Provided by: kitty_0.37.0-1_amd64 bug

Name

       kitten-hints - Select text from screen with keyboard

Overview

       kitty  has  a hints mode to select and act on arbitrary text snippets currently visible on
       the screen.  For example, you can press ctrl+shift+e to choose  any  URL  visible  on  the
       screen and then open it using your default web browser.
         URL hints mode (images not supported)

       Similarly,  you  can  press  ctrl+shift+p>f  to  select anything that looks like a path or
       filename and then insert it into the terminal, very useful  for  picking  files  from  the
       output of a git or ls command and adding them to the command line for the next command.

       You  can  also  press ctrl+shift+p>n to select anything that looks like a path or filename
       followed by a colon and a line number and open the file in  your  default  editor  at  the
       specified  line  number (opening at line number will work only if your editor supports the
       +linenum command line syntax or is a "known" editor). The patterns and editor to  be  used
       can be modified using options passed to the kitten. For example:

          map ctrl+g kitten hints --type=linenum --linenum-action=tab nvim +{line} {path}

       will open the selected file in a new tab inside Neovim when you press Ctrl+G.

       Pressing  ctrl+shift+p>y  will open hyperlinks, i.e. a URL that has been marked as such by
       the program running in the terminal, for example, by ls --hyperlink=auto. If ls comes with
       your OS does not support hyperlink, you may need to install GNU Coreutils.

       You can also customize what actions are taken for different types of URLs.

       NOTE:
          If  there  are  more hints than letters, hints will use multiple letters. In this case,
          when you press the first letter, only hints starting with that  letter  are  displayed.
          Pressing  the second letter will select that hint or press Enter or Space to select the
          empty hint.

       For mouse lovers, the hints kitten also allows you to click on any matched text to  select
       it instead of typing the hint character.

       The  hints  kitten  is  very powerful to see more detailed help on its various options and
       modes of operation, see below. You can use these options to create mappings in  kitty.conf
       to select various different text snippets. See insert_selected_path for examples.

Completely customizing the matching and actions of the kitten

       The  hints  kitten  supports  writing simple Python scripts that can be used to completely
       customize how it finds matches and what happens when a match is selected. This allows  the
       hints  kitten  to  provide the user interface, while you can provide the logic for finding
       matches and performing actions on them. This is best illustrated with an  example.  Create
       the file custom-hints.py in the kitty config directory with the following contents:

          import re

          def mark(text, args, Mark, extra_cli_args, *a):
              # This function is responsible for finding all
              # matching text. extra_cli_args are any extra arguments
              # passed on the command line when invoking the kitten.
              # We mark all individual word for potential selection
              for idx, m in enumerate(re.finditer(r'\w+', text)):
                  start, end = m.span()
                  mark_text = text[start:end].replace('\n', '').replace('\0', '')
                  # The empty dictionary below will be available as groupdicts
                  # in handle_result() and can contain string keys and arbitrary JSON
                  # serializable values.
                  yield Mark(idx, start, end, mark_text, {})

          def handle_result(args, data, target_window_id, boss, extra_cli_args, *a):
              # This function is responsible for performing some
              # action on the selected text.
              # matches is a list of the selected entries and groupdicts contains
              # the arbitrary data associated with each entry in mark() above
              matches, groupdicts = [], []
              for m, g in zip(data['match'], data['groupdicts']):
                  if m:
                      matches.append(m), groupdicts.append(g)
              for word, match_data in zip(matches, groupdicts):
                  # Lookup the word in a dictionary, the open_url function
                  # will open the provided url in the system browser
                  boss.open_url(f'https://www.google.com/search?q=define:{word}')

       Now run kitty with:

          kitty -o 'map f1 kitten hints --customize-processing custom-hints.py'

       When  you  press  the F1 key you will be able to select a word to look it up in the Google
       dictionary.

Source code for hints

       The source code for this kitten is available on GitHub.

Command line interface

          kitten hints [options]

       Select text from the screen using the keyboard. Defaults to searching for URLs.

   Options
       --program <PROGRAM>
              What program to use to open matched text. Defaults to the default open program  for
              the operating system. Various special values are supported:

              -      paste the match into the terminal window.

              @      copy the match to the clipboard

              *      copy  the  match  to  the primary selection (on systems that support primary
                     selections)

              @NAME  copy the match to the specified buffer, e.g. @a

              default
                     run the default open program. Note that when using the hyperlink --type  the
                     default is to use the kitty hyperlink handling facilities.

              launch run  The  launch  command  to  open  the program in a new kitty tab, window,
                     overlay, etc. For example:

                        --program "launch --type=tab vim"

              Can be specified multiple times to run multiple programs.

       --type <TYPE>
              The type of text to search for. A value of linenum is special, it looks  for  error
              messages  using  the  pattern  specified  with  --regex,  which must have the named
              groups:  path  and  line.  If  not  specified,  will  look   for   path:line.   The
              --linenum-action option controls where to display the selected error message, other
              options are ignored.  Default: url Choices: hash,  hyperlink,  ip,  line,  linenum,
              path, regex, url, word

       --regex <REGEX>
              The regular expression to use when option --type is set to regex, in Perl 5 syntax.
              If you specify a numbered group in the regular expression, only the group  will  be
              matched.  This  allow  you  to  match text ignoring a prefix/suffix, as needed. The
              default expression matches lines. To match text over multiple lines, things  get  a
              little  tricky,  as line endings are a sequence of zero or more null bytes followed
              by either a carriage return or a newline character. To have a  pattern  match  over
              line  endings  you  will need to match the character set [\0\r\n]. The newlines and
              null bytes are automatically stripped from the returned text. If you specify  named
              groups  and a --program, then the program will be passed arguments corresponding to
              each named group of the form key=value.  Default: (?m)^s*(.+)s*$

       --linenum-action <LINENUM_ACTION>
              Where to perform the action on matched  errors.  self  means  the  current  window,
              window  a new kitty window, tab a new tab, os_window a new OS window and background
              run in the background. The actual action is whatever arguments are provided to  the
              kitten,  for  example: kitten hints --type=linenum --linenum-action=tab vim +{line}
              {path} will open the matched path at the matched line number in vim in a new  kitty
              tab.  Note  that in order to use --program to copy or paste the provided arguments,
              you need to use  the  special  value  self.   Default:  self  Choices:  background,
              os_window, self, tab, window

       --url-prefixes <URL_PREFIXES>
              Comma  separated  list of recognized URL prefixes. Defaults to the list of prefixes
              defined by the url_prefixes option in kitty.conf.  Default: default

       --url-excluded-characters <URL_EXCLUDED_CHARACTERS>
              Characters to exclude when matching  URLs.  Defaults  to  the  list  of  characters
              defined  by  the  url_excluded_characters option in kitty.conf. The syntax for this
              option is the same as for url_excluded_characters.  Default: default

       --word-characters <WORD_CHARACTERS>
              Characters to consider as part of a word. In addition,  all  characters  marked  as
              alphanumeric  in  the  Unicode  database  will  be  considered  as word characters.
              Defaults to the select_by_word_characters option from kitty.conf.

       --minimum-match-length <MINIMUM_MATCH_LENGTH>
              The minimum number of characters to consider a match.  Default: 3

       --multiple
              Select multiple matches and perform the action on all of them together at the  end.
              In this mode, press Esc to finish selecting.

       --multiple-joiner <MULTIPLE_JOINER>
              String  for  joining multiple selections when copying to the clipboard or inserting
              into the terminal. The special values are: space - a space character, newline  -  a
              newline,  empty  -  an  empty  joiner,  json  -  a  JSON serialized list, auto - an
              automatic choice, based on the type of text being selected. In  addition,  integers
              are  interpreted  as  zero-based indices into the list of selections. You can use 0
              for the first selection and -1 for the last.  Default: auto

       --add-trailing-space <ADD_TRAILING_SPACE>
              Add trailing space after matched text. Defaults to auto, which adds the space  when
              used together with --multiple.  Default: auto Choices: always, auto, never

       --hints-offset <HINTS_OFFSET>
              The  offset  (from  zero)  at which to start hint numbering. Note that only numbers
              greater than or equal to zero are respected.  Default: 1

       --alphabet <ALPHABET>
              The list of characters to use  for  hints.  The  default  is  to  use  numbers  and
              lowercase  English  alphabets.  Specify  your preference as a string of characters.
              Note that you need to specify the --hints-offset as zero to use the first character
              to  highlight the first match, otherwise it will start with the second character by
              default.

       --ascending
              Make the hints increase from top to bottom,  instead  of  decreasing  from  top  to
              bottom.

       --hints-foreground-color <HINTS_FOREGROUND_COLOR>
              The  foreground  color  for  hints.  You can use color names or hex values. For the
              eight basic named terminal colors you can also use the bright- prefix  to  get  the
              bright variant of the color.  Default: black

       --hints-background-color <HINTS_BACKGROUND_COLOR>
              The  background  color  for  hints.  You can use color names or hex values. For the
              eight basic named terminal colors you can also use the bright- prefix  to  get  the
              bright variant of the color.  Default: green

       --hints-text-color <HINTS_TEXT_COLOR>
              The  foreground  color for text pointed to by the hints. You can use color names or
              hex values. For the eight basic named terminal colors you can also use the  bright-
              prefix to get the bright variant of the color.  Default: bright-gray

       --customize-processing <CUSTOMIZE_PROCESSING>
              Name  of  a  python  file  in  the kitty config directory which will be imported to
              provide custom implementations  for  pattern  finding  and  performing  actions  on
              selected  matches.  You  can  also  specify  absolute paths to load the script from
              elsewhere. See https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/kittens/hints/ for details.

       --window-title <WINDOW_TITLE>
              The title for the hints window, default title is based on the type  of  text  being
              hinted.

       NOTE:
          To  avoid  having to specify the same command line options on every invocation, you can
          use the action_alias option in kitty.conf, creating aliases that have  common  sets  of
          options.  For example:

              action_alias myhints kitten hints --alphabet qfjdkslaureitywovmcxzpq1234567890
              map f1 myhints --customize-processing custom-hints.py

Author

       Kovid Goyal

Copyright

       2024, Kovid Goyal