterministic.

       Prefer  using styled to output styled text; the support for SGR escape sequences is mostly
       for compatibility with external cross-shell prompts.

       The default prompt and rprompt are equivalent to:

              set edit:prompt = { tilde-abbr $pwd; put '> ' }
              set edit:rprompt = (constantly (styled (whoami)@(hostname) inverse))

       Some more examples:

              ~> set edit:prompt = { tilde-abbr $pwd; styled '> ' green }
              ~> # ">" is now green
              ~> set edit:prompt = { echo '$' }
              $
              # Cursor will be on the next line as `echo` outputs a trailing newline

   Stale Prompt
       Elvish never waits for the prompt function to finish.  Instead,  the  prompt  function  is
       always  executed  on  a  separate  thread, and Elvish updates the screen when the function
       finishes.

       However, this can be misleading when the function is slow: this means that the  prompt  on
       the  screen  may  not  contain  the  latest information.  To deal with this, if the prompt
       function does not finish within a certain threshold - by default 0.2 seconds, Elvish marks
       the  prompt as stale: it still shows the old stale prompt content, but transforms it using
       a stale transformer.  The default stale transformer applies  reverse-video  to  the  whole
       prompt.

       The   threshold  is  customizable  with  $edit:prompt-stale-threshold;  it  specifies  the
       threshold in seconds.

       The transformer is customizable with $edit:prompt-stale-transform.  It is a function;  the
       function  is called with one argument, a styled text, and the output is interpreted in the
       same way as prompt functions.  Some examples are:

              # The following effectively disables marking of stale prompt.
              set edit:prompt-stale-transform = {|x| put $x }
              # Show stale prompts in inverse; equivalent to the default.
              set edit:prompt-stale-transform = {|x| styled $x inverse }
              # Gray out stale prompts.
              set edit:prompt-stale-transform = {|x| styled $x bright-black }

       To  see  the  transformer  in  action,  try  the  following  example   (assuming   default
       $edit:prompt-stale-transform):

              var n = 0
              set edit:prompt = { sleep 2; put $n; set n = (+ $n 1); put ': ' }
              set edit:-prompt-eagerness = 10 # update prompt on each keystroke
              set edit:prompt-stale-threshold = 0.5

       And  then  start typing.  Type one character; the prompt becomes inverse after 0.5 second:
       this is when Elvish starts to consider the prompt as stale.  The prompt will return normal
       after  2  seconds,  and  the  counter  in  the  prompt is updated: this is when the prompt
       function finishes.

       Another thing you will notice is that, if you type a few characters quickly (in less  than
       2 seconds, to be precise), the prompt is only updated twice.  This is because Elvish never
       does two prompt updates in parallel: prompt updates are serialized.  If a prompt update is
       required  when  the prompt function is still running, Elvish simply queues another update.
       If an update is already queued, Elvish does not queue  another  update.   The  reason  why
       exactly  two  updates happen in this case, and how this algorithm ensures freshness of the
       prompt is left as an exercise to the reader.

   Prompt Eagerness
       The occasions when the prompt should get updated can  be  controlled  with  $edit:-prompt-
       eagerness:

       • The  prompt  is always updated when the editor becomes active – when Elvish starts, or a
         command finishes execution, or when the user presses Enter.

       • If $edit:-prompt-eagerness >= 5, it is updated when the working directory changes.

       • If $edit:-prompt-eagerness >= 10, it is updated on each keystroke.

       The default value is 5.

   RPrompt Persistency
       By default, the rprompt is only shown while the editor is active: as  soon  as  you  press
       Enter,  it  is  erased.   If  you  want to keep it, simply set $edit:rprompt-persistent to
       $true:

              set edit:rprompt-persistent = $true

   Keybindings
       Each mode has its own keybinding, accessible as the binding variable in its  module.   For
       instance,  the  binding  table  for  insert  mode is $edit:insert:binding.  To see current
       bindings, simply print the binding table: pprint $edit:insert:binding (replace insert with
       any other mode).

       The  global key binding table, $edit:global-binding is consulted when a key is not handled
       by the active mode.

       A binding tables is simply a map that maps keys to functions.  For instance, to bind Alt-x
       in insert mode to exit Elvish, simply do:

              set edit:insert:binding[Alt-x] = { exit }

       Outputs  from a bound function always appear above the Elvish prompt.  You can see this by
       doing the following:

              set edit:insert:binding[Alt-x] = { echo 'output from a bound function!' }

       and press Alt-x in insert mode.  It allows you to put debugging outputs in bound functions
       without messing up the terminal.

       Internally,  this  is  implemented  by  connecting  their output to a pipe.  This does the
       correct thing in most cases, but if you are sure you want to do something to the terminal,
       redirect  the output to /dev/tty.  Since this will break Elvish’s internal tracking of the
       terminal state, you should also do  a  full  redraw  with  edit:redraw  &full=$true.   For
       instance, the following binds Ctrl-L to clearing the terminal:

              set edit:insert:binding[Ctrl-L] = { clear > /dev/tty; edit:redraw &full=$true }

       (The same functionality is already available as a builtin, edit:clear.)

       Bound functions have their inputs redirected to /dev/null.

   Format of Keys
       Key modifiers and names are case sensitive.  This includes single character key names such
       as x and Y as well as function key names such as Enter.

       Key names have zero or more modifiers from the following symbols:

              A  Alt
              C  Ctrl
              M  Meta
              S  Shift

       Modifiers, if present, end with either a - or +; e.g., S-F1, Ctrl-X or Alt+Enter.  You can
       stack modifiers; e.g., C+A-X.

       The key name may be a simple character such as x or a function key from these symbols:

              F1  F2  F3  F4  F5  F6  F7  F8  F9  F10  F11  F12
              Up  Down  Right  Left
              Home  Insert  Delete  End  PageUp  PageDown
              Tab  Enter  Backspace

       Note:  Tab  is  an alias for "\t" (aka Ctrl-I), Enter for "\n" (aka Ctrl-J), and Backspace
       for "\x7F" (aka Ctrl-?).

       Note: The Shift modifier is only applicable to function keys such as F1.  You cannot write
       Shift-m as a synonym for M.

       TODO: Document the behavior of the Shift modifier.

   Listing Modes
       The  modes  histlist, loc and lastcmd are all listing modes: They all show a list, and you
       can filter items and accept items.

       Because they are very similar, you may want to change their bindings  at  the  same  time.
       This  is made possible by the $edit:listing:binding binding table (listing is not a “real”
       mode but an “abstract” mode).  These modes  still  have  their  own  binding  tables  like
       $edit:histlist:binding, and bindings there have higher precedence over those in the shared
       $edit:listing:binding table.

       Moreover,  there  are  a  lot  of  builtin  functions  in  the  edit:listing  module  like
       edit:listing:down  (for  moving  down  selection).  They always apply to whichever listing
       mode is active.

   Caveat: Bindings to Start Modes
       Note that keybindings to start modes live in the binding table of the insert mode, not the
       target  mode.   For  instance, if you want to be able to use Alt-l to start location mode,
       you should modify $edit:insert:binding[Alt-l]:

              set edit:insert:binding[Alt-l] = { edit:location:start }

       One tricky case is the history mode.  You can press ▲︎ to start searching for history, and
       continue pressing it to search further.  However, when the first press happens, the editor
       is in insert mode, while with subsequent presses, the editor is in  history  mode.   Hence
       this    binding   actually   relies   on   two   entries,   $edit:insert:binding[Up]   and
       $edit:history:binding[Up].

       So for instance if you want to be able to use Ctrl-P for this, you  need  to  modify  both
       bindings:

              set edit:insert:binding[Ctrl-P] =  { edit:history:start }
              set edit:history:binding[Ctrl-P] = { edit:history:up }

   Filter DSL
       The  completion,  history listing, location and navigation modes all support filtering the
       items to show using a filter DSL.  It uses a small subset of Elvish’s  expression  syntax,
       and can be any of the following:

       • A literal string (barewords and single-quoted or double-quoted strings all work) matches
         items containing the string.  If the string is all lower case, the match is  done  case-
         insensitively; otherwise the match is case-sensitive.

       • A  list [re $string] matches items matching the regular expression $string.  The $string
         must be a literal string.

       • A list [and $expr...] matches items matching all of the $exprs.

       • A list [or $expr...] matches items matching any of the $exprs.

       If the filter contains multiple expressions, they  are  ANDed,  as  if  surrounded  by  an
       implicit [and ...].

   Completion API
   Argument Completer
       There  are two types of completions in Elvish: completion for internal data and completion
       for command arguments.  The former includes completion  for  variable  names  (e.g.   echo
       $Tab)  and  indices (e.g.  echo $edit:insert:binding[Tab).  These are the completions that
       Elvish can provide itself because they only depend on the internal state of Elvish.

       The latter, in turn, is what happens when you type e.g.  catTab.   Elvish  cannot  provide
       completions for them without full knowledge of the command.

       Command  argument  completions  are  programmable  via  the $edit:completion:arg-completer
       variable.  When Elvish is completing an argument of command $x, it  will  call  the  value
       stored  in  $edit:completion:arg-completer[$x],  with all the existing arguments, plus the
       command name in the front.

       For example, if the user types man 1Tab, Elvish will call:

              $edit:completion:arg-completer[man] man 1

       If the user is starting a new argument when hitting Tab, Elvish will  call  the  completer
       with a trailing empty string.  For instance, if you do man 1SpaceTab, Elvish will call:

              $edit:completion:arg-completer[man] man 1 ""

       The  output  of  this  call  becomes  candidates.   There  are  several ways of outputting
       candidates:

       • Writing byte output, e.g.  “echo cand1; echo cand2”.  Each  line  becomes  a  candidate.
         This  has the drawback that you cannot put newlines in candidates.  Only use this if you
         are sure that you candidates will not contain newlines – e.g.  package names, usernames,
         but not file names, etc..

       • Write  strings  to  value output, e.g.  “put cand1 cand2”.  Each string output becomes a
         candidate.

       • Use the edit:complex-candidate command, e.g.:

                edit:complex-candidate &code-suffix='' &display=$stem' ('$description')'  $stem

         See edit:complex-candidate for the full description of the arguments is accepts.

       After receiving your candidates, Elvish will match your candidates against what  the  user
       has typed.  Hence, normally you don’t need to (and shouldn’t) do any matching yourself.

       That means that in many cases you can (and should) simply ignore the last argument to your
       completer.  However, they can be useful for deciding what kind of things to complete.  For
       instance,  if  you  are  to  write  a  completer  for ls, you want to see whether the last
       argument starts with - or not: if it does, complete an option;  and  if  not,  complete  a
       filename.

       Here  is  a  very  basic  example of configuring a completer for the apt command.  It only
       supports completing the install and remove command and package names after that:

              var all-packages = [(apt-cache search '' | eawk {|0 1 @rest| put $1 })]

              set edit:completion:arg-completer[apt] = {|@args|
                  var n = (count $args)
                  if (== $n 2) {
                      # apt x<Tab> -- complete a subcommand name
                      put install uninstall
                  } elif (== $n 3) {
                      put $@all-packages
                  }
              }

       Here is another slightly more complex example for the git command.  It supports completing
       some common subcommands and then branch names after that:

              fn all-git-branches {
                  # Note: this assumes a recent version of git that supports the format
                  # string used.
                  git branch -a --format="%(refname:strip=2)" | eawk {|0 1 @rest| put $1 }
              }

              var common-git-commands = [
                add branch checkout clone commit diff init log merge
                pull push rebase reset revert show stash status
              ]

              set edit:completion:arg-completer[git] = {|@args|
                  var n = (count $args)
                  if (== $n 2) {
                      put $@common-git-commands
                  } elif (>= $n 3) {
                      all-git-branches
                  }
              }

   Matcher
       As  stated  above,  after  the completer outputs candidates, Elvish matches them with them
       with what the user has typed.  For clarity, the part of the user input that is relevant to
       tab  completion is called for the seed of the completion.  For instance, in echo xTab, the
       seed is x.

       Elvish first indexes the matcher table – $edit:completion:matcher –  with  the  completion
       type to find a matcher.  The completion type is currently one of variable, index, command,
       redir  or  argument.   If   the   $edit:completion:matcher   lacks   the   suitable   key,
       $edit:completion:matcher[''] is used.

       Elvish  then  calls  the  matcher  with one argument – the seed, and feeds the text of all
       candidates to the input.   The  mather  must  output  an  identical  number  of  booleans,
       indicating whether the candidate should be kept.

       As an example, the following code configures a prefix matcher for all completion types:

              set edit:completion:matcher[''] = {|seed| each {|cand| has-prefix $cand $seed } }

       Elvish   provides   three   builtin  matchers,  edit:match-prefix,  edit:match-substr  and
       edit:match-subseq.  In addition to conforming to the matcher  protocol,  they  accept  two
       options &ignore-case and &smart-case.  For example, if you want completion of arguments to
       use prefix matching and ignore case, use:

              set edit:completion:matcher[argument] = {|seed| edit:match-prefix $seed &ignore-case=$true }

       The default value of $edit:completion:matcher  is  [&''=$edit:match-prefix~],  hence  that
       candidates for all completion types are matched by prefix.

   Hooks
       Hooks  are  functions  that  are  executed  at  certain  points  in  time.  In Elvish this
       functionality is provided by variables that are a list of functions.

       NOTE: Hook variables may be initialized with a non-empty list, and you  may  have  modules
       that  add  their  own  hooks.  In general you should append to a hook variable rather than
       assign a list of functions to it.  That is, rather than doing set edit:some-hook = [ { put
       'I ran' } ] you should do set edit:some-hook = [ $@hook-var { put 'I ran' } ].

       These are the editor/REPL hooks:

       • $edit:before-readline  (https://elv.sh/ref/edit.html#editbefore-readline): The functions
         are called before the editor runs.  Each function is called with no arguments.

       • $edit:after-readline  (https://elv.sh/ref/edit.html#editafter-readline):  The  functions
         are  called  after  the editor accepts a command for execution.  Each function is called
         with a sole argument: the line just read.

       • $edit:after-command (https://elv.sh/ref/edit.html#editafter-command): The functions  are
         called after the shell executes the command you entered (typically by pressing the Enter
         key).  Each function is called with a sole argument: a  map  that  provides  information
         about  the executed command.  This hook is also called after your interactive RC file is
         executed and before the first prompt is output.

       Example usage:

              set edit:before-readline = [{ echo 'going to read' }]
              set edit:after-readline = [{|line| echo 'just read '$line }]
              set edit:after-command = [{|m| echo 'command took '$m[duration]' seconds' }]

       Given the above hooks...

       1. Every time you accept a chunk of  code  (normally  by  pressing  Enter)  just  read  is
          printed.

       2. At  the very beginning of an Elvish session, or after a chunk of code is handled, going
          to read is printed.

       3. After each non empty chunk of code is accepted and executed the  string  “command  took
          ...  seconds` is output.

   Word types
       The  editor  supports  operating on entire “words”.  As intuitive as the concept of “word”
       is, there is actually no single definition for  the  concept.   The  editor  supports  the
       following three definitions of words:

       • A big word, or simply word, is a sequence of non-whitespace characters.  This definition
         corresponds to the concept of “WORD” in vi.

       • A small word is a sequence of alphanumerical  characters  (“alnum  small  word”),  or  a
         sequence  of  non-alphanumerical,  non-whitespace characters (“punctuation small word”).
         This definition corresponds to the concept of “word” in vi and zsh.

       • An alphanumerical word is a sequence  of  alphanumerical  characters.   This  definition
         corresponds to the concept of “word” in bash.

       Whitespace      characters      are      those     with     the     Unicode     Whitespace
       (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitespace_character#Unicode)   property.    Alphanumerical
       characters are those in the Unicode Letter or Number category.

       A word boundary is an imaginary zero-length boundary around a word.

       To  see  the difference between these definitions, consider the following string: abc++ /*
       xyz:

       • It contains three (big) words: abc++, /* and xyz.

       • It contains four small words, abc, ++, /* and xyz.  Among them, abc and  xyz  are  alnum
         small words, while ++ and /* are punctuation small words.

       • It contains two alnum words, abc and xyz.

Variables

   $edit:abbr {#edit:abbr}
       A map from (simple) abbreviations to their expansions.

       An  abbreviation  is replaced by its expansion when it is typed in full and consecutively,
       without being interrupted by the use of other  editing  functionalities,  such  as  cursor
       movements.

       If more than one abbreviations would match, the longest one is used.

       Examples:

              set edit:abbr['||'] = '| less'
              set edit:abbr['>dn'] = '2>/dev/null'

       With  the definitions above, typing || anywhere expands to | less, and typing >dn anywhere
       expands to 2>/dev/null.  However, typing a |, moving the cursor left, and typing another |
       does not expand to | less, since the abbreviation || was not typed consecutively.

       See also edit:small-word-abbr.

   $edit:add-cmd-filters {#edit:add-cmd-filters}
       List of filters to run before adding a command to history.

       A  filter  is a function that takes a command as argument and outputs a boolean value.  If
       any of the filters outputs $false, the command is not saved to history, and  the  rest  of
       the  filters  are not run.  The default value of this list contains a filter which ignores
       command starts with space.

   $edit:after-command {#edit:after-command}
       A list of functions to call after each interactive command completes.  There is  one  pre-
       defined  function  used to populate the $edit:command-duration variable.  Each function is
       called with a single map (https://elv.sh/ref/language.html#map)  argument  containing  the
       following keys:

       • src:  Information  about  the  source  that  was executed, same as what src would output
         inside the code.

       • duration: A floating-point number (https://elv.sh/ref/language.html#number) representing
         the command execution duration in seconds.

       • error: An exception object if the command terminated with an exception, else $nil.

       See also edit:command-duration.

   $edit:after-readline {#edit:after-readline}
       A  list  of  functions  to call after each readline cycle.  Each function is called with a
       single string argument containing the code that has been read.

   $edit:before-readline {#edit:before-readline}
       A list of functions to call before each readline cycle.  Each function is  called  without
       any arguments.

   $edit:command-duration {#edit:command-duration}
       Duration,  in seconds, of the most recent interactive command.  This can be useful in your
       prompt to provide feedback on how long a command took to run.  The initial value  of  this
       variable is the time to evaluate your rc.elv before printing the first prompt.

       See also edit:after-command.

   $edit:command:binding {#edit:command:binding}
       Key  bindings  for command mode.  This is currently a very small subset of Vi command mode
       bindings.

       See also edit:command:start.

   $edit:completion:arg-completer {#edit:completion:arg-completer}
       A map containing argument completers.

   $edit:completion:binding {#edit:completion:binding}
       Keybinding for the completion mode.

   $edit:completion:matcher {#edit:completion:matcher}
       A map mapping from context names to matcher functions.  See the Matcher section.

   $edit:current-command {#edit:current-command}
       Contains the content of the current input.  Setting the variable will cause the cursor  to
       move to the very end, as if edit-dot = (count $edit:current-command) has been invoked.

       This API is subject to change.

   $edit:-dot {#edit:-dot}
       Contains  the  current  position  of  the cursor, as a byte position within $edit:current-
       command.

   $edit:exceptions {#edit:exceptions}
       A list of exceptions  thrown  from  callbacks  such  as  prompts.   Useful  for  examining
       tracebacks and other metadata.

   $edit:global-binding {#edit:global-binding}
       Global keybindings, consulted for keys not handled by mode-specific bindings.

       See Keybindings.

   $edit:history:binding {#edit:history:binding}
       Binding table for the history mode.

   $edit:-instant:binding {#edit:-instant:binding}
       Binding for the instant mode.

   $edit:location:hidden {#edit:location:hidden}
       A list of directories to hide in the location addon.

   $edit:location:pinned {#edit:location:pinned}
       A list of directories to always show at the top of the list of the location addon.

   $edit:location:workspaces {#edit:location:workspaces}
       A map mapping types of workspaces to their patterns.

   $edit:max-height {#edit:max-height}
       Maximum height the editor is allowed to use, defaults to +Inf.

       By  default,  the  height  of  the editor is only restricted by the terminal height.  Some
       modes like location mode can use a lot of lines; as a result,  it  can  often  occupy  the
       entire  terminal,  and  push  up your scrollback buffer.  Change this variable to a finite
       number to restrict the height of the editor.

   $edit:navigation:binding {#edit:navigation:binding}
       Keybinding for the navigation mode.

   $edit:navigation:width-ratio {#edit:navigation:width-ratio}
       A list of 3 integers, used for specifying the width ratio of the 3 columns  in  navigation
       mode.

   $edit:prompt {#edit:prompt}
       See Prompts.

   $edit:-prompt-eagerness {#edit:-prompt-eagerness}
       See Prompt Eagerness.

   $edit:prompt-stale-threshold {#edit:prompt-stale-threshold}
       See Stale Prompt.

   $edit:prompt-stale-transformer. {#edit:prompt-stale-transformer.}
       See Stale Prompt.

   $edit:rprompt {#edit:rprompt}
       See Prompts.

   $edit:-rprompt-eagerness {#edit:-rprompt-eagerness}
       See Prompt Eagerness.

   $edit:rprompt-persistent {#edit:rprompt-persistent}
       See RPrompt Persistency.

   $edit:rprompt-stale-threshold {#edit:rprompt-stale-threshold}
       See Stale Prompt.

   $edit:rprompt-stale-transformer. {#edit:rprompt-stale-transformer.}
       See Stale Prompt.

   $edit:selected-file {#edit:selected-file}
       Name of the currently selected file in navigation mode.  $nil if not in navigation mode.

   $edit:small-word-abbr {#edit:small-word-abbr}
       A map from small-word abbreviations and their expansions.

       A  small-word  abbreviation  is  replaced  by  its expansion after it is typed in full and
       consecutively, and followed by another character (the  trigger  character).   Furthermore,
       the expansion requires the following conditions to be satisfied:

       • The  end  of  the abbreviation must be adjacent to a small-word boundary, i.e.  the last
         character of the abbreviation and the trigger  character  must  be  from  two  different
         small-word categories.

       • The  start of the abbreviation must also be adjacent to a small-word boundary, unless it
         appears at the beginning of the code buffer.

       • The cursor must be at the end of the buffer.

       If more than one abbreviations would match, the longest one is used.

       As an example, with the following configuration:

              set edit:small-word-abbr['gcm'] = 'git checkout master'

       In the following scenarios, the gcm abbreviation is expanded:

       • With an empty buffer, typing gcm and a space or semicolon;

       • When the buffer ends with a space, typing gcm and a space or semicolon.

       The space or semicolon after gcm is preserved in both cases.

       In the following scenarios, the gcm abbreviation is not expanded:

       • With an empty buffer, typing Xgcm and a space or semicolon (start of abbreviation is not
         adjacent to a small-word boundary);

       • When the buffer ends with X, typing gcm and a space or semicolon (end of abbreviation is
         not adjacent to a small-word boundary);

       • When the buffer is non-empty, move the cursor to the beginning, and  typing  gcm  and  a
         space (cursor not at the end of the buffer).

       This  example  shows  the  case  where the abbreviation consists of a single small word of
       alphanumerical characters, but that doesn’t have to be the case.  For  example,  with  the
       following configuration:

              set edit:small-word-abbr['>dn'] = ' 2>/dev/null'

       The  abbreviation >dn starts with a punctuation character, and ends with an alphanumerical
       character.  This means that it is expanded when it borders a whitespace or  alphanumerical
       character  to  the left, and a whitespace or punctuation to the right; for example, typing
       ls>dn; will expand it.

       Some extra examples of small-word abbreviations:

              set edit:small-word-abbr['gcp'] = 'git cherry-pick -x'
              set edit:small-word-abbr['ll'] = 'ls -ltr'

       If both a simple abbreviation and a small-word abbreviation can be  expanded,  the  simple
       abbreviation has priority.

       See also edit:abbr.

Functions

   edit:add-var {#edit:add-var}
              edit:add-var $name $init

       Defines  a  new  variable in the interactive REPL with an initial value.  The new variable
       becomes available during the next REPL cycle.

       Equivalent to running var $name = $init at a REPL prompt, but $name can be dynamic.

       This is most useful for modules to modify the REPL namespace.  Example:

              ~> cat .config/elvish/lib/a.elv
              for i [(range 10)] {
                edit:add-var foo$i $i
              }
              ~> use a
              ~> put $foo1 $foo2
              ▶ (num 1)
              ▶ (num 2)

       Note that if you use a variable as  the  $init  argument,  edit:add-var  doesn’t  add  the
       variable “itself” to the REPL namespace.  The variable in the REPL namespace will have the
       initial value set to the variable’s value,  but  it  is  not  an  alias  of  the  original
       variable:

              ~> cat .config/elvish/lib/b.elv
              var foo = foo
              edit:add-var foo $foo
              ~> use b
              ~> put $foo
              ▶ foo
              ~> set foo = bar
              ~> echo $b:foo
              foo

       One  common  use  of this command is to put the definitions of functions intended for REPL
       use in a module instead of your rc.elv.  For example, if you want to define ll as  ls  -l,
       you can do so in your rc.elv directly:

              fn ll {|@a| ls -l $@a }

       But  if  you  move  the definition into a module (say util.elv in one of the module search
       directories, this function can only be used as util:ll  (after  use  util).   To  make  it
       usable directly as ll, you can add the following to util.elv:

              edit:add-var ll~ $ll~

       Another  use case is to add a module or function to the REPL namespace conditionally.  For
       example, to only import the unix module when actually running on UNIX,  you  can  put  the
       following in rc.elv:

              use platform
              if $platform:is-unix {
                use unix
                edit:add-var unix: $unix:
              }

   edit:add-vars {#edit:add-vars}
              edit:add-vars $map

       Takes a map from strings to arbitrary values.  Equivalent to calling edit:add-var for each
       key-value pair in the map.

   edit:binding-table {#edit:binding-table}
       Converts a normal map into a binding map.

   edit:clear {#edit:clear}
              edit:clear

       Clears the screen.

       This command should be used in place of the external clear command to clear the screen.

   edit:close-mode {#edit:close-mode}
       Closes the current active mode.

   edit:command-history {#edit:command-history}
              edit:command-history &cmd-only=$false &dedup=$false &newest-first

       Outputs the command history.

       By default, each entry is represented as a map, with an id key key for the sequence number
       of  the  command,  and a cmd key for the text of the command.  If &cmd-only is $true, only
       the text of each command is output.

       All entries are output by default.  If &dedup is $true, only the most recent  instance  of
       each command (when comparing just the cmd key) is output.

       Commands  are  are output in oldest to newest order by default.  If &newest-first is $true
       the output is in newest to oldest order instead.

       As an example, either of the following extracts the text of the most recent command:

              edit:command-history | put [(all)][-1][cmd]
              edit:command-history &cmd-only &newest-first | take 1

   edit:command:start {#edit:command:start}
       Enter command mode.  This mode is intended to emulate Vi’s command mode, but  it  is  very
       incomplete right now.

       See also edit:command:binding.

   edit:complete-filename {#edit:complete-filename}
              edit:complete-filename $args...

       Produces  a  list  of  filenames  found  in the directory of the last argument.  All other
       arguments are ignored.  If the last argument does not contain a path (either  absolute  or
       relative  to  the  current directory), then the current directory is used.  Relevant files
       are output as edit:complex-candidate objects.

       This function is the default  handler  for  any  commands  without  explicit  handlers  in
       $edit:completion:arg-completer.  See Argument Completer.

       Example:

              ~> edit:complete-filename ''
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate Applications &code-suffix=/ &style='01;34')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate Books &code-suffix=/ &style='01;34')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate Desktop &code-suffix=/ &style='01;34')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate Docsafe &code-suffix=/ &style='01;34')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate Documents &code-suffix=/ &style='01;34')
              ...
              ~> edit:complete-filename .elvish/
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate .elvish/aliases &code-suffix=/ &style='01;34')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate .elvish/db &code-suffix=' ' &style='')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate .elvish/epm-installed &code-suffix=' ' &style='')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate .elvish/lib &code-suffix=/ &style='01;34')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate .elvish/rc.elv &code-suffix=' ' &style='')

   edit:complete-getopt {#edit:complete-getopt}
              edit:complete-getopt $args $opt-specs $arg-handlers

       Produces  completions  according to a specification of accepted command-line options (both
       short and long options  are  handled),  positional  handler  functions  for  each  command
       position, and the current arguments in the command line.  The arguments are as follows:

       • $args  is  an  array  containing  the current arguments in the command line (without the
         command itself).  These are the arguments as passed to the Argument Completer function.

       • $opt-specs is an array of maps, each one  containing  the  definition  of  one  possible
         command-line  option.   Matching  options  will be provided as completions when the last
         element of $args starts with a dash, but  not  otherwise.   Each  map  can  contain  the
         following keys (at least one of short or long needs to be specified):

         • short contains the one-letter short option, if any, without the dash.

         • long contains the long option name, if any, without the initial two dashes.

         • arg-optional,  if  set  to  $true,  specifies  that  the  option  receives an optional
           argument.

         • arg-required, if set  to  $true,  specifies  that  the  option  receives  a  mandatory
           argument.  Only one of arg-optional or arg-required can be set to $true.

         • desc  can be set to a human-readable description of the option which will be displayed
           in the completion menu.

         • completer can be set to a function to generate possible  completions  for  the  option
           argument.   The  function receives as argument the element at that position and return
           zero or more candidates.

       • $arg-handlers is an array of functions, each one returning the possible completions  for
         that  position in the arguments.  Each function receives as argument the last element of
         $args, and should return zero or more possible values for the completions at that point.
         The  returned  values  can be plain strings or the output of edit:complex-candidate.  If
         the last element of the list is the string ..., then the last handler is reused for  all
         following arguments.

       Example:

              ~> fn complete {|@args|
                   opt-specs = [ [&short=a &long=all &desc="Show all"]
                                 [&short=n &desc="Set name" &arg-required=$true
                                  &completer= {|_| put name1 name2 }] ]
                   arg-handlers = [ {|_| put first1 first2 }
                                    {|_| put second1 second2 } ... ]
                   edit:complete-getopt $args $opt-specs $arg-handlers
                 }
              ~> complete ''
              ▶ first1
              ▶ first2
              ~> complete '-'
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate -a &display='-a (Show all)')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate --all &display='--all (Show all)')
              ▶ (edit:complex-candidate -n &display='-n (Set name)')
              ~> complete -n ''
              ▶ name1
              ▶ name2
              ~> complete -a ''
              ▶ first1
              ▶ first2
              ~> complete arg1 ''
              ▶ second1
              ▶ second2
              ~> complete arg1 arg2 ''
              ▶ second1
              ▶ second2

       See also flag:parse-getopt.

   edit:completion:close {#edit:completion:close}
       Closes the completion mode UI.

   edit:completion:smart-start {#edit:completion:smart-start}
       Starts  the  completion mode.  However, if all the candidates share a non-empty prefix and
       that prefix starts with the seed, inserts the prefix instead.

   edit:completion:start {#edit:completion:start}
       Start the completion mode.

   edit:complex-candidate {#edit:complex-candidate}
              edit:complex-candidate $stem &display='' &code-suffix=''

       Builds a complex candidate.  This is mainly useful in argument completers.

       The &display option controls how the candidate is shown in the UI.  It can be a string  or
       a styled text.  If it is empty, $stem is used.

       The  &code-suffix  option  affects  how the candidate is inserted into the code when it is
       accepted.  By default, a quoted version of $stem is inserted.   If  $code-suffix  is  non-
       empty, it is added to that text, and the suffix is not quoted.

   edit:-dump-buf {#edit:-dump-buf}
       Dumps  the  current UI buffer as HTML.  This command is used to generate “ttyshots” on the
       website (https://elv.sh).

       Example:

              set edit:global-binding[Ctrl-X] = { print (edit:-dump-buf) > ~/a.html }

   edit:end-of-history {#edit:end-of-history}
       Adds a notification saying “End of history”.

   edit:history:down {#edit:history:down}
       Walks to the next entry in history mode.

   edit:history:down-or-quit {#edit:history:down-or-quit}
       Walks to the next entry in history mode, or quit the history mode if already at the newest
       entry.

   edit:history:fast-forward {#edit:history:fast-forward}
       Import command history entries that happened after the current session started.

   edit:history:start {#edit:history:start}
       Starts the history mode.

   edit:history:up {#edit:history:up}
       Walks to the previous entry in history mode.

   edit:insert-at-dot {#edit:insert-at-dot}
              edit:insert-at-dot $text

       Inserts the given text at the dot, moving the dot after the newly inserted text.

   edit:insert-last-word {#edit:insert-last-word}
       Inserts the last word of the last command.

   edit:insert-raw {#edit:insert-raw}
       Requests the next terminal input to be inserted uninterpreted.

   edit:-instant:start {#edit:-instant:start}
       Starts  the  instant  mode.   In  instant  mode,  any  text entered at the command line is
       evaluated immediately, with the output displayed.

       WARNING: Beware of unintended consequences when using destructive commands.  For  example,
       if  you  type sudo rm -rf /tmp/* in the instant mode, Elvish will attempt to evaluate sudo
       rm -rf / when you typed that far.

   edit:key {#edit:key}
              edit:key $string

       Parses a string into a key.

   edit:kill-alnum-word-left {#edit:kill-alnum-word-left}
       Deletes the the last alnum word to the left of the dot.

   edit:kill-alnum-word-right {#edit:kill-alnum-word-right}
       Deletes the the first alnum word to the right of the dot.

   edit:kill-line-left {#edit:kill-line-left}
       Deletes the text between the dot and the start of the current line.

   edit:kill-line-right {#edit:kill-line-right}
       Deletes the text between the dot and the end of the current line.

   edit:kill-rune-left {#edit:kill-rune-left}
       Kills one rune right of the dot.  Does nothing if the dot is at the end of the buffer.

   edit:kill-small-word-left {#edit:kill-small-word-left}
       Deletes the the last small word to the left of the dot.

   edit:kill-small-word-right {#edit:kill-small-word-right}
       Deletes the the first small word to the right of the dot.

   edit:kill-word-left {#edit:kill-word-left}
       Deletes the the last word to the left of the dot.

   edit:kill-word-right {#edit:kill-word-right}
       Deletes the the first word to the right of the dot.

   edit:listing:accept {#edit:listing:accept}
       Accepts the current selected listing item.

   edit:listing:down {#edit:listing:down}
       Moves the cursor down in listing mode.

   edit:listing:down-cycle {#edit:listing:down-cycle}
       Moves the cursor down in listing mode, or to the first item if the last item is  currently
       selected.

   edit:listing:left {#edit:listing:left}
       Moves the cursor left in listing mode.

   edit:listing:page-down {#edit:listing:page-down}
       Moves the cursor down one page.

   edit:listing:page-up {#edit:listing:page-up}
       Moves the cursor up one page.

   edit:listing:right {#edit:listing:right}
       Moves the cursor right in listing mode.

   edit:listing:start-custom {#edit:listing:start-custom}
       Starts a custom listing addon.

   edit:listing:up {#edit:listing:up}
       Moves the cursor up in listing mode.

   edit:listing:up-cycle {#edit:listing:up-cycle}
       Moves  the  cursor  up in listing mode, or to the last item if the first item is currently
       selected.

   edit:match-prefix {#edit:match-prefix}
              edit:match-prefix $seed $inputs?

       For each input, outputs whether the input has $seed as a prefix.  Uses the result  of  to-
       string for non-string inputs.

       Roughly equivalent to the following Elvish function, but more efficient:

              use str
              fn match-prefix {|seed @input|
                each {|x| str:has-prefix (to-string $x) $seed } $@input
              }

   edit:match-subseq {#edit:match-subseq}
              edit:match-subseq $seed $inputs?

       For   each   input,   outputs   whether   the   input   has   $seed   as   a   subsequence
       (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsequence).  Uses the result of to-string for  non-string
       inputs.

   edit:match-substr {#edit:match-substr}
              edit:match-substr $seed $inputs?

       For  each  input,  outputs whether the input has $seed as a substring.  Uses the result of
       to-string for non-string inputs.

       Roughly equivalent to the following Elvish function, but more efficient:

              use str
              fn match-substr {|seed @input|
                each {|x| str:has-contains (to-string $x) $seed } $@input
              }

   edit:move-dot-down {#edit:move-dot-down}
       Moves the dot down one line, trying to preserve  the  visual  horizontal  position.   Does
       nothing if dot is already on the last line of the buffer.

   edit:move-dot-eol {#edit:move-dot-eol}
       Moves the dot to the end of the current line.

   edit:move-dot-left {#edit:move-dot-left}
       Moves the dot left one rune.  Does nothing if the dot is at the beginning of the buffer.

   edit:move-dot-left-alnum-word {#edit:move-dot-left-alnum-word}
       Moves the dot to the beginning of the last alnum word to the left of the dot.

   edit:move-dot-left-small-word {#edit:move-dot-left-small-word}
       Moves the dot to the beginning of the last small word to the left of the dot.

   edit:move-dot-left-word {#edit:move-dot-left-word}
       Moves the dot to the beginning of the last word to the left of the dot.

   edit:move-dot-right {#edit:move-dot-right}
       Moves the dot right one rune.  Does nothing if the dot is at the end of the buffer.

   edit:move-dot-right-alnum-word {#edit:move-dot-right-alnum-word}
       Moves the dot to the beginning of the first alnum word to the right of the dot.

   edit:move-dot-right-small-word {#edit:move-dot-right-small-word}
       Moves the dot to the beginning of the first small word to the right of the dot.

   edit:move-dot-right-word {#edit:move-dot-right-word}
       Moves the dot to the beginning of the first word to the right of the dot.

   edit:move-dot-sol {#edit:move-dot-sol}
       Moves the dot to the start of the current line.

   edit:move-dot-up {#edit:move-dot-up}
       Moves  the  dot  up  one  line,  trying  to preserve the visual horizontal position.  Does
       nothing if dot is already on the first line of the buffer.

   edit:navigation:insert-selected {#edit:navigation:insert-selected}
       Inserts the selected filename.

   edit:navigation:insert-selected-and-quit {#edit:navigation:insert-selected-and-quit}
       Inserts the selected filename and closes the navigation addon.

   edit:navigation:start {#edit:navigation:start}
       Start the navigation mode.

   edit:navigation:trigger-filter {#edit:navigation:trigger-filter}
       Toggles the filtering status of the navigation addon.

   edit:navigation:trigger-shown-hidden {#edit:navigation:trigger-shown-hidden}
       Toggles whether the navigation addon should be showing hidden files.

   edit:notify {#edit:notify}
              edit:notify $message

       Prints a notification message.  The argument may be a string or a styled text.

       If called while the editor is active, this will print the message above  the  editor,  and
       redraw the editor.

       If  called  while  the  editor is inactive, the message will be queued, and shown once the
       editor becomes active.

   edit:redraw {#edit:redraw}
              edit:redraw &full=$false

       Triggers a redraw.

       The &full option controls whether to do a full redraw.  By default, all redraws  performed
       by  the line editor are incremental redraws, updating only the part of the screen that has
       changed from the last redraw.  A full redraw updates the entire command line.

   edit:replace-input {#edit:replace-input}
              edit:replace-input $text

       Equivalent to assigning $text to $edit:current-command.

   edit:return-eof {#edit:return-eof}
       Causes the Elvish REPL to terminate.  If called from a key binding, takes effect after the
       key binding returns.

   edit:return-line {#edit:return-line}
       Causes  the  Elvish  REPL  to end the current read iteration and evaluate the code it just
       read.  If called from a key binding, takes effect after the key binding returns.

   edit:smart-enter {#edit:smart-enter}
       Inserts a literal newline if the current code is not syntactically complete  Elvish  code.
       Accepts the current line otherwise.

   edit:transpose-alnum-word {#edit:transpose-alnum-word}
       Swaps the alnum words to the left and right of the dot.  If the dot is at the beginning of
       the buffer, it swaps the first two alnum words, and if the dot is at the end, it swaps the
       last two.

   edit:transpose-rune {#edit:transpose-rune}
       Swaps  the  runes to the left and right of the dot.  If the dot is at the beginning of the
       buffer, swaps the first two runes, and if the dot is at the end, it swaps the last two.

   edit:transpose-small-word {#edit:transpose-small-word}
       Swaps the small words to the left and right of the dot.  If the dot is at the beginning of
       the buffer, it swaps the first two small words, and if the dot is at the end, it swaps the
       last two.

   edit:transpose-word {#edit:transpose-word}
       Swaps the words to the left and right of the dot.  If the dot is at the beginning  of  the
       buffer, swaps the first two words, and the dot is at the end, it swaps the last two.

   edit:wordify {#edit:wordify}
              edit:wordify $code

       Breaks Elvish code into words.