fish-shell/share/functions/abbr_old.fish
Kurtis Rader 17dff8c569 rewrite abbr function
Rewrite the `abbr` function to store each abbreviation in a separate
variable. This greatly improves the efficiency. For the common case
it is 5x faster. For pathological cases it is upwards of 100x faster.
Most people should be able to unconditionally define abbreviations in
their config.fish without a noticable slow down.

Fixes #4048
2017-08-03 14:35:06 -07:00

207 lines
6.8 KiB
Fish

function abbr_old --description "Manage abbreviations using old fish 2.x scheme."
# parse arguments
set -l mode
set -l mode_flag # the flag that was specified, for better errors
set -l mode_arg
set -l needs_arg no
while set -q argv[1]
set -l new_mode
switch $argv[1]
case '-h' '--help'
__fish_print_help abbr
return 0
case '-a' '--add'
set new_mode add
set needs_arg multi
case '-r' '--rename'
set new_mode rename
set needs_arg double
case '-e' '--erase'
set new_mode erase
set needs_arg single
case '-l' '--list'
set new_mode list
case '-s' '--show'
set new_mode show
case '--'
set -e argv[1]
break
case '-*'
printf ( _ "%s: invalid option -- %s\n" ) abbr $argv[1] >&2
return 1
case '*'
break
end
if test -n "$mode" -a -n "$new_mode"
# we're trying to set two different modes
printf ( _ "%s: %s cannot be specified along with %s\n" ) abbr $argv[1] $mode_flag >&2
return 1
end
set mode $new_mode
set mode_flag $argv[1]
set -e argv[1]
end
# If run with no options, treat it like --add if we have an argument, or
# --show if we do not have an argument
if not set -q mode[1]
if set -q argv[1]
set mode add
set needs_arg multi
else
set mode show
end
end
if test $needs_arg = single
set mode_arg $argv[1]
set needs_arg no
set -e argv[1]
else if test $needs_arg = double
# Pull the two parameters from argv.
# * leave argv non-empty, if there are more than two arguments
# * leave needs_arg set to double if there is not enough arguments
if set -q argv[1]
set param1 $argv[1]
set -e argv[1]
if set -q argv[1]
set param2 $argv[1]
set needs_arg no
set -e argv[1]
end
end
else if test $needs_arg = multi
set mode_arg $argv
set needs_arg no
set -e argv
end
if test $needs_arg != no
printf ( _ "%s: option requires an argument -- %s\n" ) abbr $mode_flag >&2
return 1
end
# none of our modes want any excess arguments
if set -q argv[1]
printf ( _ "%s: Unexpected argument -- %s\n" ) abbr $argv[1] >&2
return 1
end
switch $mode
case 'add'
# Convert from old "key=value" syntax
# TODO: This should be removed later
if not set -q mode_arg[2]
and string match -qr '^[^ ]+=' -- $mode_arg
set mode_arg (string split "=" -- $mode_arg)
end
# Bail out early if the exact abbr is already in
set -q fish_user_abbreviations
and contains -- "$mode_arg" $fish_user_abbreviations
and return 0
set -l key $mode_arg[1]
set -e mode_arg[1]
set -l value "$mode_arg"
# Because we later store "$key $value", there can't be any spaces in the key
if string match -q "* *" -- $key
printf ( _ "%s: abbreviation cannot have spaces in the key\n" ) abbr >&2
return 1
end
if test -z "$value"
printf ( _ "%s: abbreviation must have a value\n" ) abbr >&2
return 1
end
if set -l idx (__fish_abbr_get_by_key $key)
# erase the existing abbreviation
set -e fish_user_abbreviations[$idx]
end
if not set -q fish_user_abbreviations
# initialize as a universal variable, so we can skip the -U later
# and therefore work properly if someone sets this as a global variable
set -U fish_user_abbreviations
end
set fish_user_abbreviations $fish_user_abbreviations "$key $value"
return 0
case 'rename'
set -l old_name $param1
set -l new_name $param2
# if the target name already exists, throw an error
if set -l idx (__fish_abbr_get_by_key $new_name)
printf ( _ "%s: abbreviation '%s' already exists, cannot rename\n" ) abbr $new_name >&2
return 2
end
# Because we later store "$key $value", there can't be any spaces in the key
if string match -q "* *" -- $new_name
printf ( _ "%s: abbreviation cannot have spaces in the key\n" ) abbr >&2
return 1
end
set -l idx (__fish_abbr_get_by_key $old_name)
or begin
printf ( _ "%s: no such abbreviation '%s'\n" ) abbr $old_name >&2
return 2
end
set -l value (string split " " -m 1 -- $fish_user_abbreviations[$idx])[2]
set fish_user_abbreviations[$idx] "$new_name $value"
return 0
case 'erase'
if set -l idx (__fish_abbr_get_by_key $mode_arg)
set -e fish_user_abbreviations[$idx]
return 0
else
printf ( _ "%s: no such abbreviation '%s'\n" ) abbr $mode_arg >&2
return 2
end
case 'show'
for i in $fish_user_abbreviations
set -l opt_double_dash
set -l kv (string split " " -m 1 -- $i)
set -l key $kv[1]
set -l value $kv[2]
# Check to see if either key or value has a leading dash
# If so, we need to write --
string match -q -- '-*' $key $value
and set opt_double_dash '--'
echo abbr $opt_double_dash (string escape -- $key $value)
end
return 0
case 'list'
for i in $fish_user_abbreviations
set -l key (string split " " -m 1 -- $i)[1]
printf "%s\n" $key
end
return 0
end
end
function __fish_abbr_get_by_key
if not set -q argv[1]
echo "__fish_abbr_get_by_key: expected one argument, got none" >&2
return 2
end
set -q fish_user_abbreviations
or return 1
# Going through all entries is still quicker than calling `seq`
set -l keys
for kv in $fish_user_abbreviations
# If this does not match, we have screwed up before and the error should be reported
set keys $keys (string split " " -m 1 -- $kv)[1]
end
if set -l idx (contains -i -- $argv[1] $keys)
echo $idx
return 0
end
return 1
end