Like I mentioned in #9089, 12 entries is a bit few.
So, instead, we do like we do for completions before disclosing and
pick half the screen (but at least X, in this case 12).
This avoids filling the entire screen, and will avoid an unsightly "X
more entries" (which requires scrolling down to fully disclose)
because it matches what the pager does.
Note: For multiline commands we can be pushed further upwards, and in
case of a multi-column layout we could fit more lines. That would
require asking the pager to fit as many as possible and give us back
the index of the last matching entry and rewinding the history search.
That's gonna be left as an exercise for later if it turns out to be necessary.
This keeps tripping people up. We can't mention it *everywhere*, but
lets see if it works just in "match", since that sees to be where
people hit it most.
This used the naive `__fish_seen_subcommand_from`, which isn't
powerful enough once you allow for `conda create` and `conda env
create`.
Hattip to jvanheugten for the env completions.
Fixes#9452
On macOS, fish_git_prompt was failing to correctly handle the case where
another git was installed, e.g. /usr/local/bin/git from Homebrew.
Disable the workarounds in that case.
On macOS, fish_git_prompt was failing to correctly handle the case where
another git was installed, e.g. /usr/local/bin/git from Homebrew.
Disable the workarounds in that case.
a lynx-internal hash of div.contents collided with em>a which caused
built-in styling to render much of entire pages as emphasized links.
Since switching from doxygen, we haven't had a <div class="contents">
so this workaround is no longer needed.
Our macOS workarounds involve running "xcrun" to check if Git is installed.
On a freshly upgraded Ventura system that does not have XCode or
CommandLineTools installed, "xcrun" will print this error:
xcrun: error: invalid active developer path (/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools), missing xcrun at: /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/xcrun
on every prompt. Let's silence this error.
(cherry picked from commit a0840637fa)
Our macOS workarounds involve running "xcrun" to check if Git is installed.
On a freshly upgraded Ventura system that does not have XCode or
CommandLineTools installed, "xcrun" will print this error:
xcrun: error: invalid active developer path (/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools), missing xcrun at: /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/xcrun
on every prompt. Let's silence this error.
These four completions all have a strange pattern (that doesn't
work.)
set -l subcommands cmd1 cmd2 cmd3 ...
complete -n "__fish_use_subcommand $subcommands" -c foo -a cmd1
complete -n "__fish_use_subcommand $subcommands" -c foo -a cmd2
complete -n "__fish_use_subcommand $subcommands" -c foo -a cmd3
Remove the redundant lists of subcommands and the unused argument
passed to __fish_use_subcommand for bosh, cf, mariner, and port.
- fix complete condition
- add short flag
the conditions are not include short flags currently.
and conditions are not right, causing the complete to not work as expected.
The `git` can already have finished here, leading to "disown: There
are no suitable jobs". This has caused a failure on Github Actions.
So we do $last_pid and silence all output, like we do in other spots
This allows linking them from elsewhere (currently fish_indent) and
also improves the formatting - the code formatting here isn't actually a good look.
macOS ships with a stub `/usr/bin/python3` which by default opens a
dialog to install the command line tools. As we run `python3` initially
at launch, this causes the dialog to appear on first run of fish, if the
command line tools are not installed.
Fix this by detecting the case of `/usr/bin/python3` on Darwin without
the command line tools installed, and do not offer that as a viable
python.