mirror of
git://git.code.sf.net/p/zsh/code
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498 lines
22 KiB
Text
498 lines
22 KiB
Text
-----------------
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THE Z SHELL (ZSH)
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-----------------
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Version
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-------
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This is version 5.1.1 of the shell. This is a stable release. There are
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a few visible improvements since 5.0.8 as well as many bugfixes. Note
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in particular the two changes highlighted under "Incompatibilites
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between 5.0.8 and 5.1" below. See NEWS for more information.
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There are mostly bug fixes between 5.1 and 5.1.1; however, a few minor
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features useful in resolving problems with shell functions were added.
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Installing Zsh
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--------------
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The instructions for compiling zsh are in the file INSTALL. You should
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also check the file MACHINES in the top directory to see if there
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are any special instructions for your particular architecture.
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Note in particular the zsh/newuser module that guides new users through
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setting basic shell options without the administrator's intervention. This
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is turned on by default. See the section AUTOMATIC NEW USER CONFIGURATION
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in INSTALL for configuration information.
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Features
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--------
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Zsh is a shell with lots of features. For a list of some of these, see the
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file FEATURES, and for the latest changes see NEWS. For more
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details, see the documentation.
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Incompatibilites between 5.0.8 and 5.1
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--------------------------------------
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The default behaviour when text is pasted into an X Windows terminal has
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changed significantly (unless you are using a very old terminal emulator
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that doesn't support this mode). Now, the new "bracketed paste mode"
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treats all the pasted text as literal characters. This means, in
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particular, that a newline is simply inserted as a visible newline; you
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need to hit Return on the keyboard to execute the pasted text in one go.
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See the description of zle_bracketed_paste in the zshparams manual for
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more. "unset zle_bracketed_paste" restores the previous behaviour.
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As noted in NEWS, the builtins declare, export, float, integer, local,
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readonly and typeset now have corresponding reserved words that provide
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true assignment semantics instead of an approximation by means of normal
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command line arguments. It is hoped that this additional consistency
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provides a more natural interface. However, compatbility with older
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versions of zsh can be obtained by turning off the reserved word
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interface, exposing the builtin interface:
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disable -r declare export float integer local readonly typeset
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This is also necessary in the unusual eventuality that the builtins are
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to be overridden by shell functions, since reserved words take
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precedence over functions.
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Incompatibilites between 5.0.7 and 5.0.8
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----------------------------------------
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Various arithmetic operations have changed, in particular with respect
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to the choice of integer or floating point operations. The new
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behaviour is intended to be more consistent, but is not compatible with
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the old.
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1) Previously, the modulus operation, `%', implicitly converted the
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operation to integer and output an integer result, even if one
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or both of the arguments were floating point. Now, the C math
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library fmod() operator is used to implement the operation where
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one of the arguments is floating point. For example:
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Old behavour:
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% print $(( 5.5 % 2 ))
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1
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New behaviour:
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% print $(( 5.5 % 2 ))
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1.5
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2) Previously, assignments to variables assigned the correct type to
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variables declared as floating point or integer, but this type was
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not propagated to the value of the expression, as a C programmer
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would naturally expect. Now, the type of the variable is propagated
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so long as the variable is declared as a numeric type (however this
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happened, e.g. the variable may have been implicitly typed by a
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previous assignment). For example:
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Old behaviour:
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% integer var
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% print $(( var = 5.5 / 2.0 ))
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2.75
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% print $var
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2
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New behaviour:
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% integer var
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% print $(( var = 5.5 / 2.0 ))
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2
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% print $var
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2
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3) Previously, the FORCE_FLOAT option only forced the use of floating
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point in arithmetic expressions for integer constants, i.e. numbers
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typed directly into the expression, but not for variables. Hence
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an operation involving only integer variables (or string variables
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containing integers) was not forced to be performed with floating point
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arithmetic. Now, operations involving variables are also forced to
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floating point. For example:
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Old behaviour:
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% unsetopt FORCE_FLOAT
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% print $(( 1 / 2 ))
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0
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% integer i=1 j=2
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% print $(( i / j ))
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0
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% setopt FORCE_FLOAT
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% print $(( 1 / 2 ))
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0.5
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% print $(( i / j ))
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0
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New behaviour:
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% unsetopt FORCE_FLOAT
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% print $(( 1 / 2 ))
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0
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% integer i=1 j=2
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% print $(( i / j ))
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0
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% setopt FORCE_FLOAT
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% print $(( 1 / 2 ))
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0.5
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% print $(( i / j ))
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0.5
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4) The _git completion used to offer both local and remote heads under the
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tag 'heads'. The tag has now been split into 'heads-local' and
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'heads-remote' in all contexts that existed in 5.0.7. The --fixup/--squash
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context still uses the tag 'heads' (but this may change in a future release).
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Incompatibilities between 5.0.2 and 5.0.5
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-----------------------------------------
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The "zshaddhistory" hook mechanism documented in the zshmisc manual page
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has been upgraded so that a hook returning status 2 causes a history
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line to be saved on the internal history list but not written to the
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history file. Previously any non-zero status return would cause
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the line not to be saved on the history at all. It is recommended
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to use status 1 for this (indeed most shell users would naturally do
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so).
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Incompatibilities between 5.0.0 and 5.0.2
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-----------------------------------------
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In 5.0.0, the new "sticky" emulation feature was applied to functions
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explicitly declared within an expression following `emulate ... -c', but
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did not apply to functions marked for autoload in that expression. This
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was not documented and experience suggests it was inconvenient, so in
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5.0.2 autoloads also have the sticky property.
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In other words,
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emulate zsh -c 'func() { ... }'
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behaves the same way in 5.0.0 and 5.0.2, with the function func always being
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run in native zsh emulation regardless of the current option settings.
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However,
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emulate zsh -c 'autoload -Uz func'
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behaves differently: in 5.0.0, func was loaded with the options in
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effect at the point where it was first run, and subsequently run with
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whatever options were in effect at that point; in 5.0.2, func is loaded
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with native zsh emulation options and run with those same options. This
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is now the recommended way of ensuring a function is loaded and run with
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a consistent set of options.
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Note that the command `autoload -z' has never affected the options
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applied when the function is loaded or run, only the effect of the
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KSH_AUTOLOAD option at the point the function is loaded.
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Possible incompatibilities between 4.2 and 5.0
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----------------------------------------------
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Here are some incompatibilities in the shell since the 4.2 series of
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releases. It is hoped most users will not be adversely affected by these.
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In previous releases of the shell, builtin commands and precommand
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modifiers that did not accept options also did not recognize the
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argument "--" as marking the end of option processing without being
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considered an argument. This was not documented and was incompatible
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with other shells. All such commands now handle this syntax.
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The configuration option --enable-lfs to enable large file support has
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been replaced by autoconf's standard --enable-largefile mechanism.
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As this is usually used whenever necessary, this won't usually
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be noticeable; however, anyone configuring with --disable-lfs
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should configure with --disable-largefile instead.
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The configuration option --with-curses-terminfo has been replaced
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by the option --with-term-lib="LIBS" where LIBS is a space-separated
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list of libraries to search for termcap and curses features.
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The option SH_WORD_SPLIT, used in Bourne/Korn/Posix shell compatibility
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mode, has been made more like other shells in the case of substitutions of
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the form ${1+"$@"} (a common trick used to work around problems in older
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Bourne shells) or any of the related forms with the + replaced by - or =
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with an optional colon preceding. Previously, with SH_WORD_SPLIT in
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effect, this expression would cause splitting on all white space in the
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shell arguments. (This was always regarded as a bug but was long-standing
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behaviour.) Now it is treated identically to "$@". The same change
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applies to expressions with forced splitting such as ${=1+"$@"}, but
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otherwise the case where SH_WORD_SPLIT is not set is unaffected.
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Debug traps (`trap ... DEBUG' or the function TRAPDEBUG) now run by default
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before the command to which they refer instead of after. This is almost
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always the right behaviour for the intended purpose of debugging and is
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consistent with recent versions of other shells. The option
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DEBUG_BEFORE_CMD can be unset to revert to the previous behaviour.
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Previously, process substitutions of the form =(...), <(...) and >(...)
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were only handled if they appeared as separate command arguments.
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(However, the latter two forms caused the current argument to be
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terminated and a new one started even if they occurred in the middle of
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a string.) Now all three may be followed by other strings, and the
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latter two may also be preceded by other strings. Remaining
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limitations on their use (to reduce incompatibilities to a minimum)
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are documented in the zshexpn.1 manual.
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In previous versions of the shell it was possible to use index 0 in an
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array or string subscript to refer to the same element as index 1 if the
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option KSH_ARRAYS was not in effect. This was a limited approximation to
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the full KSH_ARRAYS handling and so was not very useful. In this version
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of the shell, this behaviour is only provided when the option
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KSH_ZERO_SUBSCRIPT is set. Note that despite the name this does not provide
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true compatibility with ksh or other shells and KSH_ARRAYS should still be
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used for that purpose. By default, the option is not set; an array
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subscript that evaluates to 0 returns an empty string or array element and
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attempts to write to an array or string range including only a zero
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subscript are treated as an error. Writes to otherwise valid ranges that
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also include index zero are allowed; hence for example the assignment
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array[(R)notfound,(r)notfound]=()
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(where the string "notfound" does not match an element in $array) sets the
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entire array to be empty, as in previous versions of the shell.
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KSH_ZERO_SUBSCRIPT is irrelevant when KSH_ARRAYS is set. Also as in previous
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versions, attempts to write to non-existent elements at the end of an array
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cause the array to be suitably extended. This difference means that, for
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example
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array[(R)notfound]=(replacement)
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is an error if KSH_ZERO_SUBSCRIPT is not set (new behaviour), while
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array[(r)notfound]=(replacement)
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causes the given value to be appended to the array (same behaviour as
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previous versions).
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The "exec" precommand modifier now takes various options for compatibility
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with other shells. This means that whereas "exec -prog" previously
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tried to execute a command name "-prog", it will now report an error
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in option handling. "exec -- -prog" will execute "-prog". If
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the option EQUALS is set, as it is by default in zsh's native mode,
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"exec =-prog" behaves the same way in all versions of zsh provided
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the command can be found.
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The "unset" builtin now does not regard the unsetting of non-existent
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variables as an error, so can still return status 0 (depending on the
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handling of other arguments). This appears to be the standard shell
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behaviour.
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The variable BAUD is no longer set automatically by the shell.
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In previous versions it was set to the baud rate reported by
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the terminal driver in order to initialise the line editor's
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compensation mechanism for slow baud rates. However, the baud
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rate so reported is very rarely related to the limiting speed of
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screen updates on modern systems. Users who need the compensation
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mechanism should set BAUD to an appropriate rate by hand.
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The variable HOME is no longer set by the shell if zsh is emulating any
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other shell at startup; it must be present in the environment or set
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subsequently by the user. It is valid for the variable to be unset.
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If the shell starts in a mode where it is emulating another shell
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(typically because the base name of the shell was "sh" or another known
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shell), the "repeat" syntax is not available by default, to avoid clashes
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with external commands, but the "ulimit" command is available by default.
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"limit", "sched" and "unlimit" are not available by default in such modes:
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this has been the case for many versions but is now documented for the
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first time. (Users should note that emulation modes are not designed for
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backwards compatibility with previous versions of zsh, but to maximise
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compatibility with other shells, hence it is not safe to assume emulation
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modes will behave consistently between zsh versions.)
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Parameter substitutions in the form ${param//#%search/replace} match
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against "search" anchored at both ends of the parameter value. Previously
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this syntax would have matched against "%search", anchored only at the head
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of the value. The form ${param//#$search/replace} where the value
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$search starts with "%" considers the "%" to be part of the search
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string as before.
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Configure attempts to decide if multibyte characters are supported by the
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system and if so sets the effect of --enable-multibyte, unless
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--disable-multibyte was passed on the command line. When
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--enable-multibyte is in effect, the MULTIBYTE shell option is on by
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default; this causes many operations to recognise characters in the current
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locale. (Most typically this is used for a UTF-8 character set but the
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shell will work with any character set provided by the system where
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individual octets are either US ASCII characters or have the top bit set.)
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Older versions of the shell always assumed a character was one byte; this
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remains the case if --disable-multibyte is in effect or if the MULTIBYTE
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option is unset. In some places the width of characters will be taken into
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account where previously a raw string length was used; this is transparent
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in calculations of screen position, but also occurs, for example, in
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calculations of padding width. Note that MULTIBYTE is not automatically
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set when emulating Bourne- and POSIX-style shells; for interactive use of
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these emulations it may be necessary to set it by hand. Note also that the
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option COMBINING_CHARS is not set by default due to difficulties detecting
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the ability of the terminal to display combining characters correctly; MAC
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users in particular will probably wish to set this option.
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Zsh has previously been lax about whether it allows octets with the
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top bit set to be part of a shell identifier. Older versions of the shell
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assumed all such octets were allowed in identifiers, however the POSIX
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standard does not allow such characters in identifiers. The older
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behaviour is still obtained with --disable-multibyte in effect.
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With --enable-multibyte in effect (see previous paragraph) there are three
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possible cases:
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MULTIBYTE option unset: only ASCII characters are allowed; the
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shell does not attempt to identify non-ASCII characters at all.
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MULTIBYTE option set, POSIX_IDENTIFIERS option unset: in addition
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to the POSIX characters, any alphanumeric characters in the
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local character set are allowed. Note that scripts and functions that
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take advantage of this are non-portable; however, this is in the spirit
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of previous versions of the shell. Note also that the options must
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be set before the shell parses the script or function; setting
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them during execution is not sufficient.
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MULITBYTE option set, POSIX_IDENTIFIERS set: only ASCII characters
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are allowed in identifiers even though the shell will recognise
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alphanumeric multibyte characters.
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The sched builtin now keeps entries in time order. This means that
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after adding an entry the index of an existing entry used for deletion
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may change, if that entry had a later time than the new entry. However,
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deleting a entry with a later time will now never change the index of an
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entry with an earlier time, which could happen with the previous method.
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The completion style pine-directory must now be set to use completion
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for PINE mailbox folders; previously it had the default ~/mail. This
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change was necessary because otherwise recursive directories under
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~/mail were searched by default, which could be a considerable unnecessary
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hit for anyone not using PINE. The previous default can be restored with:
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zstyle ':completion:*' pine-directory ~/mail
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The completion style fake-files now allows patterns as directories,
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for example the value '/home/*:.snapshot' is now valid. This will
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only cause problems in the unlikely event that a directory in the style
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has a pattern character in it.
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The default maximum function depth (configurable with
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--enable-max-function-depth) has been decreased to 1000 from 4096. The
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previous value was observed to be small enough that crashes still occurred
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on some fairly common PC configurations. This change is only likely to
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affect some highly specialised uses of the shell.
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The variables HISTCHARS and histchars now reject any attempt to
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set non-ASCII characters for history or comments. Multibyte characters
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have never worked and the most consistent change was to restrict the
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set to portable characters only.
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Writers of add-on modules should note that the API has changed
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significantly to allow user control of individual features provided by
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modules. See the documentation for zmodload -F and
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Etc/zsh-development-guide, in that order.
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Documentation
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-------------
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There are a number of documents about zsh in this distribution:
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Doc/Zsh/*.yo The master source for the zsh documentation is written in
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yodl. Yodl is a document language written by Karel Kubat.
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It is not required by zsh but it is a nice program so you
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might want to get it anyway, especially if you are a zsh
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developer. It can be downloaded from
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ftp://yodl.sourceforge.net/
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Doc/zsh*.1 Man pages in nroff format. These will be installed
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by "make install.man" or "make install". By default,
|
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these will be installed in /usr/local/man/man1, although
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you can change this with the --mandir option to configure
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or editing the user configuration section of the top level
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Makefile.
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Doc/zsh.texi Everything the man pages have, but in texinfo format. These
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will be installed by "make install.info" or "make install".
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By default, these will be installed in /usr/local/info,
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although you can change this with the --infodir option to
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configure or editing the user configuration section of the
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top level Makefile. Version 4.0 or above of the
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Texinfo tools are recommended for processing this file.
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Also included in the distribution are:
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Doc/intro.ms An introduction to zsh in troff format using the ms
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macros. This document explains many of the features
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that make zsh more equal than other shells.
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Unfortunately this is based on zsh-2.5 so some examples
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may not work without changes but it is still a good
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introduction.
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For more information, see the website, as described in the META-FAQ.
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If you do not have the necessary tools to process these documents, PDF,
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Info and DVI versions are available in the separate file zsh-doc.tar.gz at
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the archive sites listed in the META-FAQ.
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The distribution also contains a Perl script in Utils/helpfiles which
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can be used to extract the descriptions of builtin commands from the
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zshbuiltins manual page. See the comments at the beginning of the
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script about its usage. The files created by this script can be used
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by example function run-help located in the subdirectory Functions/Misc to
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show information about zsh builtins and run `man' on external commands.
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For this the shell variable HELPDIR should point to a directory containing
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the files generated by the helpfiles script. run-help should be
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unaliased before loading the run-help function. After that this function
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will be executed by the run-help ZLE function which is by default bound
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to ESC-h in emacs mode.
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Examples
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--------
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Examples of zsh startup files are located in the subdirectory
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StartupFiles. Examples of zsh functions and scripts are located in
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the subdirectory Functions. Examples of completion control commands
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(compctl) are located in the file Misc/compctl-examples.
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Zsh FTP Sites, Web Pages, and Mailing Lists
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-------------------------------------------
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The current list of zsh FTP sites, web pages, and mailing lists can be
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found in the META-FAQ. A copy is included in this distribution and is
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available separately at any of the zsh FTP sites.
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Common Problems and Frequently Asked Questions
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----------------------------------------------
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Zsh has a list of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) maintained by Peter
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Stephenson <pws@zsh.org>. It covers many common problems encountered
|
|
when building, installing, and using zsh. A copy is included in this
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distribution in Etc/FAQ and is available separately at any of the zsh
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ftp sites.
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Zsh Maintenance and Bug Reports
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-------------------------------
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Zsh is currently maintained by the members of the zsh-workers mailing list
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and coordinated by Peter Stephenson <coordinator@zsh.org>. Please send
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any feedback and bugs reports to <zsh-workers@zsh.org>.
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Reports are most helpful if you can reproduce the bug starting zsh with
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the -f option. This skips the execution of local startup files except
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/etc/zshenv. If a bug occurs only when some options set try to locate
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the option which triggers the bug.
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There is a script "reporter" in the subdirectory Util which will print out
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your current shell environment/setup. If you cannot reproduce the bug
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with "zsh -f", use this script and include the output from sourcing this
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file. This way, the problem you are reporting can be recreated.
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The known bugs in zsh are listed in the file Etc/BUGS. Check this as
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|
well as the Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) list before sending a bug
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report. Note that zsh has some features which are not compatible with
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|
sh but these are not bugs. Most of these incompatibilities go away
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when zsh is invoked as sh or ksh (e.g. using a symbolic link).
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If you send a bug report to the list and are not a subscriber, please
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mention this in your message if you want a response.
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If you would like to contribute to the development and maintenance of zsh,
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then you should join the zsh-workers mailing list (check the META-FAQ
|
|
for info on this). You should also read the "zsh-development-guide"
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|
located in the subdirectory Etc.
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Contributors
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------------
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The people who have contributed to this software project are listed
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in Etc/CONTRIBUTORS.
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