function __fish_paste # Also split on \r, otherwise it looks confusing set -l data (string split \r -- $argv[1] | string split \n) set data (string replace -ra [[:cntrl:]] '' -- $data) if commandline --search-field >/dev/null commandline --search-field -i -- $data return end # If the current token has an unmatched single-quote, # escape all single-quotes (and backslashes) in the paste, # in order to turn it into a single literal token. # # This eases pasting non-code (e.g. markdown or git commitishes). set -l quote_state (__fish_tokenizer_state -- (commandline -ct | string collect)) if contains -- $quote_state single single-escaped if status test-feature regex-easyesc set data (string replace -ra "(['\\\])" '\\\\$1' -- $data) else set data (string replace -ra "(['\\\])" '\\\\\\\$1' -- $data) end else if not contains -- $quote_state double double-escaped and set -q data[2] # Leading whitespace in subsequent lines is unneded, since fish # already indents. Also gets rid of tabs (issue #5274). set -l tmp for line in $data switch $quote_state case normal set -a tmp (string trim -l -- $line) case single single-escaped double double-escaped escaped set -a tmp $line end set quote_state (__fish_tokenizer_state -i $quote_state -- $line) end set data $data[1] $tmp[2..] end if not string length -q -- (commandline -c) # If we're at the beginning of the first line, trim whitespace from the start, # so we don't trigger ignoring history. set data[1] (string trim -l -- $data[1]) end if test -n "$data" commandline -i -- $data end end