Autocomplete custom scripts?
from MoLoPoLY@discuss.tchncs.de to linux@lemmy.ml on 07 Mar 12:04
https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/31745845

As my time with linux, I created a lot of scripts. Some of them have input parameters and sometimes I just forget this parameters.

So I wonder if there is some way to create autocomplete parameters, like i autocomplete a path by pressing the tab key?

For example a script. ./test.sh can be completed with parameter-one, eg. ./test.sh parameter-one or ./test.sh parameter-two. If i type now ./test.sh followed by tab it should add parameter-one if i press tab again it should change to parameter-two.

How can I do that? I’m on bash…

#linux

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ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.org on 07 Mar 12:10 next collapse

With shell scripts, I’m not sure.

With Python scripts, you want argcomplete.

unlawfulbooger@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Mar 12:30 next collapse

Here’s an article that does this: iridakos.com/…/bash-programmable-completion-tutor…

I have done this for one of my own tools ta, which is a function that switches to a tmux session, or creates it if it doesn’t exist:

# switch to existing tmux session, or create it.
# overrides workdir if session name is "Work"
function ta() {
        case "$1" in
                Work) workdir="${HOME}/Work/" ;;
                *) workdir="${HOME}" ;;
        esac
        if tmux has-session -t "$@" &>/dev/null; then
                tmux switch-client -t "$@"
        else
                tmux new-session -A -D -d -c "${workdir}" -s "$@"
                tmux switch-client -t "$@"
        fi
}

# complete tmux sessions
# exclude current session from completion
function _ta_completion() {
        command="${1}"
        completing="${2}"
        previous="${3}"
        [[ "${command}" != 'ta' ]] && return
        current_session=&qu
MoLoPoLY@discuss.tchncs.de on 07 Mar 13:58 next collapse

Many thx. This is exactly what I want. Will try that when I’m batch from vacation.

N0x0n@lemmy.ml on 07 Mar 14:56 collapse

This really looks great, I got a question though. As I understand it, it works based on your bash_history which can be very small or autodeleted after each poweroff for privacy & security reasons.

So it doesn’t work in that case. However, creating a file containing a list or array? Of commands could that be a possible way to implemented a similar behavior?

I’m asking because I’m not very proficient in any programming language but have done some small bash scripts here and there and quite interested in this functionality !

a14o@feddit.org on 07 Mar 12:43 next collapse

Not exactly what you are looking for, but modern shells like fish or zsh (probably?) are good at suggesting completions from history. fzf is another great tool for that. Both are super useful for remembering and repeating commands.

Flagstaff@programming.dev on 07 Mar 14:38 collapse

espanso.org

trevor@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Mar 14:58 collapse

Espanso is probably the most useful software that nobody is using. I can’t live without it.

I hope it gets an update soon…

Flagstaff@programming.dev on 07 Mar 15:15 collapse

Its .YML formatting is really clunky. It feels like it takes up twice as much line space as .AHK (for example), which can do a lot of this kind of stuff in a single line. But I wanna go cross-platform and this is all I can find…

trevor@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Mar 15:47 collapse

I like YAML, as long as you aren’t using complicated syntax. Using the | operator will get you some flexible usage that’s mostly easy enough to read. YAML definitely has its problems though. If you want, I can share some snippets of my config.

Sadly though, due to Espanso not having a working RPM build for Wayland (or a Flatpak, which they’re working on), it’s not quite as cross-platform as I want it to be. It won’t work on any of the cool uBlue-derived distros that I’ve gravitated toward, so I’m hoping we get a nice, big update this year.

Flagstaff@programming.dev on 07 Mar 21:15 collapse

Did you put in a request for this? And sure, I’m always interested in seeing how others use it—especially to complex levels.

trevor@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 12 Mar 13:32 collapse

It took me a while to get around to this so I could sanitize some of the highly-personal stuff there (mostly just a bunch of URLs because I don’t use browser bookmarks lol), but here’s a condensed version of what I like to use Espanso for.

The second half is …interesting. I wanted a way to autofill passwords from my password manager in any application, not just a browser. It’s a very homebrewed solution, and it only works on Windows and Linux because macOS blocks tools like Espanso from viewing or modifying login input fields.

Did you put in a request for this?

For a Wayland Flatpak or RPM? I haven’t looked in a long time, but I believe there’s an open issue for a Wayland RPM.

Edit: Found them: Flatpak issue and RPM issue.

Flagstaff@programming.dev on 12 Mar 17:14 collapse

macOS blocks tools like Espanso from viewing or modifying login input fields.

I wonder if SikuliX may be of interest to you, then. I just invoke KeePassXC’s built-in autotyper; it’s not too much more painful for me. Anyway, thanks for sharing! We certainly use it for very different things. Here’s a Reddit search URL generation script that I use sporadically:

  - trigger: '`rs'
    replace: '{{output}}'
    vars:
      - name: form
        type: form
        params:
          layout: |
            [[subdomain]]
            Subreddit (optional): [[subreddit]]
            Query:
            [[query]]
          fields:
            subdomain:
              type: choice
              values:
                - www
                - old
              default: old
      - name: output
        type: script
        params:
          args:
            - python
            - -c
            - |
              if '{{form.subreddit}}':
                print(f'https://{{form.subdomain}}.reddit.com/r/{{form.subreddit}}/search?q={{form.query}}&restrict_sr=on&include_over_18=on')
              else:
                print(f'https://{{form.subdomain}}.reddit.com/search?q={{form.query}}&include_over_18=on')

I wanna make a Lemmy equivalent of this, eventually…

Update: Okay, just did for my instance!

  - trigger: "`lemmy"
    propagate_case: true
    replace: "https://programming.dev/search?q={{lemmy.query}}&type={{lemmy.search}}&listingType=All&page=1&sort={{lemmy.timeframe}}"
    vars:
      - name: "lemmy"
        type: form
        params:
          layout: |
            Query: [[query]]
            Filter: [[search]]Time Frame: [[timeframe]]
          fields:
            query:
            search:
              type: list
              values:
                - All
                - Comments
                - Communities
                - Posts
                - Users
                - URL
              default: All
            timeframe:
              type: list
              values:
                - TopWeek
                - TopMonth
                - TopThreeMonths
                - TopSixMonths
                - TopNineMonths
                - TopYear
                - TopAll
              default: TopAll

It’d be nice to be able to improve the layout’s appearance, but I don’t know how to do that…