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ZSHCONTRIB(1)					    ZSHCONTRIB(1)

NAME
       zshcontrib - user contributions to zsh

DESCRIPTION
       The  Zsh	 source distribution includes a number of items contributed by
       the user community.  These are not inherently a part of the shell,  and
       some may not be available in every zsh installation.  The most signifi-
       cant of these are documented here.  For	documentation  on  other  con-
       tributed	 items such as shell functions, look for comments in the func-
       tion source files.

UTILITIES
   Accessing On-Line Help
       The key sequence ESC h is normally bound by ZLE to execute the run-help
       widget  (see  zshzle(1)).   This	 invokes the run-help command with the
       command word from the current input line as its argument.  By  default,
       run-help	 is an alias for the man command, so this often fails when the
       command word is	a  shell  builtin  or  a  user-defined	function.   By
       redefining  the	run-help  alias, one can improve the on-line help pro-
       vided by the shell.

       The helpfiles utility, found in the Util directory of the distribution,
       is a Perl program that can be used to process the zsh manual to produce
       a separate help file for each shell builtin and for  many  other	 shell
       features	 as  well.  The autoloadable run-help function, found in Func-
       tions/Misc, searches for these helpfiles	 and  performs	several	 other
       tests to produce the most complete help possible for the command.

       There  may already be a directory of help files on your system; look in
       /usr/share/zsh or /usr/local/share/zsh and subdirectories below	those,
       or ask your system administrator.

       To create your own help files with helpfiles, choose or create a direc-
       tory where the individual command help files will reside.  For example,
       you  might  choose ~/zsh_help.  If you unpacked the zsh distribution in
       your home directory, you would use the commands:

	      mkdir ~/zsh_help
	      cd ~/zsh_help
	      man zshall | colcrt - | \
	      perl ~/zsh-4.3.11/Util/helpfiles

       Next, to use the run-help function, you need  to	 add  lines  something
       like the following to your .zshrc or equivalent startup file:

	      unalias run-help
	      autoload run-help
	      HELPDIR=~/zsh_help

       The  HELPDIR parameter tells run-help where to look for the help files.
       If your system already has a help file directory installed, set HELPDIR
       to the path of that directory instead.

zsh 4.3.11		December 20, 2010			1

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       Note  that  in order for `autoload run-help' to work, the run-help file
       must be in one of the directories named in your fpath array  (see  zsh-
       param(1)).   This should already be the case if you have a standard zsh
       installation; if it is not, copy Functions/Misc/run-help to  an	appro-
       priate directory.

   Recompiling Functions
       If  you frequently edit your zsh functions, or periodically update your
       zsh installation to track the latest developments, you  may  find  that
       function	 digests compiled with the zcompile builtin are frequently out
       of date with respect to the function source files.  This is not usually
       a  problem, because zsh always looks for the newest file when loading a
       function, but it may cause slower shell startup and  function  loading.
       Also,  if  a digest file is explicitly used as an element of fpath, zsh
       won't check whether any of its source files has changed.

       The zrecompile autoloadable function, found in Functions/Misc,  can  be
       used to keep function digests up to date.

       zrecompile [ -qt ] [ name ... ]
       zrecompile [ -qt ] -p args [ -- args ... ]
	      This tries to find *.zwc files and automatically re-compile them
	      if at least one of the original files is newer than the compiled
	      file.  This works only if the names stored in the compiled files
	      are full paths or are relative to the  directory	that  contains
	      the .zwc file.

	      In the first form, each name is the name of a compiled file or a
	      directory containing *.zwc files that should be checked.	If  no
	      arguments	 are  given,  the directories and *.zwc files in fpath
	      are used.

	      When -t is given, no compilation is performed, but a return sta-
	      tus  of  zero  (true)  is set if there are files that need to be
	      re-compiled and non-zero (false) otherwise.  The -q option  qui-
	      ets the chatty output that describes what zrecompile is doing.

	      Without  the  -t	option, the return status is zero if all files
	      that needed re-compilation could be  compiled  and  non-zero  if
	      compilation for at least one of the files failed.

	      If  the  -p  option is given, the args are interpreted as one or
	      more sets of arguments for zcompile,  separated  by  `--'.   For
	      example:

		     zrecompile -p \
				-R ~/.zshrc -- \
				-M ~/.zcompdump -- \
				~/zsh/comp.zwc ~/zsh/Completion/*/_*

	      This  compiles  ~/.zshrc into ~/.zshrc.zwc if that doesn't exist
	      or if it is older than  ~/.zshrc.	 The  compiled	file  will  be
	      marked  for  reading  instead  of	 mapping. The same is done for

zsh 4.3.11		December 20, 2010			2

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	      ~/.zcompdump and ~/.zcompdump.zwc, but  this  compiled  file  is
	      marked   for   mapping.	The  last  line	 re-creates  the  file
	      ~/zsh/comp.zwc if any of the files matching the given pattern is
	      newer than it.

	      Without  the  -p	option,	 zrecompile  does  not create function
	      digests that do not already exist, nor does it add new functions
	      to the digest.

       The  following  shell loop is an example of a method for creating func-
       tion digests for all functions in your fpath, assuming  that  you  have
       write permission to the directories:

	      for ((i=1; i <= $#fpath; ++i)); do
		dir=$fpath[i]
		zwc=${dir:t}.zwc
		if [[ $dir == (.|..) || $dir == (.|..)/* ]]; then
		  continue
		fi
		files=($dir/*(N-.))
		if [[ -w $dir:h && -n $files ]]; then
		  files=(${${(M)files%/*/*}#/})
		  if ( cd $dir:h &&
		       zrecompile -p -U -z $zwc $files ); then
		    fpath[i]=$fpath[i].zwc
		  fi
		fi
	      done

       The  -U and -z options are appropriate for functions in the default zsh
       installation fpath; you may need to use different options for your per-
       sonal function directories.

       Once  the digests have been created and your fpath modified to refer to
       them, you can keep them up to date by running zrecompile with no	 argu-
       ments.

   Keyboard Definition
       The  large  number of possible combinations of keyboards, workstations,
       terminals, emulators, and window systems makes it impossible for zsh to
       have  built-in  key  bindings  for  every situation.  The zkbd utility,
       found in Functions/Misc, can help you quickly create key	 bindings  for
       your configuration.

       Run zkbd either as an autoloaded function, or as a shell script:

	      zsh -f ~/zsh-4.3.11/Functions/Misc/zkbd

       When  you  run  zkbd, it first asks you to enter your terminal type; if
       the default it offers is correct, just press return.  It then asks  you
       to  press  a  number  of different keys to determine characteristics of
       your keyboard and terminal; zkbd warns you if it finds anything out  of
       the ordinary, such as a Delete key that sends neither ^H nor ^?.

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       The  keystrokes	read by zkbd are recorded as a definition for an asso-
       ciative array named key, written to a file in  the  subdirectory	 .zkbd
       within  either your HOME or ZDOTDIR directory.  The name of the file is
       composed from  the  TERM,  VENDOR  and  OSTYPE  parameters,  joined  by
       hyphens.

       You  may	 read  this file into your .zshrc or another startup file with
       the `source' or `.' commands, then reference the key parameter in bind-
       key commands, like this:

	      source ${ZDOTDIR:-$HOME}/.zkbd/$TERM-$VENDOR-$OSTYPE
	      [[ -n ${key[Left]} ]] && bindkey "${key[Left]}" backward-char
	      [[ -n ${key[Right]} ]] && bindkey "${key[Right]}" forward-char
	      # etc.

       Note  that  in order for `autoload zkbd' to work, the zkdb file must be
       in one of the directories named in your fpath array (see	 zshparam(1)).
       This  should  already  be the case if you have a standard zsh installa-
       tion; if it is not, copy Functions/Misc/zkbd to an  appropriate	direc-
       tory.

   Dumping Shell State
       Occasionally  you  may encounter what appears to be a bug in the shell,
       particularly if you are using a beta version of zsh  or	a  development
       release.	 Usually it is sufficient to send a description of the problem
       to one of the zsh mailing lists (see zsh(1)), but sometimes one of  the
       zsh developers will need to recreate your environment in order to track
       the problem down.

       The script named reporter, found in the Util directory of the distribu-
       tion,  is  provided for this purpose.  (It is also possible to autoload
       reporter, but reporter is not installed in  fpath  by  default.)	  This
       script  outputs	a  detailed  dump  of  the shell state, in the form of
       another script that can be read with `zsh -f' to recreate that state.

       To use reporter, read the script into your shell with the  `.'  command
       and redirect the output into a file:

	      . ~/zsh-4.3.11/Util/reporter > zsh.report

       You should check the zsh.report file for any sensitive information such
       as passwords and delete them by hand before sending the script  to  the
       developers.   Also,  as the output can be voluminous, it's best to wait
       for the developers to ask for this information before sending it.

       You can also use reporter to dump only a subset	of  the	 shell	state.
       This is sometimes useful for creating startup files for the first time.
       Most of the output from reporter is far more detailed than  usually  is
       necessary  for  a  startup  file, but the aliases, options, and zstyles
       states may be  useful  because  they  include  only  changes  from  the
       defaults.   The bindings state may be useful if you have created any of
       your own keymaps, because reporter arranges to dump the keymap creation
       commands as well as the bindings for every keymap.

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       As  is  usual  with  automated tools, if you create a startup file with
       reporter, you should edit the results to remove	unnecessary  commands.
       Note  that  if  you're  using the new completion system, you should not
       dump the functions state to your startup files with reporter;  use  the
       compdump function instead (see zshcompsys(1)).

       reporter [ state ... ]
	      Print  to	 standard  output  the indicated subset of the current
	      shell state.  The state arguments may be one or more of:

	      all    Output everything listed below.
	      aliases
		     Output alias definitions.
	      bindings
		     Output ZLE key maps and bindings.
	      completion
		     Output old-style compctl  commands.   New	completion  is
		     covered by functions and zstyles.
	      functions
		     Output autoloads and function definitions.
	      limits Output limit commands.
	      options
		     Output setopt commands.
	      styles Same as zstyles.
	      variables
		     Output  shell parameter assignments, plus export commands
		     for any environment variables.
	      zstyles
		     Output zstyle commands.

	      If the state is omitted, all is assumed.

       With the exception of `all', every state can be abbreviated by any pre-
       fix, even a single letter; thus a is the same as aliases, z is the same
       as zstyles, etc.

   Manipulating Hook Functions
       add-zsh-hook [-dD] hook function
	      Several functions are special to the shell, as described in  the
	      section  SPECIAL	FUNCTIONS,  see	 zshmisc(1),  in that they are
	      automatic called at a specific  point  during  shell  execution.
	      Each has an associated array consisting of names of functions to
	      be called at the same point; these  are  so-called  `hook	 func-
	      tions'.	The  shell function add-zsh-hook provides a simple way
	      of adding or removing functions from the array.

	      hook is one of chpwd, periodic, precmd or preexec,  the  special
	      functions in question.

	      functions	 is name of an ordinary shell function.	 If no options
	      are given this will be added to the array	 of  functions	to  be
	      executed in the given context.

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	      If  the  option  -d  is  given, the function is removed from the
	      array of functions to be executed.

	      If the option -D is given, the function is treated as a  pattern
	      and  any	matching names of functions are removed from the array
	      of functions to be executed.

REMEMBERING RECENT DIRECTORIES
       The function cdr allows you to change the working directory to a previ-
       ous working directory from a list maintained automatically.  It is sim-
       ilar in concept to the directory stack controlled by  the  pushd,  popd
       and  dirs  builtins,  but  is  more  configurable, and as it stores all
       entries in files it is maintained  across  sessions  and	 (by  default)
       between	terminal  emulators in the current session.  (The pushd direc-
       tory stack is not actually modified or used by cdr unless you configure
       it to do so as described in the configuration section below.)

   Installation
       The  system works by means of a hook function that is called every time
       the directory changes.  To install the system,  autoload	 the  required
       functions and use the add-zsh-hook function described above:

	      autoload -Uz chpwd_recent_dirs cdr add-zsh-hook
	      add-zsh-hook chpwd chpwd_recent_dirs

       Now  every time you change directly interactively, no matter which com-
       mand you use, the directory to which you change will be	remembered  in
       most-recent-first order.

   Use
       All direct user interaction is via the cdr function.

       The  argument  to  cdr  is  a  number  N	 corresponding to the Nth most
       recently changed-to directory.  1 is the immediately preceeding	direc-
       tory;  the current directory is remembered but is not offered as a des-
       tination.  Note that if you have multiple windows open 1 may refer to a
       directory  changed  to  in another window; you can avoid this by having
       per-terminal  files  for	 storing  directory  as	 described   for   the
       recent-dirs-file style below.

       If  you	set  the  recent-dirs-default  style  described below cdr will
       behave the same as cd if given a non-numeric argument, or more than one
       argument.   The	recent directory list is updated just the same however
       you change directory.

       If the argument is omitted, 1 is assumed.  This is similar  to  pushd's
       behaviour of swapping the two most recent directories on the stack.

       Completion  for	the  argument to cdr is available if compinit has been
       run; menu selection is recommended, using:

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	      zstyle ':completion:*:*:cdr:*:*' menu selection

       to allow you to cycle through recent directories;  the  order  is  pre-
       served,	so  the	 first	choice is the most recent directory before the
       current one.  The verbose style	is  also  recommended  to  ensure  the
       directory  is  shown;  this  style  is  on  by  default so no action is
       required unless you have changed it.

   Options
       The behaviour of cdr may be modified by the following options.

       -l     lists the numbers and the corresponding directories in  abbrevi-
	      ated  form  (i.e.	 with ~ substitution reapplied), one per line.
	      The directories here are not quoted (this would only be an issue
	      if  a  directory name contained a newline).  This is used by the
	      completion system.

       -r     sets the variable reply  to  the	current	 set  of  directories.
	      Nothing is printed and the directory is not changed.

       -e     allows  you  to edit the list of directories, one per line.  The
	      list can be edited to any extent you like; no sanity checking is
	      performed.   Completion  is  available.  No quoting is necessary
	      (except for newlines, where I have in  any  case	no  sympathy);
	      directories  are	in  unabbreviated from and contain an absolute
	      path, i.e. they start with /.  Usually the first entry should be
	      left as the current directory.

   Configuration
       Configuration is by means of the styles mechanism that should be famil-
       iar from completion; if not, see the description of the zstyle  command
       in  see	zshmodules(1).	 The  context  for  setting  styles  should be
       ':chpwd:*' in case the meaning of the context is	 extended  in  future,
       for example:

	      zstyle ':chpwd:*' recent-dirs-max 0

       sets  the  value	 of  the  recent-dirs-max style to 0.  In practice the
       style name is specific enough that a context of '*' should be fine.

       An exception is recent-dirs-insert, which is used  exclusively  by  the
       completion  system  and	so  has	 the  usual  completion system context
       (':completion:*' if nothing more specific is needed), though again  '*'
       should be fine in practice.

       recent-dirs-default
	      If  true, and the command is expecting a recent directory index,
	      and either there is more than one argument or  the  argument  is
	      not an integer, then fall through to "cd".  This allows the lazy
	      to use only one  command	for  directory	changing.   Completion
	      recognises  this, too; see recent-dirs-insert for how to control
	      completion when this option is in use.

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       recent-dirs-file
	      The file where the list of directories is saved.	The default is
	      ${ZDOTDIR:-$HOME}/.chpwd-recent-dirs,  i.e. this is in your home
	      directory unless you have set  the  variable  ZDOTDIR  to	 point
	      somewhere	 else.	 Directory  names  are	saved in $'...' quoted
	      form, so each line in the file can be supplied directly  to  the
	      shell as an argument.

	      The  value  of  this  style  may be an array.  In this case, the
	      first file in the list will always be used for  saving  directo-
	      ries while any other files are left untouched.  When reading the
	      recent directory list, if there are fewer than the maximum  num-
	      ber of entries in the first file, the contents of later files in
	      the array will be appended with duplicates removed from the list
	      shown.   The  contents of the two files are not sorted together,
	      i.e. all the entries in the first file  are  shown  first.   The
	      special  value  + can appear in the list to indicate the default
	      file should be read at that point.  This allows effects like the
	      following:

		     zstyle ':chpwd:*' recent-dirs-file \
		     ~/.chpwd-recent-dirs-${TTY##*/} +

	      Recent  directories  are	read from a file numbered according to
	      the terminal.  If there are insufficient	entries	 the  list  is
	      supplemented from the default file.

	      It  is  possible	to use zstyle -e to make the directory config-
	      urable at run time:

		     zstyle -e ':chpwd:*' recent-dirs-file pick-recent-dirs-file
		     pick-recent-dirs-file() {
		       if [[ $PWD = ~/text/writing(|/*) ]]; then
			 reply=(~/.chpwd-recent-dirs-writing)
		       else
			 reply=(+)
		       fi
		     }

	      In this example, if the current directory is ~/text/writing or a
	      directory	 under	it,  then use a special file for saving recent
	      directories, else use the default.

       recent-dirs-insert
	      Used by completion.  If recent-dirs-default is true,  then  set-
	      ting  this  to true causes the actual directory, rather than its
	      index, to be inserted on the command line;  this	has  the  same
	      effect  as  using the corresponding index, but makes the history
	      clearer and the line easier to edit.  With this setting, if part
	      of  an  argument	was already typed, normal directory completion
	      rather than recent directory completion is done; this is because
	      recent  directory	 completion  is expected to be done by cycling
	      through entries menu fashion.

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	      If the value of the style is always, then only  recent  directo-
	      ries  will  be  completed; in that case, use the cd command when
	      you want to complete other directories.

	      If the value is  fallback,  recent  directories  will  be	 tried
	      first,  then  normal directory completion is performed if recent
	      directory completion failed to find a match.

	      Finally, if the value is both then both sets of completions  are
	      presented;  the  usual  tag mechanism can be used to distinguish
	      results, with recent directories tagged  as  recent-dirs.	  Note
	      that the recent directories inserted are abbreviated with direc-
	      tory names where appropriate.

       recent-dirs-max
	      The maximum number of directories to save to the file.  If  this
	      is  zero	or  negative  there is no maximum.  The default is 20.
	      Note this includes the current directory, which  isn't  offered,
	      so  the highest number of directories you will be offered is one
	      less than the maximum.

       recent-dirs-prune
	      This style is an array determining what directories  should  (or
	      should  not) be added to the recent list.	 Elements of the array
	      can include:

	      parent Prune  parents  (more  accurately,	 ancestors)  from  the
		     recent  list.   If present, changing directly down by any
		     number of directories causes the current directory to  be
		     overwritten.    For   example,   changing	from  ~pws  to
		     ~pws/some/other/dir causes ~pws not to  be	 left  on  the
		     recent  directory	stack.	 This  only  applies to direct
		     changes to descendant directories; earlier directories on
		     the  list	are  not  pruned.   For example, changing from
		     ~pws/yet/another to ~pws/some/other/dir  does  not	 cause
		     ~pws to be pruned.

	      pattern:pattern
		     Gives  a  zsh  pattern for directories that should not be
		     added to the recent list (if not  already	there).	  This
		     element  can  be repeated to add different patterns.  For
		     example, 'pattern:/tmp(|/*)' stops /tmp  or  its  descen-
		     dants  from  being	 added.	  The  EXTENDED_GLOB option is
		     always turned on for these patterns.

       recent-dirs-pushd
	      If set to true, cdr will use pushd instead of cd to  change  the
	      directory, so the directory is saved on the directory stack.  As
	      the directory stack is completely	 separate  from	 the  list  of
	      files saved by the mechanism used in this file there is no obvi-
	      ous reason to do this.

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   Use with dynamic directory naming
       It is possible to refer to recent directories using the dynamic	direc-
       tory name syntax that appeared in zsh version 4.3.7.  If you create and
       autoload a function zsh_directory_name containing the  following	 code,
       ~[1]  will  refer  to the most recent directory other than $PWD, and so
       on.  This also includes completion.

	      if [[ $1 = n ]]; then
		if [[ $2 = <-> ]]; then
		  # Recent directory
		  typeset -ga reply
		  autoload -Uz cdr
		  cdr -r
		  if [[ -n ${reply[$2]} ]]; then
		    reply=(${reply[$2]})
		    return 0
		  else
		    reply=()
		    return 1
		  fi
		fi
	      elif [[ $1 = c ]]; then
		if [[ $PREFIX = <-> || -z $PREFIX ]]; then
		  typeset -a keys values
		  values=(${${(f)"$(cdr -l)"}/ ##/:})
		  keys=(${values%%:*})
		  _describe -t dir-index 'recent directory index' values keys -V unsorted -S']'
		  return
		fi
	      fi
	      return 1

   Details of directory handling
       This section is for the curious or confused; most users will  not  need
       to know this information.

       Recent  directories  are saved to a file immediately and hence are pre-
       served across sessions.	Note currently no file locking is applied: the
       list  is	 updated  immediately on interactive commands and nowhere else
       (unlike history), and it is assumed you are only going to change direc-
       tory  in	 one window at once.  This is not safe on shared accounts, but
       in any case the system has limited utility when someone else is	chang-
       ing to a different set of directories behind your back.

       To make this a little safer, only directory changes instituted from the
       command line, either directly  or  indirectly  through  shell  function
       calls  (but  not	 through subshells, evals, traps, completion functions
       and the like) are saved.	 Shell functions should use cd -q or pushd  -q
       to avoid side effects if the change to the directory is to be invisible
       at  the	 command   line.    See	  the	contents   of	the   function
       chpwd_recent_dirs for more details.

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GATHERING INFORMATION FROM VERSION CONTROL SYSTEMS
       In  a  lot  of  cases, it is nice to automatically retrieve information
       from version control systems (VCSs), such as subversion, CVS or git, to
       be  able	 to  provide it to the user; possibly in the user's prompt. So
       that you can instantly tell which branch	 you  are  currently  on,  for
       example.

       In order to do that, you may use the vcs_info function.

       The following VCSs are supported, showing the abbreviated name by which
       they are referred to within the system:
       Bazaar (bzr)
	      http://bazaar-vcs.org/
       Codeville (cdv)
	      http://codeville.org/
       Concurrent Versioning System (cvs)
	      http://www.nongnu.org/cvs/
       Darcs (darcs)
	      http://darcs.net/
       Git (git)
	      http://git-scm.com/
       GNU arch (tla)
	      http://www.gnu.org/software/gnu-arch/
       Mercurial (hg)
	      http://mercurial.selenic.com/
       Monotone (mtn)
	      http://monotone.ca/
       Perforce (p4)
	      http://www.perforce.com/
       Subversion (svn)
	      http://subversion.tigris.org/
       SVK (svk)
	      http://svk.bestpractical.com/

       There  is  also	support	 for  the  patch   management	system	 quilt
       (http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt).  See  Quilt	 Support below
       for details.

       To load vcs_info:

	      autoload -Uz vcs_info

       It can be used in any existing prompt, because it does not require  any
       $psvar entries to be left available.

   Quickstart
       To  get this feature working quickly (including colors), you can do the
       following (assuming, you loaded vcs_info properly - see above):

	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*' actionformats '%F{5}(%f%s%F{5})%F{3}-%F{5}[%F{2}%b%F{3}|%F{1}%a%F{5}]%f '
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*' formats	 '%F{5}(%f%s%F{5})%F{3}-%F{5}[%F{2}%b%F{5}]%f '
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:(sv[nk]|bzr):*' branchformat '%b%F{1}:%F{3}%r'
	      precmd () { vcs_info }

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	      PS1='%F{5}[%F{2}%n%F{5}] %F{3}%3~ ${vcs_info_msg_0_}%f%# '

       Obviously, the last two lines are there for demonstration. You need  to
       call  vcs_info  from your precmd function. Once that is done you need a
       single quoted '${vcs_info_msg_0_}' in your prompt.

       To be able to use '${vcs_info_msg_0_}' directly	in  your  prompt  like
       this, you will need to have the PROMPT_SUBST option enabled.

       Now call the vcs_info_printsys utility from the command line:

	      % vcs_info_printsys
	      ## list of supported version control backends:
	      ## disabled systems are prefixed by a hash sign (#)
	      bzr
	      cdv
	      cvs
	      darcs
	      git
	      hg
	      mtn
	      p4
	      svk
	      svn
	      tla
	      ## flavours (cannot be used in the enable or disable styles; they
	      ## are enabled and disabled with their master [git-svn -> git])
	      ## they *can* be used in contexts: ':vcs_info:git-svn:*'.
	      git-p4
	      git-svn
	      hg-git
	      hg-hgsubversion
	      hg-hgsvn

       You  may not want all of these because there is no point in running the
       code to detect systems you do not use.  So there is a  way  to  disable
       some backends altogether:

	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*' disable bzr cdv darcs mtn svk tla

       You may also pick a few from that list and enable only those:

	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*' enable git cvs svn

       If  you	rerun  vcs_info_printsys after one of these commands, you will
       see the backends listed in the disable style (or backends  not  in  the
       enable  style  -	 if  you used that) marked as disabled by a hash sign.
       That means the detection of these systems  is  skipped  completely.  No
       wasted time there.

   Configuration
       The vcs_info feature can be configured via zstyle.

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       First, the context in which we are working:
	      :vcs_info:<vcs-string>:<user-context>:<repo-root-name>

       <vcs-string>
	      is  one  of:  git, git-svn, git-p4, hg, hg-git, hg-hgsubversion,
	      hg-hgsvn, darcs, bzr, cdv, mtn, svn, cvs, svk, tla or  p4.  When
	      hooks are active the hooks name is added after a `+'. (See Hooks
	      in vcs_info below.)

       <user-context>
	      is a freely configurable string, assignable by the user  as  the
	      first argument to vcs_info (see its description below).

       <repo-root-name>
	      is  the name of a repository in which you want a style to match.
	      So, if you want a setting specific to  /usr/src/zsh,  with  that
	      being  a	CVS  checkout,	you can set <repo-root-name> to zsh to
	      make it so.

       There are three special values for <vcs-string>:	 The  first  is	 named
       -init-,	that  is  in  effect as long as there was no decision what VCS
       backend to use. The second is -preinit-; it is used before vcs_info  is
       run,  when initializing the data exporting variables. The third special
       value is formats and is used by the vcs_info_lastmsg for looking up its
       styles.

       The  initial value of <repo-root-name> is -all- and it is replaced with
       the actual name, as soon as it is known. Only use this part of the con-
       text for defining the formats, actionformats or branchformat styles, as
       it is guaranteed that <repo-root-name> is set up	 correctly  for	 these
       only. For all other styles, just use '*' instead.

       There are two pre-defined values for <user-context>:
       default
	      the one used if none is specified
       command
	      used by vcs_info_lastmsg to lookup its styles

       You  can of course use ':vcs_info:*' to match all VCSs in all user-con-
       texts at once.

       This is a description of all styles that are looked up.

       formats
	      A list of formats, used when actionformats is not used (which is
	      most of the time).

       actionformats
	      A list of formats, used if there is a special action going on in
	      your current repository; like an interactive rebase or  a	 merge
	      conflict.

       branchformat
	      Some backends replace %b in the formats and actionformats styles

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	      above, not only by a branch name but also by a revision  number.
	      This style lets you modify how that string should look.

       nvcsformats
	      These  "formats"	are  exported  when we didn't detect a version
	      control system for the current directory. This is useful if  you
	      want  vcs_info  to  completely  take over the generation of your
	      prompt.  You would do something like PS1='${vcs_info_msg_0_}' to
	      accomplish that.

       hgrevformat
	      hg  uses	both  a hash and a revision number to reference a spe-
	      cific changeset in a repository. With this style you can	format
	      the  revision  string  (see  branchformat)  to include either or
	      both. It's only useful when get-revision is true.

       max-exports
	      Defines the maximum number of vcs_info_msg_*_ variables vcs_info
	      will export.

       enable A	 list  of backends you want to use. Checked in the -init- con-
	      text. If this list contains an item called NONE  no  backend  is
	      used  at all and vcs_info will do nothing. If this list contains
	      ALL vcs_info will use all	 known	backends.  Only	 with  ALL  in
	      enable  will the disable style have any effect. ALL and NONE are
	      case insensitive.

       disable
	      A list of VCSs you don't want vcs_info to test for  repositories
	      (checked	in  the -init- context, too). Only used if enable con-
	      tains ALL.

       disable-patterns
	      A list of patterns that are checked against $PWD. If  a  pattern
	      matches, vcs_info will be disabled. This style is checked in the
	      :vcs_info:-init-:*:-all- context.

	      Say, ~/.zsh is a directory under version control, in  which  you
	      do not want vcs_info to be active, do:
		     zstyle ':vcs_info:*' disable-patterns "$HOME/.zsh(|/*)"

       use-quilt
	      If  enabled,  the	 quilt support code is active in `addon' mode.
	      See Quilt Support for details.

       quilt-standalone
	      If enabled, `standalone' mode detection is attempted if  no  VCS
	      is active in a given directory. See Quilt Support for details.

       quilt-patch-dir
	      Overwrite	 the value of the $QUILT_PATCHES environment variable.
	      See Quilt Support for details.

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       quiltcommand
	      When quilt itself is called in quilt support the value  of  this
	      style is used as the command name.

       check-for-changes
	      If  enabled,  this  style causes the %c and %u format escapes to
	      show when the working directory  has  uncommitted	 changes.  The
	      strings  displayed  by  these  escapes can be controlled via the
	      stagedstr and unstagedstr styles. The only  backends  that  cur-
	      rently  support  this  option  are  git and hg (hg only supports
	      unstaged).

	      Note, the actions taken if this style is enabled are potentially
	      expensive (read: they may be slow, depending on how big the cur-
	      rent repository is).  Therefore, it is disabled by default.

       stagedstr
	      This string will be used in the %c escape if  there  are	staged
	      changes in the repository.

       unstagedstr
	      This  string will be used in the %u escape if there are unstaged
	      changes in the repository.

       command
	      This style causes vcs_info to use the  supplied  string  as  the
	      command  to  use as the VCS's binary. Note, that setting this in
	      ':vcs_info:*' is not a good idea.

	      If the value of this style is empty (which is the default),  the
	      used  binary name is the name of the backend in use (e.g. svn is
	      used in an svn repository).

	      The repo-root-name part in the context  is  always  the  default
	      -all- when this style is looked up.

	      For  example,  this  style  can  be  used	 to  use binaries from
	      non-default installation directories. Assume, git	 is  installed
	      in  /usr/bin  but	 your  sysadmin	 installed  a newer version in
	      /usr/bin/local. Instead of changing  the	order  of  your	 $PATH
	      parameter, you can do this:
		     zstyle ':vcs_info:git:*:-all-' command /usr/local/bin/git

       use-server
	      This is used by the Perforce backend (p4) to decide if it should
	      contact the Perforce server to find out if a directory  is  man-
	      aged  by Perforce.  This is the only reliable way of doing this,
	      but runs the risk of a delay if the server name cannot be found.
	      If  the server (more specifically, the host:port pair describing
	      the server) cannot be contacted, its name is put into the	 asso-
	      ciative  array  vcs_info_p4_dead_servers	and  is	 not contacted
	      again during the session until it is removed by hand.  If you do
	      not  set	this  style, the p4 backend is only usable if you have
	      set the environment variable P4CONFIG to a file  name  and  have

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	      corresponding  files  in	the  root directories of each Perforce
	      client.  See comments in	the  function  VCS_INFO_detect_p4  for
	      more detail.

       use-simple
	      If  there	 are  two different ways of gathering information, you
	      can select the simpler one by setting this style	to  true;  the
	      default is to use the not-that-simple code, which is potentially
	      a lot slower but might be more accurate in all  possible	cases.
	      This style is used by the bzr and hg backends. In the case of hg
	      it will invoke the external hexdump program to parse the	binary
	      dirstate cache file; this method will not return the local revi-
	      sion number.

       get-revision
	      If set to true, vcs_info goes the extra mile to figure  out  the
	      revision	of a repository's work tree (currently for the git and
	      hg backends, where  this	kind  of  information  is  not	always
	      vital).  For  git,  the  hash value of the currently checked out
	      commit is available via the %i expansion.	 With  hg,  the	 local
	      revision	number and the corresponding global hash are available
	      via %i.

       get-mq If set to true, the hg backend will look for a  Mercurial	 Queue
	      (mq) patch directory. Information will be available via the `%m'
	      replacement.

       get-bookmarks
	      If set to true, the hg backend will try to get a list of current
	      bookmarks. They will be available via the `%m' replacement.

       use-prompt-escapes
	      Determines  if we assume that the assembled string from vcs_info
	      includes prompt escapes. (Used by vcs_info_lastmsg.)

       debug  Enable debugging output to track	possible  problems.  Currently
	      this style is only used by vcs_info's hooks system.

       hooks  A	 list  style  that  defines  hook-function names. See Hooks in
	      vcs_info below for details.

       The default values for these styles in all contexts are:

       formats
	      " (%s)-[%b]%u%c-"
       actionformats
	      " (%s)-[%b|%a]%u%c-"
       branchformat
	      "%b:%r" (for bzr, svn, svk and hg)
       nvcsformats
	      ""
       hgrevformat
	      "%r:%h"

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       max-exports
	      2
       enable ALL
       disable
	      (empty list)
       disable-patterns
	      (empty list)
       check-for-changes
	      false
       stagedstr
	      (string: "S")
       unstagedstr
	      (string: "U")
       command
	      (empty string)
       use-server
	      false
       use-simple
	      false
       get-revision
	      false
       get-mq true
       get-bookmarks
	      false
       use-prompt-escapes
	      true
       debug  false
       hooks  (empty list)
       use-quilt
	      false
       quilt-standalone
	      false
       quilt-patch-dir
	      empty - use $QUILT_PATCHES
       quiltcommand
	      quilt

       In normal formats and  actionformats  the  following  replacements  are
       done:

       %s     The VCS in use (git, hg, svn, etc.).
       %b     Information about the current branch.
       %a     An  identifier  that  describes  the action. Only makes sense in
	      actionformats.
       %i     The current revision number or identifier. For hg the  hgrevfor-
	      mat style may be used to customize the output.
       %c     The  string from the stagedstr style if there are staged changes
	      in the repository.
       %u     The string from the unstagedstr  style  if  there	 are  unstaged
	      changes in the repository.
       %R     The base directory of the repository.
       %r     The repository name. If %R is /foo/bar/repoXY, %r is repoXY.
       %S     A	   subdirectory	   within    a	  repository.	If   $PWD   is
	      /foo/bar/repoXY/beer/tasty, %S is beer/tasty.

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       %m     A "misc" replacement. It is at the discretion of the backend  to
	      decide what this replacement expands to. It is currently used by
	      the hg and git backends to display patch information from the mq
	      and stgit extensions.

       In branchformat these replacements are done:

       %b     The branch name.
       %r     The current revision number or the hgrevformat style for hg.

       In hgrevformat these replacements are done:

       %r     The current local revision number.
       %h     The current 40-character changeset ID hash identifier.

       In patch-format and nopatch-format these replacements are done:

       %p     The name of the top-most applied patch.
       %u     The number of unapplied patches.
       %n     The number of applied patches.
       %c     The number of unapplied patches.
       %g     The names of active mq guards (hg backend).
       %G     The number of active mq guards (hg backend).

       Not  all VCS backends have to support all replacements. For nvcsformats
       no replacements are performed at all, it is just a string.

   Oddities
       If you want to use the %b (bold off) prompt expansion in formats, which
       expands	%b  itself, use %%b. That will cause the vcs_info expansion to
       replace %%b with %b, so that zsh's prompt expansion mechanism can  han-
       dle  it. Similarly, to hand down %b from branchformat, use %%%%b. Sorry
       for this inconvenience, but it cannot be easily avoided. Luckily we  do
       not  clash  with	 a  lot of prompt expansions and this only needs to be
       done for those.

   Quilt Support
       Quilt is not a version control system, therefore	 this  is  not	imple-
       mented  as a backend. It can help keeping track of a series of patches.
       People use it to keep a set of changes they want to use on top of soft-
       ware  packages (which is tightly integrated into the package build pro-
       cess - the Debian project does this for a large	number	of  packages).
       Quilt  can  also	 help  individual  developers  keep track of their own
       patches on top of real version control systems.

       The vcs_info integration tries to support both ways of using  quilt  by
       having  two  slightly  different	 modes	of operation: `addon' mode and
       `standalone' mode).

       For `addon' mode to become active vcs_info must have already detected a
       real  version  control system controlling the directory. If that is the
       case, a directory that holds quilt's patches needs to  be  found.  That

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       directory is configurable via the `QUILT_PATCHES' environment variable.
       If that	variable  exists  its  value  is  used,	 otherwise  the	 value
       `patches'  is assumed. The value from $QUILT_PATCHES can be overwritten
       using the `quilt-patches' style. (Note: you can use  vcs_info  to  keep
       the  value  of  $QUILT_PATCHES  correct all the time via the post-quilt
       hook).

       When the directory in question is found, quilt is assumed to be active.
       To  gather  more	 information,  vcs_info	 looks	for a directory called
       `.pc'; Quilt uses that directory to track its current  state.  If  this
       directory  does	not  exist we know that quilt has not done anything to
       the working directory (read: no patches have been applied yet).

       If patches are applied, vcs_info will try to find  out  which.  If  you
       want to know which patches of a series are not yet applied, you need to
       activate the get-unapplied style in the appropriate context.

       vcs_info allows for very detailed control over how the gathered	infor-
       mation  is  presented  (see  the	 below	sections,  Styles and Hooks in
       vcs_info), all of which are documented below. Note there are  a	number
       of  other  patch tracking systems that work on top of a certain version
       control system (like stgit for git, or mq for  hg);  the	 configuration
       for  systems  like  that	 are  generally configured the same way as the
       quilt support.

       If the quilt support is working in `addon' mode, the produced string is
       available  as a simple format replacement (%Q to be precise), which can
       be used in formats and actionformats; see below for details).

       If, on the other hand, the support  code	 is  working  in  `standalone'
       mode,  vcs_info will pretend as if quilt were an actual version control
       system. That means that the version control  system  identifier	(which
       otherwise  would	 be  something	like  `svn'  or	 `cvs') will be set to
       `-quilt-'. This has implications on the used style context  where  this
       identifier is the second element. vcs_info will have filled in a proper
       value for the "repository's" root directory and the  string  containing
       the  information	 about	quilt's	 state will be available as the `misc'
       replacement (and %Q for compatibility with `addon' mode.

       What is left to discuss is  how	`standalone'  mode  is	detected.  The
       detection  itself is a series of searches for directories. You can have
       this detection enabled all the time in every directory that is not oth-
       erwise  under  version control. If you know there is only a limited set
       of trees where you would like vcs_info to try and  look	for  Quilt  in
       `standalone'  mode to minimise the amount of searching on every call to
       vcs_info, there are a number of ways to do that:

       Essentially, `standalone' mode  detection  is  controlled  by  a	 style
       called  `quilt-standalone'. It is a string style and its value can have
       different effects. The simplest values are: `always' to	run  detection
       every  time  vcs_info  is  run,	and  `never' to turn the detection off
       entirely.

       If the value of quilt-standalone is something else, it  is  interpreted

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       differently. If the value is the name of a scalar variable the value of
       that  variable  is  checked  and	 that  value  is  used	in  the	  same
       `always'/`never' way as described above.

       If  the	value  of  quilt-standalone  is an array, the elements of that
       array are used as directory names under which you want the detection to
       be active.

       If  quilt-standalone  is	 an  associative  array, the keys are taken as
       directory names under which you want the detection to  be  active,  but
       only if the corresponding value is the string `true'.

       Last,  but not least, if the value of quilt-standalone is the name of a
       function, the function is called without arguments and the return value
       decides whether detection should be active. A `0' return value is true;
       a non-zero return value is interpreted as false.

       Note, if there is both a	 function  and	a  variable  by	 the  name  of
       quilt-standalone, the function will take precedence.

   Function Descriptions (Public API)
       vcs_info [user-context]
	      The main function, that runs all backends and assembles all data
	      into ${vcs_info_msg_*_}. This is the function you want  to  call
	      from  precmd  if	you  want to include up-to-date information in
	      your prompt (see Variable description below). If an argument  is
	      given,  that  string  will  be  used  instead  of default in the
	      user-context field of the style context.

       vcs_info_lastmsg
	      Outputs the last ${vcs_info_msg_*_} value.  Takes	 into  account
	      the  value  of  the  use-prompt-escapes style in ':vcs_info:for-
	      mats:command:-all-'. It also only prints max-exports values.

       vcs_info_printsys [user-context]
	      Prints a list of all supported version control  systems.	Useful
	      to find out possible contexts (and which of them are enabled) or
	      values for the disable style.

       vcs_info_setsys
	      Initializes vcs_info's internal list of available backends. With
	      this function, you can add support for new VCSs without restart-
	      ing the shell.

       All functions named VCS_INFO_* are for internal use only.

   Variable Description
       ${vcs_info_msg_N_} (Note the trailing underscore)
	      Where N is an integer, e.g.,  vcs_info_msg_0_.  These  variables
	      are  the storage for the informational message the last vcs_info
	      call has assembled. These are strongly connected to the formats,
	      actionformats  and  nvcsformats  styles  described  above. Those

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	      styles are lists. The first member of that  list	gets  expanded
	      into  ${vcs_info_msg_0_}, the second into ${vcs_info_msg_1_} and
	      the Nth into ${vcs_info_msg_N-1_}. These parameters are exported
	      into the environment. (See the max-exports style above.)

       All variables named VCS_INFO_* are for internal use only.

   Hooks in vcs_info
       Hooks are places in vcs_info where you can run your own code. That code
       can communicate with the code that called it and through	 that,	change
       the system's behaviour.

       For configuration, hooks change the style context:
	      :vcs_info:<vcs-string>+<hook-name>:<user-context>:<repo-root-name>

       To  register  functions	to  a hook, you need to list them in the hooks
       style in the appropriate context.

       Example:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*+foo:*' hooks bar baz

       This registers functions to the hook `foo' for all backends.  In	 order
       to   avoid  namespace  problems,	 all  registered  function  names  are
       prepended by a `+vi-', so the actual functions  called  for  the	 `foo'
       hook are `+vi-bar' and `+vi-baz'.

       If  something  seems weird, you can enable the `debug' boolean style in
       the proper context and the hook-calling code will print what  it	 tried
       to execute and whether the function in question existed.

       When  you  register more than one function to a hook, all functions are
       executed one after another until one function returns non-zero or until
       all functions have been called.

       You   may  pass	data  between  functions  via  an  associative	array,
       user_data.  For example:

	      +vi-git-myfirsthook(){
		  user_data[myval]=$myval
	      }
	      +vi-git-mysecondhook(){
		  # do something with ${user_data[myval]}
	      }

       There are a number of variables that are special in hook contexts:

       ret    The return value that  the  hooks	 system	 will  return  to  the
	      caller.  The  default is an integer `zero'. If and how a changed
	      ret value changes the execution of the  caller  depends  on  the
	      specific hook. See the hook documentation below for details.

       hook_com
	      An   associated	array	which	is   used   for	 bidirectional

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	      communication from the caller to hook functions. The  used  keys
	      depend on the specific hook.

       context
	      The  active  context  of the hook. Functions that wish to change
	      this variable should make it local scope first.

       vcs    The current VCS after it was detected. The same values as in the
	      enable/disable  style  are  used.	 Available in all hooks except
	      start-up.

       Finally, the full list of currently available hooks:

       start-up
	      Called after starting vcs_info but before the VCS in this direc-
	      tory  is	determined. It can be used to deactivate vcs_info tem-
	      porarily if necessary. When ret is set to 1, vcs_info aborts and
	      does  nothing;  when set to 2, vcs_info sets up everything as if
	      no version control were active and exits.

       pre-get-data
	      Same as start-up but after the VCS was detected.

       gen-hg-bookmark-string
	      Called in the Mercurial backend when a bookmark string is gener-
	      ated; the get-revision and get-bookmarks styles must be true.

	      This  hook  gets	the  names  of	the  Mercurial	bookmarks that
	      vcs_info collected from `hg'.

	      When setting ret to non-zero, the string in  ${hook_com[hg-book-
	      mark-string]}  will  be  used  in	 the  %m escape in formats and
	      actionformats and will be availabe in  the  global  backend_misc
	      array as ${backend_misc[bookmarks]}.

       gen-applied-string
	      Called in the git (with stgit), and hg (with mq) backends and in
	      quilt  support  when  the	 applied-string	 is   generated;   the
	      use-quilt	 zstyle must be true for quilt (the mq and stgit back-
	      ends are active by default).

	      This hook gets the names of all applied patches  which  vcs_info
	      collected	 so  far  in  the opposite order, which means that the
	      first argument is the top-most patch and so forth.

	      When    setting	 ret	to    non-zero,	   the	  string    in
	      ${hook_com[applied-string]}  will	 be  used  in the %m escape in
	      formats and actionformats; it will be available  in  the	global
	      backend_misc  array  as  $backend_misc[patches]}; and it will be
	      available as %p in the patch-format and nopatch-format styles.

       gen-unapplied-string
	      Called in the git (with stgit), and hg (with mq) backend and  in
	      quilt  support  when  the	 unapplied-string  is  generated;  the

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	      get-unapplied style must be true.

	      This hook gets the names of all unapplied patches which vcs_info
	      collected	 so  far  in  the  opposite order, which mean that the
	      first argument is the patch next-in-line to be  applied  and  so
	      forth.

	      When  setting  ret  to  non-zero, the string in ${hook_com[unap-
	      plied-string]} will be available as %u in the  patch-format  and
	      nopatch-format styles.

       gen-mqguards-string
	      Called  in  the  hg backend when guards-string is generated; the
	      get-mq style must be true (default).

	      This hook gets the names of any active mq guards.

	      When    setting	 ret	to    non-zero,	   the	  string    in
	      ${hook_com[guards-string]}  will be used in the %g escape in the
	      patch-format and nopatch-format styles.

       post-quilt
	      Called after the quilt support is done. The  following  informa-
	      tion  is	passed	as arguments to the hook: 1. the quilt-support
	      mode (`addon' or `standalone'); 2. the directory	that  contains
	      the  patch  series;  3.  the directory that holds quilt's status
	      information (the `.pc' directory) or the string "-nopc-" if that
	      directory wasn't found.

	      The `hook_com' parameter is not used.

       set-branch-format
	      Called  before  `branchformat'  is set. The only argument to the
	      hook is the format that is configured at this point.

	      The `hook_com' keys  considered  are  `branch'  and  `revision'.
	      They  are	 set  to the values figured out so far by vcs_info and
	      any change will be used directly when the actual replacement  is
	      done.

	      If    ret	   is	 set   to   to	 non-zero,   the   string   in
	      ${hook_com[branch-replace]} will be used unchanged as  the  `%b'
	      replacement in the variables set by vcs_info.

       set-hgrev-format
	      Called  before  a `hgrevformat' is set. The only argument to the
	      hook is the format that is configured at this point.

	      The `hook_com' keys considered are `hash' and `localrev'.	  They
	      are  set	to  the	 values figured out so far by vcs_info and any
	      change will be used directly  when  the  actual  replacement  is
	      done.

	      If    ret	   is	 set   to   to	 non-zero,   the   string   in

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	      ${hook_com[rev-replace]} will be	used  unchanged	 as  the  `%i'
	      replacement in the variables set by vcs_info.

       set-message
	      Called  each time before a `vcs_info_msg_N_' message is set.  It
	      takes two arguments; the first being  the	 `N'  in  the  message
	      variable name, the second is the currently configured formats or
	      actionformats.

	      There are a number of  `hook_com'	 keys,	that  are  used	 here:
	      `action',	 `branch',  `base',  `base-name',  `subdir', `staged',
	      `unstaged', `revision', `misc', `vcs' and one `miscN' entry  for
	      each  backend-specific data field (N starting at zero). They are
	      set to the values figured out so far by vcs_info and any	change
	      will be used directly when the actual replacement is done.

	      Since  this hook is triggered multiple times (once for each con-
	      figured formats or actionformats), each of the  `hook_com'  keys
	      mentioned	 above	(except	 for the miscN entries) has an `_orig'
	      counterpart, so even if you changed a value to your  liking  you
	      can  still  get the original value in the next run. Changing the
	      `_orig' values is probably not a good idea.

	      If ret is set to to non-zero, the string in ${hook_com[message]}
	      will be used unchanged as the message by vcs_info.

       If  all	of  this  sounds rather confusing, take a look at the Examples
       section below and also in the Misc/vcs_info-examples file  in  the  Zsh
       source.	They contain some explanatory code.

   Examples
       Don't use vcs_info at all (even though it's in your prompt):
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*' enable NONE

       Disable the backends for bzr and svk:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*' disable bzr svk

       Disable everything but bzr and svk:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*' enable bzr svk

       Provide a special formats for git:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:git:*' formats	     ' GIT, BABY! [%b]'
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:git:*' actionformats ' GIT ACTION! [%b|%a]'

       All  %x	expansion in all sorts of formats ("formats", "actionformats",
       branchformat, you name it) are done using the  `zformat'	 builtin  from
       the  `zsh/zutil' module. That means you can do everything with these %x
       items what zformat supports. In particular, if you want something  that
       is  really  long	 to  have  a  fixed  width, like a hash in a mercurial
       branchformat, you can do this: %12.12i. That'll shrink the 40 character
       hash  to	 its  12 leading characters. The form is actually `%min.maxx'.
       More is possible.  See the section `The zsh/zutil  Module'  in  zshmod-
       ules(1) for details.

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       Use the quicker bzr backend
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:bzr:*' use-simple true

       If    you    do	  use	use-simple,   please   report	if   it	  does
       `the-right-thing[tm]'.

       Display the revision number in yellow for bzr and svn:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:(svn|bzr):*' branchformat '%b%{'${fg[yellow]}'%}:%r'

       If you want colors, make sure you enclose the color codes in %{...%} if
       you want to use the string provided by vcs_info in prompts.

       Here  is	 how  to  print	 the  VCS  information	as a command (not in a
       prompt):
	      alias vcsi='vcs_info command; vcs_info_lastmsg'

       This way,  you  can  even  define  different  formats  for  output  via
       vcs_info_lastmsg in the ':vcs_info:*:command:*' namespace.

       Now  as promised, some code that uses hooks: say, you'd like to replace
       the string `svn' by `subversion' in vcs_info's %s formats  replacement.

       First,  we  will	 tell  vcs_info to call a function when populating the
       message variables with the gathered information:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*+set-message:*' hooks svn2subversion

       Nothing happens. Which is reasonable, since we didn't define the actual
       function	 yet.  To see what the hooks subsystem is trying to do, enable
       the `debug' style:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*+*:*' debug true

       That should give you an idea what is going on. Specifically, the	 func-
       tion  that we are looking for is `+vi-svn2subversion'. Note, the `+vi-'
       prefix. So, everything is in order, just as documented.	When  you  are
       done checking out the debugging output, disable it again:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:*+*:*' debug false

       Now, let's define the function:

	      function +vi-svn2subversion() {
		  [[ ${hook_com[vcs_orig]} == svn ]] && hook_com[vcs]=subversion
	      }

       Simple enough. And it could have even been simpler, if only we had reg-
       istered our function in a less generic context. If we do it only in the
       `svn' backend's context, we don't need to test which the active backend
       is:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:svn+set-message:*' hooks svn2subversion

	      function +vi-svn2subversion() {
		  hook_com[vcs]=subversion
	      }

       And finally a little more elaborate example, that uses a hook to create

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       a customised bookmark string for the hg backend.

       Again, we start off by registering a function:
	      zstyle ':vcs_info:hg+gen-hg-bookmark-string:*' hooks hgbookmarks

       And then we define the `+vi-hgbookmarks function:

	      function +vi-hgbookmarks() {
		  # The default is to connect all bookmark names by
		  # commas. This mixes things up a little.
		  # Imagine, there's one type of bookmarks that is
		  # special to you. Say, because it's *your* work.
		  # Those bookmarks look always like this: "sh/*"
		  # (because your initials are sh, for example).
		  # This makes the bookmarks string use only those
		  # bookmarks. If there's more than one, it
		  # concatenates them using commas.
		  local s i
		  # The bookmarks returned by `hg' are available in
		  # the functions positional parameters.
		  (( $# == 0 )) && return 0
		  for i in "$@"; do
		      if [[ $i == sh/* ]]; then
			  [[ -n $s ]] && s=$s,
			  s=${s}$i
		      fi
		  done
		  # Now, the communication with the code that calls
		  # the hook functions is done via the hook_com[]
		  # hash. The key, at which the `gen-hg-bookmark-string'
		  # hook looks at is `hg-bookmark-string'. So:
		  hook_com[hg-bookmark-string]=$s
		  # And to signal, that we want to use the sting we
		  # just generated, set the special variable `ret' to
		  # something other than the default zero:
		  ret=1
		  return 0
	      }

       Some longer examples and code snippets which might be useful are avail-
       able in the examples file located at Misc/vcs_info-examples in the  Zsh
       source directory.

       This concludes our guided tour through zsh's vcs_info.

PROMPT THEMES
   Installation
       You  should  make  sure	all  the  functions from the Functions/Prompts
       directory of the source distribution are available; they all begin with
       the  string `prompt_' except for the special function`promptinit'.  You
       also need the `colors' function	from  Functions/Misc.	All  of	 these
       functions  may  already have been installed on your system; if not, you

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       will need to find them and copy them.  The directory should  appear  as
       one of the elements of the fpath array (this should already be the case
       if they were installed), and at least the function promptinit should be
       autoloaded;  it will autoload the rest.	Finally, to initialize the use
       of the system you need to call the promptinit function.	The  following
       code  in	 your  .zshrc  will arrange for this; assume the functions are
       stored in the directory ~/myfns:

	      fpath=(~/myfns $fpath)
	      autoload -U promptinit
	      promptinit

   Theme Selection
       Use the prompt command to select your preferred	theme.	 This  command
       may  be	added to your .zshrc following the call to promptinit in order
       to start zsh with a theme already selected.

       prompt [ -c | -l ]
       prompt [ -p | -h ] [ theme ... ]
       prompt [ -s ] theme [ arg ... ]
	      Set or examine the prompt theme.	With no options	 and  a	 theme
	      argument,	 the theme with that name is set as the current theme.
	      The available themes are determined at  run  time;  use  the  -l
	      option  to  see  a  list.	 The special theme `random' selects at
	      random one of the available themes and sets your prompt to that.

	      In  some	cases  the  theme may be modified by one or more argu-
	      ments, which should be given after the theme name.  See the help
	      for each theme for descriptions of these arguments.

	      Options are:

	      -c     Show  the currently selected theme and its parameters, if
		     any.
	      -l     List all available prompt themes.
	      -p     Preview the theme named by theme, or  all	themes	if  no
		     theme is given.
	      -h     Show help for the theme named by theme, or for the prompt
		     function if no theme is given.
	      -s     Set theme as the current theme and save state.

       prompt_theme_setup
	      Each available theme has a setup function which is called by the
	      prompt function to install that theme.  This function may define
	      other functions as necessary to maintain the  prompt,  including
	      functions	 used  to  preview  the prompt or provide help for its
	      use.  You should not normally  call  a  theme's  setup  function
	      directly.

ZLE FUNCTIONS
   Widgets
       These  functions all implement user-defined ZLE widgets (see zshzle(1))

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       which can be bound to keystrokes in interactive shells.	To  use	 them,
       your .zshrc should contain lines of the form

	      autoload function
	      zle -N function

       followed	 by  an	 appropriate bindkey command to associate the function
       with a key sequence.  Suggested bindings are described below.

       bash-style word functions
	      If you are looking for functions to implement  moving  over  and
	      editing  words  in  the  manner of bash, where only alphanumeric
	      characters are considered word characters, you can use the func-
	      tions  described	in  the next section.  The following is suffi-
	      cient:

		     autoload -U select-word-style
		     select-word-style bash

       forward-word-match, backward-word-match
       kill-word-match, backward-kill-word-match
       transpose-words-match, capitalize-word-match
       up-case-word-match, down-case-word-match
       select-word-style, match-word-context, match-words-by-style
	      The eight `-match' functions are drop-in	replacements  for  the
	      builtin widgets without the suffix.  By default they behave in a
	      similar way.  However, by the use of  styles  and	 the  function
	      select-word-style, the way words are matched can be altered.

	      The  simplest  way  of  configuring  the	functions  is  to  use
	      select-word-style, which can either be called as a normal	 func-
	      tion with the appropriate argument, or invoked as a user-defined
	      widget that will prompt for the  first  character	 of  the  word
	      style  to	 be  used.   The  first	 time it is invoked, the eight
	      -match functions will automatically  replace  the	 builtin  ver-
	      sions, so they do not need to be loaded explicitly.

	      The  word styles available are as follows.  Only the first char-
	      acter is examined.

	      bash   Word characters are alphanumeric characters only.

	      normal As	 in  normal  shell  operation:	 word  characters  are
		     alphanumeric  characters  plus  any characters present in
		     the string given by the parameter $WORDCHARS.

	      shell  Words are	complete  shell	 command  arguments,  possibly
		     including	complete quoted strings, or any tokens special
		     to the shell.

	      whitespace
		     Words are any set of characters delimited by  whitespace.

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	      default
		     Restore the default settings; this is usually the same as
		     `normal'.

	      All but `default' can be input as an upper case character, which
	      has  the	same  effect  but with subword matching turned on.  In
	      this case, words with upper case	characters  are	 treated  spe-
	      cially:  each separate run of upper case characters, or an upper
	      case character followed by any number of	other  characters,  is
	      considered a word.  The style subword-range can supply an alter-
	      native character range to the default `[:upper:]'; the value  of
	      the  style is treated as the contents of a `[...]' pattern (note
	      that the outer brackets should not be supplied, only those  sur-
	      rounding named ranges).

	      More  control  can  be  obtained	using  the  zstyle command, as
	      described in zshmodules(1).  Each style is looked up in the con-
	      text  :zle:widget	 where	widget is the name of the user-defined
	      widget, not the name of the function implementing it, so in  the
	      case of the definitions supplied by select-word-style the appro-
	      priate contexts are :zle:forward-word, and so on.	 The  function
	      select-word-style	 itself	 always defines styles for the context
	      `:zle:*' which can be overridden by more specific (longer)  pat-
	      terns as well as explicit contexts.

	      The  style word-style specifies the rules to use.	 This may have
	      the following values.

	      normal Use the standard  shell  rules,  i.e.  alphanumerics  and
		     $WORDCHARS, unless overridden by the styles word-chars or
		     word-class.

	      specified
		     Similar to normal, but only the specified characters, and
		     not also alphanumerics, are considered word characters.

	      unspecified
		     The  negation  of	specified.   The  given characters are
		     those which will not be considered part of a word.

	      shell  Words are obtained by using the syntactic rules for  gen-
		     erating  shell  command  arguments.  In addition, special
		     tokens which are never command arguments such as `()' are
		     also treated as words.

	      whitespace
		     Words are whitespace-delimited strings of characters.

	      The  first  three of those rules usually use $WORDCHARS, but the
	      value  in	 the  parameter	 can  be  overridden  by   the	 style
	      word-chars,  which  works in exactly the same way as $WORDCHARS.
	      In addition, the style word-class uses character class syntax to
	      group  characters	 and  takes precedence over word-chars if both
	      are set.	The word-class style does not include the  surrounding

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	      brackets of the character class; for example, `-:[:alnum:]' is a
	      valid word-class to include all alphanumerics plus  the  charac-
	      ters  `-'	 and  `:'.   Be	 careful including `]', `^' and `-' as
	      these are special inside character classes.

	      word-style may also have `-subword' appended  to	its  value  to
	      turn on subword matching, as described above.

	      The  style  skip-chars  is mostly useful for transpose-words and
	      similar functions.  If set,  it  gives  a	 count	of  characters
	      starting	at  the	 cursor	 position which will not be considered
	      part of the word and are treated as space,  regardless  of  what
	      they actually are.  For example, if

		     zstyle ':zle:transpose-words' skip-chars 1

	      has  been set, and transpose-words-match is called with the cur-
	      sor on the X of fooXbar, where X can be any character, then  the
	      resulting expression is barXfoo.

	      Finer  grained  control  can  be	obtained  by setting the style
	      word-context to an array of pairs	 of  entries.	Each  pair  of
	      entries consists of a pattern and a subcontext.  The shell argu-
	      ment the cursor is on is matched against each  pattern  in  turn
	      until  one  matches;  if	it  does, the context is extended by a
	      colon and the corresponding subcontext.  Note that the  test  is
	      made against the original word on the line, with no stripping of
	      quotes.  Special handling is done	 between  words:  the  current
	      context is examined and if it contains the string back, the word
	      before the cursor is considered, else the word after  cursor  is
	      considered. Some examples are given below.

	      Here are some examples of use of the styles, actually taken from
	      the simplified interface in select-word-style:

		     zstyle ':zle:*' word-style standard
		     zstyle ':zle:*' word-chars ''

	      Implements bash-style word handling for all widgets,  i.e.  only
	      alphanumerics  are  word	characters;  equivalent to setting the
	      parameter WORDCHARS empty for the given context.

		     style ':zle:*kill*' word-style space

	      Uses space-delimited words for widgets with the word  `kill'  in
	      the  name.   Neither  of the styles word-chars nor word-class is
	      used in this case.

	      Here are some examples of	 use  of  the  word-context  style  to
	      extend the context.

		     zstyle ':zle:*' word-context "*/*" file "[[:space:]]" whitespace
		     zstyle ':zle:transpose-words:whitespace' word-style shell
		     zstyle ':zle:transpose-words:filename' word-style normal

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		     zstyle ':zle:transpose-words:filename' word-chars ''

	      This  provides  two  different  ways  of	using  transpose-words
	      depending on whether the cursor is on whitespace	between	 words
	      or  on a filename, here any word containing a /.	On whitespace,
	      complete arguments as defined by standard shell  rules  will  be
	      transposed.   In	a  filename, only alphanumerics will be trans-
	      posed.  Elsewhere, words will be transposed  using  the  default
	      style for :zle:transpose-words.

	      The  word	 matching  and	all the handling of zstyle settings is
	      actually implemented by the function match-words-by-style.  This
	      can  be  used  to	 create new user-defined widgets.  The calling
	      function should set the local parameter curcontext to  :zle:wid-
	      get,   create   the   local  parameter  matched_words  and  call
	      match-words-by-style   with   no	  arguments.	 On    return,
	      matched_words will be set to an array with the elements: (1) the
	      start of the line	 (2)  the  word	 before	 the  cursor  (3)  any
	      non-word	characters  between  that  word and the cursor (4) any
	      non-word character at the cursor	position  plus	any  remaining
	      non-word	characters before the next word, including all charac-
	      ters specified by the skip-chars style, (5) the word at or  fol-
	      lowing  the  cursor  (6)	any non-word characters following that
	      word (7) the remainder of the line.  Any of the elements may  be
	      an  empty	 string;  the calling function should test for this to
	      decide whether it can perform its function.

	      It   is	possible   to	pass   options	 with	arguments   to
	      match-words-by-style to override the use of styles.  The options
	      are:
	      -w     word-style
	      -s     skip-chars
	      -c     word-class
	      -C     word-chars
	      -r     subword-range

	      For example, match-words-by-style -w shell -c 0 may be  used  to
	      extract the command argument around the cursor.

	      The   word-context   style   is	implemented  by	 the  function
	      match-word-context.  This should not usually need to  be	called
	      directly.

       delete-whole-word-match
	      This  is	another function which works like the -match functions
	      described immediately above, i.e. using  styles  to  decide  the
	      word  boundaries.	  However,  it	is  not	 a replacement for any
	      existing function.

	      The basic behaviour is to delete the  word  around  the  cursor.
	      There is no numeric prefix handling; only the single word around
	      the cursor is considered.	 If the	 widget	 contains  the	string
	      kill,  the  removed  text	 will  be  placed in the cutbuffer for
	      future   yanking.	   This	  can	be   obtained	by    defining

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	      kill-whole-word-match as follows:

		     zle -N kill-whole-word-match delete-whole-word-match

	      and then binding the widget kill-whole-word-match.

       copy-earlier-word
	      This  widget  works  like	 a combination of insert-last-word and
	      copy-prev-shell-word.   Repeated	invocations  of	  the	widget
	      retrieve	earlier	 words	on  the relevant history line.	With a
	      numeric argument N, insert the Nth word from the history line; N
	      may be negative to count from the end of the line.

	      If insert-last-word has been used to retrieve the last word on a
	      previous history line, repeated invocations  will	 replace  that
	      word with earlier words from the same line.

	      Otherwise,  the  widget  applies	to words on the line currently
	      being edited.  The widget style  can  be	set  to	 the  name  of
	      another  widget  that  should be called to retrieve words.  This
	      widget must accept the same three arguments as insert-last-word.

       cycle-completion-positions
	      After inserting an unambiguous string into the command line, the
	      new function based completion system  may	 know  about  multiple
	      places  in  this	string	where characters are missing or differ
	      from at least one of the possible matches.  It will  then	 place
	      the cursor on the position it considers to be the most interest-
	      ing one, i.e. the one where one can disambiguate between as many
	      matches as possible with as little typing as possible.

	      This  widget  allows  the cursor to be easily moved to the other
	      interesting spots.   It  can  be	invoked	 repeatedly  to	 cycle
	      between all positions reported by the completion system.

       edit-command-line
	      Edit the command line using your visual editor, as in ksh.

		     bindkey -M vicmd v edit-command-line

       history-search-end
	      This    function	  implements	the   widgets	history-begin-
	      ning-search-backward-end	  and	 history-beginning-search-for-
	      ward-end.	  These commands work by first calling the correspond-
	      ing builtin widget (see `History Control' in zshzle(1)) and then
	      moving  the  cursor to the end of the line.  The original cursor
	      position is remembered and restored before calling  the  builtin
	      widget  a	 second	 time,	so that the same search is repeated to
	      look farther through the history.

	      Although you autoload only one function, the commands to use  it
	      are slightly different because it implements two widgets.

		     zle -N history-beginning-search-backward-end \

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			    history-search-end
		     zle -N history-beginning-search-forward-end \
			    history-search-end
		     bindkey '\e^P' history-beginning-search-backward-end
		     bindkey '\e^N' history-beginning-search-forward-end

       history-beginning-search-menu
	      This  function implements yet another form of history searching.
	      The text before the cursor is used to select lines from the his-
	      tory,  as	 for history-beginning-search-backward except that all
	      matches are shown in a numbered menu.   Typing  the  appropriate
	      digits  inserts the full history line.  Note that leading zeroes
	      must be typed (they are only shown when necessary	 for  removing
	      ambiguity).   The	 entire	 history is searched; there is no dis-
	      tinction between forwards and backwards.

	      With a prefix argument, the search is not anchored to the	 start
	      of  the line; the string typed by the use may appear anywhere in
	      the line in the history.

	      If the widget name contains `-end' the cursor is	moved  to  the
	      end  of the line inserted.  If the widget name contains `-space'
	      any space in the text typed is treated as	 a  wildcard  and  can
	      match  anything (hence a leading space is equivalent to giving a
	      prefix argument).	 Both forms can be combined, for example:

		     zle -N history-beginning-search-menu-space-end \
			    history-beginning-search-menu

       history-pattern-search
	      The function  history-pattern-search  implements	widgets	 which
	      prompt  for a pattern with which to search the history backwards
	      or forwards.  The pattern is in the usual	 zsh  format,  however
	      the  first  character may be ^ to anchor the search to the start
	      of the line, and the last character  may	be  $  to  anchor  the
	      search  to  the end of the line.	If the search was not anchored
	      to the end of the line the cursor is positioned just  after  the
	      pattern found.

	      The  commands to create bindable widgets are similar to those in
	      the example immediately above:

		     autoload -U history-pattern-search
		     zle -N history-pattern-search-backward history-pattern-search
		     zle -N history-pattern-search-forward history-pattern-search

       up-line-or-beginning-search, down-line-or-beginning-search
	      These   widgets	are   similar	to   the   builtin   functions
	      up-line-or-search	 and  down-line-or-search:   if in a multiline
	      buffer they move up or down within the  buffer,  otherwise  they
	      search  for  a  history  line  matching the start of the current
	      line.  In this case, however,  they  search  for	a  line	 which
	      matches  the  current line up to the current cursor position, in
	      the manner of  history-beginning-search-backward	and  -forward,

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	      rather than the first word on the line.

       incarg Typing  the keystrokes for this widget with the cursor placed on
	      or to the left of an integer causes that integer	to  be	incre-
	      mented  by  one.	 With a numeric prefix argument, the number is
	      incremented by the amount of the argument	 (decremented  if  the
	      prefix argument is negative).  The shell parameter incarg may be
	      set to change the default increment to something other than one.

		     bindkey '^X+' incarg

       incremental-complete-word
	      This  allows  incremental	 completion of a word.	After starting
	      this command, a list of completion choices can  be  shown	 after
	      every  character	you type, which you can delete with ^H or DEL.
	      Pressing return accepts the completion so far and returns you to
	      normal  editing  (that  is,  the command line is not immediately
	      executed).  You can hit TAB to do normal completion, ^G to abort
	      back  to the state when you started, and ^D to list the matches.

	      This works only with the new function based completion system.

		     bindkey '^Xi' incremental-complete-word

       insert-composed-char
	      This function allows you to compose characters that don't appear
	      on  the keyboard to be inserted into the command line.  The com-
	      mand is followed by two keys corresponding to  ASCII  characters
	      (there is no prompt).  For accented characters, the two keys are
	      a base character followed by a code for the  accent,  while  for
	      other  special  characters  the  two  characters together form a
	      mnemonic for the character to be	inserted.   The	 two-character
	      codes  are  a subset of those given by RFC 1345 (see for example
	      http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1345.html).

	      The function may optionally be followed by up to two  characters
	      which  replace  one or both of the characters read from the key-
	      board; if both characters are supplied, no input is  read.   For
	      example,	insert-composed-char a: can be used within a widget to
	      insert an a with umlaut into the command	line.	This  has  the
	      advantages  over	use  of	 a  literal  character that it is more
	      portable.

	      For best results zsh should have been  built  with  support  for
	      multibyte	 characters (configured with --enable-multibyte); how-
	      ever, the function works for the	limited	 range	of  characters
	      available in single-byte character sets such as ISO-8859-1.

	      The  character  is  converted  into the local representation and
	      inserted into the command line at	 the  cursor  position.	  (The
	      conversion  is  done within the shell, using whatever facilities
	      the C library provides.)	With a numeric argument, the character
	      and its code are previewed in the status line

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	      The  function may be run outside zle in which case it prints the
	      character (together with a newline) to standard  output.	 Input
	      is still read from keystrokes.

	      See insert-unicode-char for an alternative way of inserting Uni-
	      code characters using their hexadecimal character number.

	      The set of accented characters is reasonably complete up to Uni-
	      code  character  U+0180,	the set of special characters less so.
	      However, it it is very sporadic from  that  point.   Adding  new
	      characters  is  easy,  however;  see  the	 function  define-com-
	      posed-chars.  Please send any additions to  zsh-workers@zsh.org.

	      The codes for the second character when used to accent the first
	      are as follows.  Note that not every character  can  take	 every
	      accent.
	      !	     Grave.
	      '	     Acute.
	      >	     Circumflex.
	      ?	     Tilde.   (This  is not ~ as RFC 1345 does not assume that
		     character is present on the keyboard.)
	      -	     Macron.  (A horizontal bar over the base character.)
	      (	     Breve.  (A shallow dish shape over the base character.)
	      .	     Dot above the base character, or in the case of i no dot,
		     or in the case of L and l a centered dot.
	      :	     Diaeresis (Umlaut).
	      c	     Cedilla.
	      _	     Underline,	 however  there	 are  currently	 no underlined
		     characters.
	      /	     Stroke through the base character.
	      "	     Double acute (only supported on a few letters).
	      ;	     Ogonek.  (A little forward	 facing	 hook  at  the	bottom
		     right of the character.)
	      <	     Caron.  (A little v over the letter.)
	      0	     Circle over the base character.
	      2	     Hook over the base character.
	      9	     Horn over the base character.

	      The  most common characters from the Arabic, Cyrillic, Greek and
	      Hebrew alphabets are available; consult RFC 1345 for the	appro-
	      priate sequences.	 In addition, a set of two letter codes not in
	      RFC 1345 are available for the  double-width  characters	corre-
	      sponding to ASCII characters from !  to ~ (0x21 to 0x7e) by pre-
	      ceding the character with ^, for example ^A for  a  double-width
	      A.

	      The following other two-character sequences are understood.

	      ASCII characters
		     These are already present on most keyboards:
	      <(     Left square bracket
	      //     Backslash (solidus)
	      )>     Right square bracket
	      (!     Left brace (curly bracket)

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	      !!     Vertical bar (pipe symbol)
	      !)     Right brace (curly bracket)
	      '?     Tilde

	      Special letters
		     Characters	 found in various variants of the Latin alpha-
		     bet:
	      ss     Eszett (scharfes S)
	      D-, d- Eth
	      TH, th Thorn
	      kk     Kra
	      'n     'n
	      NG, ng Ng
	      OI, oi Oi
	      yr     yr
	      ED     ezh

	      Currency symbols
	      Ct     Cent
	      Pd     Pound sterling (also lira and others)
	      Cu     Currency
	      Ye     Yen
	      Eu     Euro (N.B. not in RFC 1345)

	      Punctuation characters
		     References to "right" quotes indicate the shape (like a 9
		     rather  than  6) rather than their grammatical use.  (For
		     example, a "right" low double quote is used to open  quo-
		     tations in German.)
	      !I     Inverted exclamation mark
	      BB     Broken vertical bar
	      SE     Section
	      Co     Copyright
	      -a     Spanish feminine ordinal indicator
	      <<     Left guillemet
	      --     Soft hyphen
	      Rg     Registered trade mark
	      PI     Pilcrow (paragraph)
	      -o     Spanish masculine ordinal indicator
	      >>     Right guillemet
	      ?I     Inverted question mark
	      -1     Hyphen
	      -N     En dash
	      -M     Em dash
	      -3     Horizontal bar
	      :3     Vertical ellipsis
	      .3     Horizontal midline ellipsis
	      !2     Double vertical line
	      =2     Double low line
	      '6     Left single quote
	      '9     Right single quote
	      .9     "Right" low quote
	      9'     Reversed "right" quote
	      "6     Left double quote

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	      "9     Right double quote
	      :9     "Right" low double quote
	      9"     Reversed "right" double quote
	      /-     Dagger
	      /=     Double dagger

	      Mathematical symbols
	      DG     Degree
	      -2, +-, -+
		     - sign, +/- sign, -/+ sign
	      2S     Superscript 2
	      3S     Superscript 3
	      1S     Superscript 1
	      My     Micro
	      .M     Middle dot
	      14     Quarter
	      12     Half
	      34     Three quarters
	      *X     Multiplication
	      -:     Division
	      %0     Per mille
	      FA, TE, /0
		     For all, there exists, empty set
	      dP, DE, NB
		     Partial derivative, delta (increment), del (nabla)
	      (-, -) Element of, contains
	      *P, +Z Product, sum
	      *-, Ob, Sb
		     Asterisk, ring, bullet
	      RT, 0(, 00
		     Root sign, proportional to, infinity

	      Other symbols
	      cS, cH, cD, cC
		     Card suits: spades, hearts, diamonds, clubs
	      Md, M8, M2, Mb, Mx, MX
		     Musical notation: crotchet (quarter note), quaver (eighth
		     note), semiquavers (sixteenth notes), flag sign,  natural
		     sign, sharp sign
	      Fm, Ml Female, male

	      Accents on their own
	      '>     Circumflex (same as caret, ^)
	      '!     Grave (same as backtick, `)
	      ',     Cedilla
	      ':     Diaeresis (Umlaut)
	      'm     Macron
	      ''     Acute

       insert-files
	      This  function  allows  you  type	 a  file  pattern, and see the
	      results of the expansion at each step.  When you hit return, all
	      expansions are inserted into the command line.

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		     bindkey '^Xf' insert-files

       narrow-to-region [ -p pre ] [ -P post ]
	   [ -S statepm | -R statepm ] [ -n ] [ start end ])
       narrow-to-region-invisible
	      Narrow  the editable portion of the buffer to the region between
	      the cursor and the mark, which may  be  in  either  order.   The
	      region may not be empty.

	      narrow-to-region may be used as a widget or called as a function
	      from a user-defined widget; by default,  the  text  outside  the
	      editable	area  remains  visible.	 A recursive-edit is performed
	      and the original widening	 status	 is  then  restored.   Various
	      options and arguments are available when it is called as a func-
	      tion.

	      The options -p pretext and -P posttext may be  used  to  replace
	      the  text	 before	 and after the display for the duration of the
	      function; either or both may be an empty string.

	      If the option -n is also given, pretext or posttext will only be
	      inserted	if  there  is  text before or after the region respec-
	      tively which will be made invisible.

	      Two numeric arguments may be given which will be used instead of
	      the cursor and mark positions.

	      The  option  -S statepm is used to narrow according to the other
	      options while saving the original state in  the  parameter  with
	      name statepm, while the option -R statepm is used to restore the
	      state from the parameter; note in both cases  the	 name  of  the
	      parameter	 is  required.	 In the second case, other options and
	      arguments are irrelevant.	 When this method is used,  no	recur-
	      sive-edit	 is  performed;	 the  calling  widget should call this
	      function with the option -S, perform its own editing on the com-
	      mand  line or pass control to the user via `zle recursive-edit',
	      then call this  function	with  the  option  -R.	 The  argument
	      statepm  must  be	 a  suitable  name  for an ordinary parameter,
	      except that parameters  beginning	 with  the  prefix  _ntr_  are
	      reserved for use within narrow-to-region.	 Typically the parame-
	      ter will be local to the calling function.

	      narrow-to-region-invisible is a simple widget which  calls  nar-
	      row-to-region  with arguments which replace any text outside the
	      region with `...'.

	      The display is restored (and the widget returns)	upon  any  zle
	      command  which  would  usually  cause the line to be accepted or
	      aborted.	Hence an additional such command is required to accept
	      or abort the current line.

	      The  return  status  of  both  widgets  is  zero if the line was
	      accepted, else non-zero.

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	      Here is a trivial example of a widget using this feature.
		     local state
		     narrow-to-region -p $'Editing restricted region\n' \
		       -P '' -S state
		     zle recursive-edit
		     narrow-to-region -R state

       insert-unicode-char
	      When first executed, the user inputs a set of  hexadecimal  dig-
	      its.   This  is  terminated  with	 another  call	to insert-uni-
	      code-char.  The digits are then turned  into  the	 corresponding
	      Unicode  character.  For example, if the widget is bound to ^XU,
	      the character sequence `^XU 4 c ^XU' inserts L (Unicode U+004c).

	      See insert-composed-char for a way of inserting characters using
	      a two-character mnemonic.

       predict-on
	      This set of functions implements predictive typing using history
	      search.	After  predict-on, typing characters causes the editor
	      to look backward in the history for  the	first  line  beginning
	      with  what  you  have  typed so far.  After predict-off, editing
	      returns to normal for the line found.  In fact, you often	 don't
	      even  need to use predict-off, because if the line doesn't match
	      something in the history, adding a key performs standard comple-
	      tion,  and  then	inserts	 itself	 if no completions were found.
	      However, editing in the middle of a line is  liable  to  confuse
	      prediction; see the toggle style below.

	      With  the	 function based completion system (which is needed for
	      this), you should be able to type TAB at	almost	any  point  to
	      advance  the  cursor to the next ``interesting'' character posi-
	      tion (usually the end of the current word, but  sometimes	 some-
	      where  in the middle of the word).  And of course as soon as the
	      entire line is what you want, you can accept with return,	 with-
	      out needing to move the cursor to the end first.

	      The first time predict-on is used, it creates several additional
	      widget functions:

	      delete-backward-and-predict
		     Replaces the backward-delete-char	widget.	  You  do  not
		     need to bind this yourself.
	      insert-and-predict
		     Implements predictive typing by replacing the self-insert
		     widget.  You do not need to bind this yourself.
	      predict-off
		     Turns off predictive typing.

	      Although you autoload only the predict-on function, it is neces-
	      sary to create a keybinding for predict-off as well.

		     zle -N predict-on
		     zle -N predict-off

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		     bindkey '^X^Z' predict-on
		     bindkey '^Z' predict-off

       read-from-minibuffer
	      This is most useful when called as a function from inside a wid-
	      get, but will work correctly as a widget in its own  right.   It
	      prompts  for a value below the current command line; a value may
	      be input using all of  the  standard  zle	 operations  (and  not
	      merely the restricted set available when executing, for example,
	      execute-named-cmd).  The value is then returned to  the  calling
	      function in the parameter $REPLY and the editing buffer restored
	      to its previous state.  If the read was aborted  by  a  keyboard
	      break  (typically	 ^G), the function returns status 1 and $REPLY
	      is not set.

	      If one argument is supplied to the function it  is  taken	 as  a
	      prompt,  otherwise `? ' is used.	If two arguments are supplied,
	      they are the prompt and the initial value of $LBUFFER, and if  a
	      third  argument  is  given  it is the initial value of $RBUFFER.
	      This provides a default value  and  starting  cursor  placement.
	      Upon return the entire buffer is the value of $REPLY.

	      One  option is available: `-k num' specifies that num characters
	      are to be read instead of a whole line.  The line editor is  not
	      invoked  recursively  in this case, so depending on the terminal
	      settings the input may not be visible, and only the  input  keys
	      are  placed  in $REPLY, not the entire buffer.  Note that unlike
	      the read builtin num must be given; there is no default.

	      The name is a slight  misnomer,  as  in  fact  the  shell's  own
	      minibuffer is not used.  Hence it is still possible to call exe-
	      cuted-named-cmd and similar functions while reading a value.

       replace-string, replace-pattern
       replace-string-again, replace-pattern-again
	      The  function  replace-string  implements	 three	widgets.    If
	      defined  under the same name as the function, it prompts for two
	      strings; the first (source) string will be replaced by the  sec-
	      ond everywhere it occurs in the line editing buffer.

	      If  the  widget name contains the word `pattern', for example by
	      defining the widget using the command  `zle  -N  replace-pattern
	      replace-string',	then  the matching is performed using zsh pat-
	      terns.  All zsh extended globbing patterns can be	 used  in  the
	      source  string; note that unlike filename generation the pattern
	      does not need to match an entire word, nor  do  glob  qualifiers
	      have  any	 effect.  In addition, the replacement string can con-
	      tain parameter or command substitutions.	Furthermore, a `&'  in
	      the  replacement string will be replaced with the matched source
	      string, and a backquoted digit `\N' will be replaced by the  Nth
	      parenthesised  expression	 matched.  The form `\{N}' may be used
	      to protect the digit from following digits.

	      If the widget instead contains the word `regex'  (or  `regexp'),

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	      then  the	 matching  is  performed  using	 regular  expressions,
	      respecting the setting of	 the  option  RE_MATCH_PCRE  (see  the
	      description  of the function regexp-replace below).  The special
	      replacement facilities described above for pattern matching  are
	      available.

	      By default the previous source or replacement string will not be
	      offered for editing.  However, this feature can be activated  by
	      setting  the style edit-previous in the context :zle:widget (for
	      example, :zle:replace-string) to true.  In addition, a  positive
	      numeric  argument	 forces	 the  previous values to be offered, a
	      negative or zero argument forces them not to be.

	      The function replace-string-again can be used to repeat the pre-
	      vious    replacement;   no   prompting   is   done.    As	  with
	      replace-string, if the name of  the  widget  contains  the  word
	      `pattern'	 or `regex', pattern or regular expression matching is
	      performed, else a literal string	replacement.   Note  that  the
	      previous	source	and replacement text are the same whether pat-
	      tern, regular expression or string matching is used.

	      For example, starting from the line:

		     print This line contains fan and fond

	      and invoking replace-pattern with the source string `f(?)n'  and
	      the replacement string `c\1r' produces the not very useful line:

		     print This line contains car and cord

	      The range of the replacement string can be limited by using  the
	      narrow-to-region-invisible  widget.   One limitation of the cur-
	      rent version is that undo will  cycle  through  changes  to  the
	      replacement  and	source	strings before undoing the replacement
	      itself.

       smart-insert-last-word
	      This function may replace the insert-last-word widget, like so:

		     zle -N insert-last-word smart-insert-last-word

	      With a numeric prefix, or when passed command line arguments  in
	      a	 call  from  another widget, it behaves like insert-last-word,
	      except that words in comments are ignored when  INTERACTIVE_COM-
	      MENTS is set.

	      Otherwise,  the rightmost ``interesting'' word from the previous
	      command is  found	 and  inserted.	  The  default	definition  of
	      ``interesting''  is  that	 the word contains at least one alpha-
	      betic character, slash, or backslash.  This  definition  may  be
	      overridden  by use of the match style.  The context used to look
	      up the style is the widget  name,	 so  usually  the  context  is
	      :insert-last-word.   However, you can bind this function to dif-
	      ferent widgets to use different patterns:

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		     zle -N insert-last-assignment smart-insert-last-word
		     zstyle :insert-last-assignment match '[[:alpha:]][][[:alnum:]]#=*'
		     bindkey '\e=' insert-last-assignment

	      If no interesting word is found and the auto-previous  style  is
	      set  to  a  true	value, the search continues upward through the
	      history.	When auto-previous is unset or	false  (the  default),
	      the widget must be invoked repeatedly in order to search earlier
	      history lines.

       transpose-lines
	      Only useful with a multi-line editing buffer; the lines here are
	      lines  within  the  current on-screen buffer, not history lines.
	      The effect is similar to the function of the same name in Emacs.

	      Transpose	 the  current line with the previous line and move the
	      cursor to the start of the next line.  Repeating this (which can
	      be done by providing a positive numeric prefix argument) has the
	      effect of moving the line above the cursor down by a  number  of
	      lines.

	      With  a  negative	 numeric  prefix  argument, requires two lines
	      above the cursor.	 These two lines are transposed and the cursor
	      moved to the start of the previous line.	Using a numeric prefix
	      less than -1 has the effect of moving the line above the	cursor
	      up by minus that number of lines.

       which-command
	      This  function  is  a drop-in replacement for the builtin widget
	      which-command.  It has enhanced behaviour, in that it  correctly
	      detects  whether or not the command word needs to be expanded as
	      an alias; if so, it continues tracing the command word from  the
	      expanded	alias  until  it reaches the command that will be exe-
	      cuted.

	      The style whence is available in the context :zle:$WIDGET;  this
	      may be set to an array to give the command and options that will
	      be used to investigate the command word found.  The  default  is
	      whence -c.

   Utility Functions
       These  functions	 are  useful  in constructing widgets.	They should be
       loaded with  `autoload  -U  function'  and  called  as  indicated  from
       user-defined widgets.

       split-shell-arguments
	      This  function splits the line currently being edited into shell
	      arguments and whitespace.	 The result is	stored	in  the	 array
	      reply.   The  array contains all the parts of the line in order,
	      starting with any whitespace before the first argument, and fin-
	      ishing  with  any whitespace after the last argument.  Hence (so
	      long as the option KSH_ARRAYS is not set) whitespace is given by
	      odd  indices  in	the array and arguments by even indices.  Note

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	      that no stripping of quotes is done; joining  together  all  the
	      elements of reply in order is guaranteed to produce the original
	      line.

	      The parameter REPLY is set to the index of  the  word  in	 reply
	      which  contains  the character after the cursor, where the first
	      element has index 1.  The parameter REPLY2 is set to  the	 index
	      of  the character under the cursor in that word, where the first
	      character has index 1.

	      Hence reply, REPLY and REPLY2 should all be made	local  to  the
	      enclosing function.

	      See  the	function modify-current-argument, described below, for
	      an example of how to call this function.

       modify-current-argument expr-using-$ARG
	      This function provides a simple method of allowing  user-defined
	      widgets to modify the command line argument under the cursor (or
	      immediately to the left of the cursor if the cursor  is  between
	      arguments).   The	 argument  should  be an expression which when
	      evaluated operates on the shell parameter ARG, which  will  have
	      been  set	 to  the  command line argument under the cursor.  The
	      expression should be suitably quoted to prevent it being	evalu-
	      ated too early.

	      For example, a user-defined widget containing the following code
	      converts the characters in the argument under  the  cursor  into
	      all upper case:

		     modify-current-argument '${(U)ARG}'

	      The  following strips any quoting from the current word (whether
	      backslashes or one of the styles of  quotes),  and  replaces  it
	      with single quoting throughout:

		     modify-current-argument '${(qq)${(Q)ARG}}'

   Styles
       The  behavior  of several of the above widgets can be controlled by the
       use of the zstyle mechanism.  In particular, widgets that interact with
       the  completion system pass along their context to any completions that
       they invoke.

       break-keys
	      This style is used by the incremental-complete-word widget.  Its
	      value  should  be	 a pattern, and all keys matching this pattern
	      will cause the widget to stop incremental completion without the
	      key  having any further effect. Like all styles used directly by
	      incremental-complete-word, this style is	looked	up  using  the
	      context `:incremental'.

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       completer
	      The incremental-complete-word and insert-and-predict widgets set
	      up their top-level context name before calling completion.  This
	      allows  one  to define different sets of completer functions for
	      normal completion and for these widgets.	For  example,  to  use
	      completion,  approximation and correction for normal completion,
	      completion and correction for incremental	 completion  and  only
	      completion for prediction one could use:

		     zstyle ':completion:*' completer \
			     _complete _correct _approximate
		     zstyle ':completion:incremental:*' completer \
			     _complete _correct
		     zstyle ':completion:predict:*' completer \
			     _complete

	      It is a good idea to restrict the completers used in prediction,
	      because they may be automatically	 invoked  as  you  type.   The
	      _list and _menu completers should never be used with prediction.
	      The _approximate, _correct, _expand, and _match  completers  may
	      be  used,	 but be aware that they may change characters anywhere
	      in the word behind the cursor, so you need  to  watch  carefully
	      that the result is what you intended.

       cursor The  insert-and-predict  widget  uses this style, in the context
	      `:predict', to decide where to place the cursor after completion
	      has been tried.  Values are:

	      complete
		     The cursor is left where it was when completion finished,
		     but only if it is after a character equal to the one just
		     inserted  by the user.  If it is after another character,
		     this value is the same as `key'.

	      key    The cursor is left after the nth occurrence of the	 char-
		     acter  just inserted, where n is the number of times that
		     character appeared in  the	 word  before  completion  was
		     attempted.	  In short, this has the effect of leaving the
		     cursor after the character just typed even if the comple-
		     tion  code	 found out that no other characters need to be
		     inserted at that position.

	      Any other value for this style unconditionally leaves the cursor
	      at the position where the completion code left it.

       list   When using the incremental-complete-word widget, this style says
	      if the matches should be listed on every key press (if they  fit
	      on  the  screen).	 Use the context prefix `:completion:incremen-
	      tal'.

	      The insert-and-predict widget uses this style to decide  if  the
	      completion  should  be  shown even if there is only one possible
	      completion.  This is done if the value  of  this	style  is  the
	      string  always.	In  this  case	the context is `:predict' (not

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	      `:completion:predict').

       match  This style is used by smart-insert-last-word to provide  a  pat-
	      tern (using full EXTENDED_GLOB syntax) that matches an interest-
	      ing word.	 The context is	 the  name  of	the  widget  to	 which
	      smart-insert-last-word is bound (see above).  The default behav-
	      ior of smart-insert-last-word is equivalent to:

		     zstyle :insert-last-word match '*[[:alpha:]/\\]*'

	      However, you might want to include words that contain spaces:

		     zstyle :insert-last-word match '*[[:alpha:][:space:]/\\]*'

	      Or include numbers as long as the word is at least  two  charac-
	      ters long:

		     zstyle :insert-last-word match '*([[:digit:]]?|[[:alpha:]/\\])*'

	      The  above example causes redirections like "2>" to be included.

       prompt The incremental-complete-word widget shows  the  value  of  this
	      style  in	 the  status  line during incremental completion.  The
	      string value may contain any of the following substrings in  the
	      manner of the PS1 and other prompt parameters:

	      %c     Replaced  by the name of the completer function that gen-
		     erated the matches (without the leading underscore).

	      %l     When the list style is set, replaced by `...' if the list
		     of	 matches  is too long to fit on the screen and with an
		     empty string otherwise.  If the list style is `false'  or
		     not set, `%l' is always removed.

	      %n     Replaced by the number of matches generated.

	      %s     Replaced  by  `-no	 match-',  `-no	 prefix-', or an empty
		     string if there is no completion matching the word on the
		     line, if the matches have no common prefix different from
		     the word on the line, or if there is such a  common  pre-
		     fix, respectively.

	      %u     Replaced by the unambiguous part of all matches, if there
		     is any, and if it is different from the word on the line.

	      Like `break-keys', this uses the `:incremental' context.

       stop-keys
	      This style is used by the incremental-complete-word widget.  Its
	      value is treated similarly to the one for the  break-keys	 style
	      (and  uses  the same context: `:incremental').  However, in this
	      case all keys matching the pattern given as its value will  stop
	      incremental  completion  and will then execute their usual func-
	      tion.

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       toggle This boolean style is used by predict-on and its related widgets
	      in the context `:predict'.  If set to one of the standard `true'
	      values, predictive typing is automatically toggled off in situa-
	      tions  where it is unlikely to be useful, such as when editing a
	      multi-line buffer or after moving into the middle of a line  and
	      then  deleting  a character.  The default is to leave prediction
	      turned on until an explicit call to predict-off.

       verbose
	      This boolean style is used by predict-on and its related widgets
	      in the context `:predict'.  If set to one of the standard `true'
	      values, these widgets display a message below  the  prompt  when
	      the  predictive state is toggled.	 This is most useful in combi-
	      nation with the toggle style.   The  default  does  not  display
	      these messages.

       widget This style is similar to the command style: For widget functions
	      that use zle to call other widgets, this style can sometimes  be
	      used  to	override  the widget which is called.  The context for
	      this style is the name of the calling widget (not	 the  name  of
	      the  calling function, because one function may be bound to mul-
	      tiple widget names).

		     zstyle :copy-earlier-word widget smart-insert-last-word

	      Check the documentation for the calling widget  or  function  to
	      determine whether the widget style is used.

EXCEPTION HANDLING
       Two  functions are provided to enable zsh to provide exception handling
       in a form that should be familiar from other languages.

       throw exception
	      The function throw throws the named exception.  The name	is  an
	      arbitrary	 string	 and is only used by the throw and catch func-
	      tions.  An exception is for the most part treated the same as  a
	      shell error, i.e. an unhandled exception will cause the shell to
	      abort all processing in a function or script and	to  return  to
	      the top level in an interactive shell.

       catch exception-pattern
	      The  function  catch  returns  status  zero  if an exception was
	      thrown and the pattern exception-pattern matches its name.  Oth-
	      erwise  it  returns  status  1.  exception-pattern is a standard
	      shell  pattern,  respecting   the	  current   setting   of   the
	      EXTENDED_GLOB option.  An alias catch is also defined to prevent
	      the argument to the function from matching  filenames,  so  pat-
	      terns  may  be  used  unquoted.  Note that as exceptions are not
	      fundamentally different from other shell errors it  is  possible
	      to  catch shell errors by using an empty string as the exception
	      name.  The shell variable CAUGHT is set by catch to the name  of
	      the exception caught.  It is possible to rethrow an exception by
	      calling the throw function again	once  an  exception  has  been

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	      caught.

       The  functions  are  designed  to be used together with the always con-
       struct described in zshmisc(1).	This is important as  only  this  con-
       struct provides the required support for exceptions.  A typical example
       is as follows.

	      {
		# "try" block
		# ... nested code here calls "throw MyExcept"
	      } always {
		# "always" block
		if catch MyExcept; then
		  print "Caught exception MyExcept"
		elif catch ''; then
		  print "Caught a shell error.	Propagating..."
		  throw ''
		fi
		# Other exceptions are not handled but may be caught further
		# up the call stack.
	      }

       If all exceptions should	 be  caught,  the  following  idiom  might  be
       preferable.

	      {
		# ... nested code here throws an exception
	      } always {
		if catch *; then
		  case $CAUGHT in
		    (MyExcept)
		    print "Caught my own exception"
		    ;;
		    (*)
		    print "Caught some other exception"
		    ;;
		  esac
		fi
	      }

       In common with exception handling in other languages, the exception may
       be thrown by code deeply nested inside the `try' block.	However,  note
       that  it	 must  be  thrown  inside the current shell, not in a subshell
       forked for a pipeline, parenthesised current-shell construct,  or  some
       form of command or process substitution.

       The  system  internally uses the shell variable EXCEPTION to record the
       name of the exception between throwing and catching.  One  drawback  of
       this scheme is that if the exception is not handled the variable EXCEP-
       TION remains set and may be incorrectly recognised as the  name	of  an
       exception if a shell error subsequently occurs.	Adding unset EXCEPTION
       at the start of the outermost layer of any  code	 that  uses  exception
       handling will eliminate this problem.

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MIME FUNCTIONS
       Three  functions	 are available to provide handling of files recognised
       by extension, for example to dispatch a file text.ps when executed as a
       command to an appropriate viewer.

       zsh-mime-setup [ -fv ] [ -l [ suffix ... ] ]
       zsh-mime-handler [-l] command arguments ...
	      These   two   functions	use   the   files   ~/.mime.types  and
	      /etc/mime.types, which associate types and extensions,  as  well
	      as  ~/.mailcap and /etc/mailcap files, which associate types and
	      the programs that handle them.  These are provided on many  sys-
	      tems with the Multimedia Internet Mail Extensions.

	      To  enable  the  system,	the  function zsh-mime-setup should be
	      autoloaded and run.  This allows files  with  extensions	to  be
	      treated  as  executable; such files be completed by the function
	      completion system.  The  function	 zsh-mime-handler  should  not
	      need to be called by the user.

	      The  system  works by setting up suffix aliases with `alias -s'.
	      Suffix aliases already installed by the user will not  be	 over-
	      written.

	      For  suffixes  defined  in  lower case, upper case variants will
	      also automatically be handled (e.g. PDF is automatically handled
	      if  handling for the suffix pdf is defined), but not vice versa.

	      Repeated calls to zsh-mime-setup do not  override	 the  existing
	      mapping  between suffixes and executable files unless the option
	      -f is given.  Note, however, that this does not override	exist-
	      ing suffix aliases assigned to handlers other than zsh-mime-han-
	      dler.

	      Calling zsh-mime-setup with the option  -l  lists	 the  existing
	      mappings	without	 altering  them.   Suffixes to list (which may
	      contain pattern characters that should be quoted from  immediate
	      interpretation  on  the command line) may be given as additional
	      arguments, otherwise all suffixes are listed.

	      Calling zsh-mime-setup with the option -v causes verbose	output
	      to be shown during the setup operation.

	      The  system  respects  the mailcap flags needsterminal and copi-
	      ousoutput, see mailcap(4).

	      The functions use the following styles, which are	 defined  with
	      the  zstyle builtin command (see zshmodules(1)).	They should be
	      defined before zsh-mime-setup is run.   The  contexts  used  all
	      start with :mime:, with additional components in some cases.  It
	      is recommended that a trailing * (suitably quoted)  be  appended
	      to  style	 patterns  in  case  the system is extended in future.
	      Some examples are given below.
	      current-shell
		     If this boolean style is true, the	 mailcap  handler  for

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		     the  context  in  question	 is run using the eval builtin
		     instead of by starting a new sh process.	This  is  more
		     efficient, but may not work in the occasional cases where
		     the mailcap handler uses strict POSIX syntax.

	      execute-as-is
		     This style gives a list of patterns to be matched against
		     files  passed  for	 execution with a handler program.  If
		     the file matches the pattern, the entire command line  is
		     executed  in  its current form, with no handler.  This is
		     useful for files which might have suffixes	 but  nonethe-
		     less  be  executable in their own right.  If the style is
		     not set, the pattern *(*) *(/) is used; hence  executable
		     files  are executed directly and not passed to a handler,
		     and the option AUTO_CD may be used to change to  directo-
		     ries that happen to have MIME suffixes.

	      file-path
		     Used  if the style find-file-in-path is true for the same
		     context.  Set to an array of directories  that  are  used
		     for  searching for the file to be handled; the default is
		     the command path given by	the  special  parameter	 path.
		     The  shell option PATH_DIRS is respected; if that is set,
		     the appropriate path will be searched even if the name of
		     the  file to be handled as it appears on the command line
		     contains a `/'.  The full context is  :mime:.suffix:,  as
		     described for the style handler.

	      find-file-in-path
		     If	 set, allows files whose names do not contain absolute
		     paths to be searched for in the command path or the  path
		     specified	by  the	 file-path  style.  If the file is not
		     found in the path, it is looked for locally  (whether  or
		     not  the  current directory is in the path); if it is not
		     found locally, the handler will  abort  unless  the  han-
		     dle-nonexistent  style  is	 set.  Files found in the path
		     are tested as described for the style execute-as-is.  The
		     full  context  is	:mime:.suffix:,	 as  described for the
		     style handler.

	      flags  Defines flags to go with a handler; the context is as for
		     the  handler style, and the format is as for the flags in
		     mailcap.

	      handle-nonexistent
		     By default, arguments that don't correspond to files  are
		     not  passed  to  the  MIME handler in order to prevent it
		     from intercepting commands found in the path that	happen
		     to	 have  suffixes.  This style may be set to an array of
		     extended glob patterns for arguments that will be	passed
		     to	 the  handler  even if they don't exist.  If it is not
		     explicitly	 set  it  defaults  to	[[:alpha:]]#:/*	 which
		     allows  URLs to be passed to the MIME handler even though
		     they don't exist in that format in the file system.   The

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		     full  context  is	:mime:.suffix:,	 as  described for the
		     style handler.

	      handler
		     Specifies a handler for a suffix; the suffix is given  by
		     the context as :mime:.suffix:, and the format of the han-
		     dler is exactly that in mailcap.  Note in particular  the
		     `.'  and  trailing	 colon	to distinguish this use of the
		     context.  This overrides any  handler  specified  by  the
		     mailcap  files.   If the handler requires a terminal, the
		     flags style should be set to include the word needstermi-
		     nal,  or if the output is to be displayed through a pager
		     (but not if the handler is itself	a  pager),  it	should
		     include copiousoutput.

	      mailcap
		     A	 list  of  files  in  the  format  of  ~/.mailcap  and
		     /etc/mailcap to  be  read	during	setup,	replacing  the
		     default list which consists of those two files.  The con-
		     text is :mime:.  A + in the list will be replaced by  the
		     default files.

	      mailcap-priorities
		     This  style  is  used to resolve multiple mailcap entries
		     for the same MIME type.  It consists of an array  of  the
		     following	elements,  in  descending  order  of priority;
		     later entries will be used if earlier entries are	unable
		     to	 resolve  the  entries being compared.	If none of the
		     tests resolve the entries, the first entry encountered is
		     retained.

		      files  The order of files (entries in the mailcap style)
			     read.  Earlier files are preferred.   (Note  this
			     does not resolve entries in the same file.)

		     priority
			     The  priority  flag  from the mailcap entry.  The
			     priority is an integer  from  0  to  9  with  the
			     default value being 5.

		      flags  The  test	given by the mailcap-prio-flags option
			     is used to resolve entries.

		      place  Later entries are preferred; as the  entries  are
			     strictly ordered, this test always succeeds.

		     Note that as this style is handled during initialisation,
		     the context is always :mime:, with no  discrimination  by
		     suffix.

	      mailcap-prio-flags
		     This  style is used when the keyword flags is encountered
		     in the list of tests specified by the  mailcap-priorities
		     style.   It  should be set to a list of patterns, each of

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		     which is tested against the flags specified in the	 mail-
		     cap  entry (in other words, the sets of assignments found
		     with some entries in the mailcap file).  Earlier patterns
		     in the list are preferred to later ones, and matched pat-
		     terns are preferred to unmatched ones.

	      mime-types
		     A list of	files  in  the	format	of  ~/.mime.types  and
		     /etc/mime.types  to  be  read during setup, replacing the
		     default list which consists of those two files.  The con-
		     text  is :mime:.  A + in the list will be replaced by the
		     default files.

	      never-background
		     If this boolean style is set, the handler for  the	 given
		     context  is  always  run  in  the foreground, even if the
		     flags provided in the mailcap entry suggest it  need  not
		     be (for example, it doesn't require a terminal).

	      pager  If	 set, will be used instead of $PAGER or more to handle
		     suffixes where the copiousoutput flag is set.   The  con-
		     text  is as for handler, i.e. :mime:.suffix: for handling
		     a file with the given suffix.

	      Examples:

		     zstyle ':mime:*' mailcap ~/.mailcap /usr/local/etc/mailcap
		     zstyle ':mime:.txt:' handler less %s
		     zstyle ':mime:.txt:' flags needsterminal

	      When zsh-mime-setup is subsequently run, it will look for	 mail-
	      cap  entries  in the two files given.  Files of suffix .txt will
	      be handled by running `less file.txt'.  The  flag	 needsterminal
	      is  set  to show that this program must run attached to a termi-
	      nal.

	      As there are several steps to dispatching a command, the follow-
	      ing  should be checked if attempting to execute a file by exten-
	      sion .ext does not have the expected effect.

	      The command `alias -s ext'  should  show	`ps=zsh-mime-handler'.
	      If  it  shows  something	else, another suffix alias was already
	      installed and was not overwritten.  If it shows nothing, no han-
	      dler  was installed:  this is most likely because no handler was
	      found in the .mime.types and mailcap combination for .ext files.
	      In   that	  case,	  appropriate  handling	 should	 be  added  to
	      ~/.mime.types and mailcap.

	      If the extension is handled by zsh-mime-handler but the file  is
	      not opened correctly, either the handler defined for the type is
	      incorrect, or the flags associated with it are  in  appropriate.
	      Running  zsh-mime-setup  -l  will show the handler and, if there
	      are any, the flags.  A %s in the handler is replaced by the file
	      (suitably	 quoted if necessary).	Check that the handler program

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	      listed lists and can be run in the way shown.  Also  check  that
	      the  flags needsterminal or copiousoutput are set if the handler
	      needs to be run under a terminal; the second flag is used if the
	      output  should  be  sent	to  a pager.  An example of a suitable
	      mailcap entry for such a program is:

		     text/html; /usr/bin/lynx '%s'; needsterminal

	      Running `zsh-mime-handler -l command line'  prints  the  command
	      line  that would be executed, simplified to remove the effect of
	      any flags, and quoted so that the output can be run  as  a  com-
	      plete  zsh  command line.	 This is used by the completion system
	      to  decide  how  to   complete   after   a   file	  handled   by
	      zsh-mime-setup.

       pick-web-browser
	      This  function is separate from the two MIME functions described
	      above and can be assigned directly to a suffix:

		     autoload -U pick-web-browser
		     alias -s html=pick-web-browser

	      It is provided as an intelligent front end  to  dispatch	a  web
	      browser.	 It may be run as either a function or a shell script.
	      The status 255 is returned if no browser could be started.

	      Various  styles  are  available  to  customize  the  choice   of
	      browsers:

	      browser-style
		     The  value of the style is an array giving preferences in
		     decreasing order for the type of  browser	to  use.   The
		     values of elements may be

		     running
			     Use a GUI browser that is already running when an
			     X Window  display	is  available.	 The  browsers
			     listed in the x-browsers style are tried in order
			     until one is found; if it is, the	file  will  be
			     displayed	in  that browser, so the user may need
			     to check whether it has appeared.	If no  running
			     browser  is  found, one is not started.  Browsers
			     other  than  Firefox,  Opera  and	Konqueror  are
			     assumed  to  understand  the  Mozilla  syntax for
			     opening a URL remotely.

		      x	     Start a new GUI browser when an X Window  display
			     is available.  Search for the availability of one
			     of the browsers listed in	the  x-browsers	 style
			     and  start the first one that is found.  No check
			     is made for an already running browser.

		      tty    Start a terminal-based browser.  Search  for  the
			     availability of one of the browsers listed in the

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			     tty-browsers style and start the first  one  that
			     is found.

		     If	 the  style  is	 not  set the default running x tty is
		     used.

	      x-browsers
		     An array in decreasing order of preference of browsers to
		     use  when	running	 under the X Window System.  The array
		     consists of the command name under	 which	to  start  the
		     browser.  They are looked up in the context :mime: (which
		     may be extended in future, so  appending  `*'  is	recom-
		     mended).  For example,

			     zstyle ':mime:*' x-browsers opera konqueror firefox

		     specifies	that  pick-web-browser should first look for a
		     running instance of Opera, Konqueror or Firefox, in  that
		     order,  and  if  it  fails	 to find any should attempt to
		     start Opera.  The default	is  firefox  mozilla  netscape
		     opera konqueror.

	      tty-browsers
		     An	 array	similar	 to  x-browsers,  except that it gives
		     browsers to use use when no X Window  display  is	avail-
		     able.  The default is elinks links lynx.

	      command
		     If	 it is set this style is used to pick the command used
		     to	 open  a  page	for  a	browser.    The	  context   is
		     :mime:browser:new:$browser:  to  start  a	new browser or
		     :mime:browser:running:$browser:  to  open	a  URL	in   a
		     browser  already  running on the current X display, where
		     $browser is  the  value  matched  in  the	x-browsers  or
		     tty-browsers  style.   The	 escape	 sequence  %b  in  the
		     style's value will be replaced by the browser,  while  %u
		     will  be  replaced	 by the URL.  If the style is not set,
		     the default for all new instances is equivalent to %b  %u
		     and  the  defaults for using running browsers are equiva-
		     lent to the values kfmclient openURL  %u  for  Konqueror,
		     firefox  -new-tab	%u  for Firefox, opera -newpage %u for
		     Opera, and %b -remote "openUrl(%u)" for all others.

MATHEMATICAL FUNCTIONS
       zcalc [ expression ... ]
	      A reasonably powerful calculator based on zsh's arithmetic eval-
	      uation  facility.	  The syntax is similar to that of formulae in
	      most programming languages; see the section `Arithmetic  Evalua-
	      tion'  in	 zshmisc(1)  for  details.   The  mathematical library
	      zsh/mathfunc will be loaded if it is available; see the  section
	      `The  zsh/mathfunc  Module'  in zshmodules(1).  The mathematical
	      functions correspond to the raw system libraries, so trigonomet-
	      ric functions are evaluated using radians, and so on.

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	      Each line typed is evaluated as an expression.  The prompt shows
	      a number, which corresponds to a positional parameter where  the
	      result  of  that calculation is stored.  For example, the result
	      of the calculation on the line preceded by `4> ' is available as
	      $4.   The	 last value calculated is available as ans.  Full com-
	      mand line editing, including the history	of  previous  calcula-
	      tions,   is   available;	the  history  is  saved	 in  the  file
	      ~/.zcalc_history.	 To exit, enter a blank line or type  `:q'  on
	      its own (`q' is allowed for historical compatibility).

	      If  arguments  are  given to zcalc on start up, they are used to
	      prime the first few positional parameters.  A visual  indication
	      of this is given when the calculator starts.

	      The  constants  PI (3.14159...) and E (2.71828...) are provided.
	      Parameter assignment is possible, but note that  all  parameters
	      will be put into the global namespace.

	      The  output  base	 can  be  initialised  by  passing  the option
	      `-#base', for example `zcalc -#16'  (the	`#'  may  have	to  be
	      quoted, depending on the globbing options set).

	      The  prompt is configurable via the parameter ZCALCPROMPT, which
	      undergoes standard prompt expansion.  The index of  the  current
	      entry is stored locally in the first element of the array psvar,
	      which can be referred to in ZCALCPROMPT as `%1v'.	  The  default
	      prompt is `%1v> '.

	      A	 few special commands are available; these are introduced by a
	      colon.  For backward compatibility, the colon may be omitted for
	      certain  commands.  Completion is available if compinit has been
	      run.

	      The output precision may be specified within  zcalc  by  special
	      commands familiar from many calculators.
	      :norm  The  default output format.  It corresponds to the printf
		     %g specification.	Typically this shows six decimal  dig-
		     its.

	      :sci digits
		     Scientific	 notation, corresponding to the printf %g out-
		     put format with the precision given by digits.  This pro-
		     duces  either fixed point or exponential notation depend-
		     ing on the value output.

	      :fix digits
		     Fixed point notation, corresponding to the printf %f out-
		     put format with the precision given by digits.

	      :eng digits
		     Exponential notation, corresponding to the printf %E out-
		     put format with the precision given by digits.

	      :raw   Raw output:  this is the default form of the output  from

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		     a math evaluation.	 This may show more precision than the
		     number actually possesses.

	      Other special commands:
	      :!line...
		     Execute line... as a normal  shell	 command  line.	  Note
		     that  it is executed in the context of the function, i.e.
		     with local variables.  Space is optional after :!.

	      :local arg ...
		     Declare variables local to the function.  Note that  cer-
		     tain  variables are used by the function for its own pur-
		     poses.  Other variables may be used, too, but  they  will
		     be taken from or put into the global scope.

	      :function name [ body ]
		     Define  a	mathematical function or (with no body) delete
		     it.  The function	is  defined  using  zmathfuncdef,  see
		     below.

		     Note  that	 zcalc	takes  care of all quoting.  Hence for
		     example:

			     function cube $1 * $1 * $1

		     defines a function to cube the sole argument.

	      [#base]
		     This is not a special  command,  rather  part  of	normal
		     arithmetic	 syntax;  however, when this form appears on a
		     line by itself the default output radix is set  to	 base.
		     Use,  for	example, `[#16]' to display hexadecimal output
		     preceded by an indication of the base, or	`[##16]'  just
		     to display the raw number in the given base.  Bases them-
		     selves are always specified in  decimal.  `[#]'  restores
		     the  normal  output  format.  Note that setting an output
		     base suppresses  floating	point  output;	use  `[#]'  to
		     return to normal operation.

	      See the comments in the function for a few extra tips.

       zmathfuncdef [ mathfunc [ body ] ]
	      A convenient front end to functions -M.

	      With  two	 arguments, define a mathematical function named math-
	      func which can be used in any  form  of  arithmetic  evaluation.
	      body is a mathematical expression to implement the function.  It
	      may contain references to position parameters $1,	 $2,  ...   to
	      refer  to	 mandatory parameters and ${1:-defvalue} ...  to refer
	      to optional parameters.  Note that the forms  must  be  strictly
	      adhered  to  for the function to calculate the correct number of
	      arguments.  The implementation is held in a shell function named
	      zsh_math_func_mathfunc;  usually the user will not need to refer
	      to the shell function directly.  Any existing  function  of  the

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	      same name is silently replaced.

	      With  one argument, remove the mathematical function mathfunc as
	      well as the shell function implementation.

	      With no arguments, list all mathfunc functions in a  form	 suit-
	      able  for restoring the definition.  The functions have not nec-
	      essarily been defined by zmathfuncdef.

USER CONFIGURATION FUNCTIONS
       The zsh/newuser module comes with a  function  to  aid  in  configuring
       shell options for new users.  If the module is installed, this function
       can also be run by hand.	 It is available even if the module's  default
       behaviour,  namely running the function for a new user logging in with-
       out startup files, is inhibited.

       zsh-newuser-install [ -f ]
	      The function presents the user with  various  options  for  cus-
	      tomizing	their initialization scripts.  Currently only ~/.zshrc
	      is handled.  $ZDOTDIR/.zshrc is used instead  if	the  parameter
	      ZDOTDIR  is set; this provides a way for the user to configure a
	      file without altering an existing .zshrc.

	      By default the function exits immediately if it finds any of the
	      files  .zshenv, .zprofile, .zshrc, or .zlogin in the appropriate
	      directory.  The option -f is required  in	 order	to  force  the
	      function	to  continue.	Note  this  may	 happen even if .zshrc
	      itself does not exist.

	      As currently configured, the function will exit  immediately  if
	      the  user has root privileges; this behaviour cannot be overrid-
	      den.

	      Once activated, the  function's  behaviour  is  supposed	to  be
	      self-explanatory.	  Menus are present allowing the user to alter
	      the value of options and parameters.  Suggestions	 for  improve-
	      ments are always welcome.

	      When the script exits, the user is given the opportunity to save
	      the new file or not; changes are	not  irreversible  until  this
	      point.   However,	 the  script is careful to restrict changes to
	      the file only to a group marked by the lines `# Lines configured
	      by  zsh-newuser-install'	and  `#	 End  of  lines	 configured by
	      zsh-newuser-install'.  In addition, the old version of .zshrc is
	      saved to a file with the suffix .zni appended.

	      If  the  function edits an existing .zshrc, it is up to the user
	      to ensure that the changes made will take effect.	 For  example,
	      if  control  usually  returns early from the existing .zshrc the
	      lines will not be executed; or a later initialization  file  may
	      override	options or parameters, and so on.  The function itself
	      does not attempt to detect any such conflicts.

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OTHER FUNCTIONS
       There are a large number of helpful  functions  in  the	Functions/Misc
       directory  of  the  zsh	distribution.  Most are very simple and do not
       require documentation here, but a few are worthy of special mention.

   Descriptions
       colors This function initializes	 several  associative  arrays  to  map
	      color names to (and from) the ANSI standard eight-color terminal
	      codes.  These are used by the prompt theme system	 (see  above).
	      You seldom should need to run colors more than once.

	      The  eight  base	colors	are:  black, red, green, yellow, blue,
	      magenta, cyan, and white.	 Each of these	has  codes  for	 fore-
	      ground  and  background.	 In addition there are eight intensity
	      attributes: bold, faint, standout,  underline,  blink,  reverse,
	      and  conceal.   Finally,	there  are  six	 codes	used to negate
	      attributes: none (reset all attributes to the defaults),	normal
	      (neither	bold  nor faint), no-standout, no-underline, no-blink,
	      and no-reverse.

	      Some terminals do not support all	 combinations  of  colors  and
	      intensities.

	      The associative arrays are:

	      color
	      colour Map all the color names to their integer codes, and inte-
		     ger codes to the color names.  The eight base  names  map
		     to	 the foreground color codes, as do names prefixed with
		     `fg-', such as `fg-red'.  Names prefixed with `bg-', such
		     as `bg-blue', refer to the background codes.  The reverse
		     mapping from code to color yields	base  name  for	 fore-
		     ground codes and the bg- form for backgrounds.

		     Although  it  is  a misnomer to call them `colors', these
		     arrays also map the other fourteen attributes from	 names
		     to codes and codes to names.

	      fg
	      fg_bold
	      fg_no_bold
		     Map  the  eight basic color names to ANSI terminal escape
		     sequences that  set  the  corresponding  foreground  text
		     properties.   The	fg  sequences change the color without
		     changing the eight intensity attributes.

	      bg
	      bg_bold
	      bg_no_bold
		     Map the eight basic color names to ANSI  terminal	escape
		     sequences	that  set the corresponding background proper-
		     ties.  The bg sequences change the color without changing
		     the eight intensity attributes.

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	      In  addition,  the  scalar parameters reset_color and bold_color
	      are  set	to  the	 ANSI  terminal	 escapes  that	turn  off  all
	      attributes and turn on bold intensity, respectively.

       fned name
	      Same  as	zed -f.	 This function does not appear in the zsh dis-
	      tribution, but can be created by linking zed to the name fned in
	      some directory in your fpath.

       is-at-least needed [ present ]
	      Perform  a  greater-than-or-equal-to  comparison	of two strings
	      having the format of a zsh version number; that is, a string  of
	      numbers  and text with segments separated by dots or dashes.  If
	      the present string is not provided, $ZSH_VERSION is used.	  Seg-
	      ments  are  paired left-to-right in the two strings with leading
	      non-number parts ignored.	 If one string has fewer segments than
	      the other, the missing segments are considered zero.

	      This  is	useful in startup files to set options and other state
	      that are not available in all versions of zsh.

		     is-at-least 3.1.6-15 && setopt NO_GLOBAL_RCS
		     is-at-least 3.1.0 && setopt HIST_REDUCE_BLANKS
		     is-at-least 2.6-17 || print "You can't use is-at-least here."

       nslookup [ arg ... ]
	      This wrapper function for	 the  nslookup	command	 requires  the
	      zsh/zpty	module	(see  zshmodules(1)).  It behaves exactly like
	      the standard  nslookup  except  that  it	provides  customizable
	      prompts  (including  a  right-side  prompt)  and	completion  of
	      nslookup commands, host  names,  etc.  (if  you  use  the	 func-
	      tion-based  completion  system).	 Completion  styles may be set
	      with the context prefix `:completion:nslookup'.

	      See also the pager, prompt and rprompt styles below.

       regexp-replace var regexp replace
	      Use regular expressions to perform a global search  and  replace
	      operation	 on  a	variable.   If the option RE_MATCH_PCRE is not
	      set, POSIX extended regular expressions are used, else Perl-com-
	      patible  regular	expressions  (this  requires  the  shell to be
	      linked against the pcre library).

	      var is the name of the variable  containing  the	string	to  be
	      matched.	 The  variable	will be modified directly by the func-
	      tion.  The variables MATCH, MBEGIN, MEND,	 match,	 mbegin,  mend
	      should  be  avoided  as these are used by the regular expression
	      code.

	      regexp is the regular expression to match against the string.

	      replace is the replacement text.	This  can  contain  parameter,
	      command  and  arithmetic expressions which will be replaced:  in
	      particular, a reference to $MATCH will be replaced by  the  text

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	      matched by the pattern.

	      The return status is 0 if at least one match was performed, else
	      1.

       run-help cmd
	      This function is designed to be invoked by the run-help ZLE wid-
	      get,  in	place  of  the	default alias.	See `Accessing On-Line
	      Help' above for setup instructions.

	      In the discussion which follows, if cmd is a file	 system	 path,
	      it  is first reduced to its rightmost component (the file name).

	      Help is first sought by looking for a  file  named  cmd  in  the
	      directory	 named by the HELPDIR parameter.  If no file is found,
	      an assistant function, alias, or command named  run-help-cmd  is
	      sought.	If  found,  the assistant is executed with the rest of
	      the current command line (everything after the command name cmd)
	      as its arguments.	 When neither file nor assistant is found, the
	      external command `man cmd' is run.

	      An example assistant for the "ssh" command:

		     run-help-ssh() {
			 emulate -LR zsh
			 local -a args
			 # Delete the "-l username" option
			 zparseopts -D -E -a args l:
			 # Delete other options, leaving: host command
			 args=(${@:#-*})
			 if [[ ${#args} -lt 2 ]]; then
			     man ssh
			 else
			     run-help $args[2]
			 fi
		     }

	      Several of these assistants are provided in  the	Functions/Misc
	      directory.   These  must	be autoloaded, or placed as executable
	      scripts in your search path, in order to be found	 and  used  by
	      run-help.

	      run-help-git
	      run-help-svk
	      run-help-svn
		     Assistant functions for the git, svk, and svn commands.

       tetris Zsh  was once accused of not being as complete as Emacs, because
	      it lacked a Tetris game.	This function was  written  to	refute
	      this vicious slander.

	      This function must be used as a ZLE widget:

		     autoload -U tetris

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		     zle -N tetris
		     bindkey keys tetris

	      To  start	 a game, execute the widget by typing the keys.	 What-
	      ever command line you were editing disappears  temporarily,  and
	      your  keymap  is also temporarily replaced by the Tetris control
	      keys.  The previous editor state is restored when you  quit  the
	      game (by pressing `q') or when you lose.

	      If  you quit in the middle of a game, the next invocation of the
	      tetris widget will continue where you left off.  If you lost, it
	      will start a new game.

       zargs [ option ... -- ] [ input ... ] [ -- command [ arg ... ] ]
	      This function works like GNU xargs, except that instead of read-
	      ing lines of arguments from the standard input,  it  takes  them
	      from  the	 command line.	This is useful because zsh, especially
	      with recursive glob operators, often  can	 construct  a  command
	      line for a shell function that is longer than can be accepted by
	      an external command.

	      The option list represents options of the zargs command  itself,
	      which  are  the  same  as those of xargs.	 The input list is the
	      collection of strings (often file names) that become  the	 argu-
	      ments  of the command, analogous to the standard input of xargs.
	      Finally, the arg	list  consists	of  those  arguments  (usually
	      options)	that are passed to the command each time it runs.  The
	      arg list precedes the elements from the input list in each  run.
	      If no command is provided, then no arg list may be provided, and
	      in that event the default command is `print' with arguments  `-r
	      --'.

	      For  example, to get a long ls listing of all plain files in the
	      current directory or its subdirectories:

		     autoload -U zargs
		     zargs -- **/*(.) -- ls -l

	      Note that `--' is used both to mark the end of the  option  list
	      and  to  mark the end of the input list, so it must appear twice
	      whenever the input list may be empty.  If there is guaranteed to
	      be  at least one input and the first input does not begin with a
	      `-', then the first `--' may be omitted.

	      In the event that the string `--' is or may be an input, the  -e
	      option  may  be  used  to change the end-of-inputs marker.  Note
	      that this does not change the end-of-options marker.  For	 exam-
	      ple, to use `..' as the marker:

		     zargs -e.. -- **/*(.) .. ls -l

	      This  is a good choice in that example because no plain file can
	      be named `..', but the best end-marker depends  on  the  circum-
	      stances.

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	      For  details  of	the  other  zargs options, see xargs(1) or run
	      zargs with the --help option.

       zed [ -f ] name
       zed -b This function uses the ZLE editor to edit a file or function.

	      Only one name argument is allowed.  If the -f option  is	given,
	      the  name	 is taken to be that of a function; if the function is
	      marked for autoloading, zed searches for it  in  the  fpath  and
	      loads  it.   Note	 that  functions edited this way are installed
	      into the current shell, but not written  back  to	 the  autoload
	      file.

	      Without  -f,  name  is  the path name of the file to edit, which
	      need not exist; it is created on write, if necessary.

	      While editing, the function sets the main keymap to zed and  the
	      vi  command  keymap to zed-vicmd.	 These will be copied from the
	      existing main and vicmd keymaps if they do not exist  the	 first
	      time  zed is run.	 They can be used to provide special key bind-
	      ings used only in zed.

	      If it creates the keymap, zed rebinds the return key to insert a
	      line  break and `^X^W' to accept the edit in the zed keymap, and
	      binds `ZZ' to accept the edit in the zed-vicmd keymap.

	      The bindings alone can be installed by running `zed  -b'.	  This
	      is  suitable  for	 putting  into	a startup file.	 Note that, if
	      rerun, this  will	 overwrite  the	 existing  zed	and  zed-vicmd
	      keymaps.

	      Completion  is available, and styles may be set with the context
	      prefix `:completion:zed'.

	      A zle widget zed-set-file-name is available.  This can be called
	      by  name	from  within  zed using `\ex zed-set-file-name' (note,
	      however, that because of zed's rebindings you will have to  type
	      ^j  at  the end instead of the return key), or can be bound to a
	      key in either of the zed or zed-vicmd keymaps after `zed -b' has
	      been  run.  When the widget is called, it prompts for a new name
	      for the file being edited.  When zed  exits  the	file  will  be
	      written  under  that  name  and  the  original file will be left
	      alone.  The widget has no effect with `zed -f'.

	      While zed-set-file-name is running, zed uses the keymap zed-nor-
	      mal-keymap,  which  is  linked from the main keymap in effect at
	      the time zed initialised its bindings.  (This  is	 to  make  the
	      return  key  operate  normally.)	The result is that if the main
	      keymap has been changed, the widget won't notice.	 This is not a
	      concern for most users.

       zcp [ -finqQvwW ] srcpat dest
       zln [ -finqQsvwW ] srcpat dest
	      Same as zmv -C and zmv -L, respectively.	These functions do not

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	      appear in the zsh distribution, but can be  created  by  linking
	      zmv to the names zcp and zln in some directory in your fpath.

       zkbd   See `Keyboard Definition' above.

       zmv [ -finqQsvwW ] [ -C | -L | -M | -p program ] [ -o optstring ]
       srcpat dest
	      Move (usually, rename) files matching the pattern srcpat to cor-
	      responding  files	 having names of the form given by dest, where
	      srcpat contains parentheses surrounding patterns which  will  be
	      replaced in turn by $1, $2, ... in dest.	For example,

		     zmv '(*).lis' '$1.txt'

	      renames	 `foo.lis'   to	  `foo.txt',   `my.old.stuff.lis'   to
	      `my.old.stuff.txt', and so on.

	      The pattern is always treated as an EXTENDED_GLOB pattern.   Any
	      file  whose  name	 is  not changed by the substitution is simply
	      ignored.	Any error (a substitution resulted in an empty string,
	      two  substitutions  gave the same result, the destination was an
	      existing regular file and -f was not given)  causes  the	entire
	      function to abort without doing anything.

	      Options:

	      -f     Force  overwriting	 of  destination files.	 Not currently
		     passed down to the mv/cp/ln command due  to  vagaries  of
		     implementations (but you can use -o-f to do that).
	      -i     Interactive:  show	 each  line to be executed and ask the
		     user whether to execute it.  `Y' or `y' will execute  it,
		     anything  else  will skip it.  Note that you just need to
		     type one character.
	      -n     No execution: print what would happen, but don't do it.
	      -q     Turn bare glob qualifiers off: now assumed by default, so
		     this has no effect.
	      -Q     Force bare glob qualifiers on.  Don't turn this on unless
		     you are actually using glob qualifiers in a pattern.
	      -s     Symbolic, passed down to ln; only works with -L.
	      -v     Verbose: print each command as it's being executed.
	      -w     Pick out wildcard parts  of  the  pattern,	 as  described
		     above,  and  implicitly  add parentheses for referring to
		     them.
	      -W     Just like -w, with the addition of turning	 wildcards  in
		     the replacement pattern into sequential ${1} .. ${N} ref-
		     erences.
	      -C
	      -L
	      -M     Force cp, ln or mv, respectively, regardless of the  name
		     of the function.
	      -p program
		     Call  program instead of cp, ln or mv.  Whatever it does,
		     it should at least understand the form `program  --  old-
		     name  newname'  where  oldname  and newname are filenames

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		     generated by zmv.
	      -o optstring
		     The optstring is split into words and passed down	verba-
		     tim  to  the  cp,	ln or mv command called to perform the
		     work.  It should probably begin with a `-'.

	      Further examples:

		     zmv -v '(* *)' '${1// /_}'

	      For any file in the current directory with at least one space in
	      the  name,  replace every space by an underscore and display the
	      commands executed.

	      For more complete examples and other implementation details, see
	      the  zmv	source file, usually located in one of the directories
	      named in your fpath, or in Functions/Misc/zmv in the zsh distri-
	      bution.

       zrecompile
	      See `Recompiling Functions' above.

       zstyle+ context style value [ + subcontext style value ... ]
	      This  makes  defining styles a bit simpler by using a single `+'
	      as a special token that allows you to append a context  name  to
	      the previously used context name.	 Like this:

		     zstyle+ ':foo:bar' style1 value1 \
			   + ':baz'	style2 value2 \
			   + ':frob'	style3 value3

	      This  defines `style1' with `value1' for the context :foo:bar as
	      usual, but it also defines `style2' with `value2' for  the  con-
	      text  :foo:bar:baz and `style3' with `value3' for :foo:bar:frob.
	      Any subcontext may be the empty string to re-use the first  con-
	      text unchanged.

   Styles
       insert-tab
	      The  zed function sets this style in context `:completion:zed:*'
	      to turn off completion when TAB is typed at the beginning	 of  a
	      line.   You may override this by setting your own value for this
	      context and style.

       pager  The nslookup  function  looks  up	 this  style  in  the  context
	      `:nslookup' to determine the program used to display output that
	      does not fit on a single screen.

       prompt
       rprompt
	      The nslookup  function  looks  up	 this  style  in  the  context
	      `:nslookup' to set the prompt and the right-side prompt, respec-
	      tively.  The usual expansions for the PS1	 and  RPS1  parameters

zsh 4.3.11		December 20, 2010		       63

ZSHCONTRIB(1)					    ZSHCONTRIB(1)

	      may be used (see EXPANSION OF PROMPT SEQUENCES in zshmisc(1)).

zsh 4.3.11		December 20, 2010		       64

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