X-Git-Url: https://ruderich.org/simon/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=zsh%2Frc;h=1f218f7b2f6eb2a7b898c75f14142f130930fab2;hb=18770ad042ddba58f8bb1b1028430b2c7061a4e9;hp=5e97beaab4604277f660124c9c5499c3e5e50689;hpb=ab61f4e2ef413cec09f17ece30741af4526c4fdb;p=config%2Fdotfiles.git diff --git a/zsh/rc b/zsh/rc index 5e97bea..1f218f7 100644 --- a/zsh/rc +++ b/zsh/rc @@ -246,7 +246,7 @@ fi # Set the prompt. A two line prompt is used. On the top left the current # working directory is displayed, on the right vcs_info (if available). On the -# bottom left current username and host is shown, the exit code of the last +# bottom left current user name and host is shown, the exit code of the last # command if it wasn't 0, the number of running jobs if not 0. # # The prompt is in green and blue to make easily detectable, the error exit @@ -487,6 +487,13 @@ zstyle ':completion:*' ignore-line yes # complete to the same and change it. zstyle ':completion:*:(mv|cp):*' ignore-line no +# Provide a fallback completer which always completes files. Useful when Zsh's +# completion is too "smart". Thanks to Frank Terbeck +# (http://www.zsh.org/mla/users/2009/msg01038.html). +zle -C complete-files complete-word _generic +zstyle ':completion:complete-files:*' completer _files +bindkey '^F' complete-files + # CUSTOM ALIASES AND FUNCTIONS @@ -507,12 +514,12 @@ TRAPINT() { return $1 } -# Colorize stderr. Very useful when looking for errors. Thanks to +# Colorize stderr in red. Very useful when looking for errors. Thanks to # http://gentoo-wiki.com/wiki/Zsh for the basic script and Mikachu in #zsh on # Freenode (2010-03-07 04:03) for some improvements (-r, printf). It's not yet # perfect and doesn't work with su and git for example, but it can handle most -# interactive output quite well (even with no trailing new line) and in those -# cases the E alias can be used as workaround. +# interactive output quite well (even with no trailing new line) and in cases +# it doesn't work, the E alias can be used as workaround. exec 2>>(while read -r -k -u 0 line; do printf '\e[91m%s\e[0m' "$line"; print -n $'\0';