csh and tcsh offer a certain amount of functionality in manipulating the command line. Both shells offer word or command completion, and tcsh allows you to edit a command line.
Both tcsh and csh provide word completion. tcsh automatically completes words and commands when the Tab key is hit; csh does so only when the filec variable is set, after the Esc key is hit. If the completion is ambiguous (i.e., more than one file matches the provided string), the shell completes as much as possible and beeps to notify you that the completion is not finished. You may request a list of possible completions with Ctrl-D. tcsh also notifies you when a completion is finished by appending a space to complete filenames or commands and a / to complete directories.
Both csh and tcsh recognize ~ notation for home directories. The shells assume that words at the beginning of a line and subsequent to |, &, ;, ||, or && are commands and modify their search paths appropriately. Completion can be done midword; only the letters to the left of the prompt are checked for completion.
autolist
fignore
listmax
listmaxrows
complete-word-back
complete-word-forward
expand-glob
list-glob
complete
uncomplete
tcsh lets you move your cursor around in the command line, editing the line as you type. There are two main modes for editing the command line, based on the two most common text editors: Emacs and vi. Emacs mode is the default; you can switch between the modes with:
bindkey -e Select Emacs bindings bindkey -v Select vi bindings
The main difference between the Emacs and vi bindings is that the Emacs bindings are modeless (i.e., they always work). With the vi bindings, you must switch between insert and command modes; different commands are useful in each mode. Additionally:
Emacs mode is simpler; vi mode allows finer control.
Emacs mode allows you to yank cut text and set a mark; vi mode does not.
The command-history-searching capabilities differ.
Table 8-1 through Table 8-3 describe the various editing keystrokes available in Emacs mode.
Command | Description |
---|---|
Ctrl-B | Move cursor back (left) one character. |
Ctrl-F | Move cursor forward (right) one character. |
Esc b | Move cursor back one word. |
Esc f | Move cursor forward one word. |
Ctrl-A | Move cursor to beginning of line. |
Ctrl-E | Move cursor to end of line. |
Command | Description |
---|---|
Del or Ctrl-H | Delete character to left of cursor. |
Ctrl-D | Delete character under cursor. |
Esc d | Delete word. |
Esc Del or Esc Ctrl-H | Delete word backward. |
Ctrl-K | Delete from cursor to end-of-line. |
Ctrl-U | Delete entire line. |
Command | Description |
---|---|
Ctrl-P | Previous command. |
Ctrl-N | Next command. |
Up arrow | Previous command. |
Down arrow | Next command. |
cmd-fragment Esc p | Search history for cmd-fragment, which must be the beginning of a command. |
cmd-fragment Esc n | Like Esc p, but search forward. |
Esc num | Repeat next command num times. |
Ctrl-Y | Yank previously deleted string. |
vi mode has two submodes, insert mode and command mode. The default mode is insert. You can toggle modes by pressing Esc; alternatively, in command mode, typing a (append) or i (insert) will return you to insert mode.
Tables 8-4 through 8-10 describe the editing keystrokes available in vi mode.
Command | Description |
---|---|
Ctrl-P | Previous command |
Ctrl-N | Next command |
Up arrow | Previous command |
Down arrow | Next command |
Esc | Toggle mode |
Command | Description |
---|---|
Ctrl-B | Move cursor back (left) one character. |
Ctrl-F | Move cursor forward (right) one character. |
Ctrl-A | Move cursor to beginning of line. |
Ctrl-E | Move cursor to end-of-line. |
DEL or Ctrl-H | Delete character to left of cursor. |
Ctrl-W | Delete word backward. |
Ctrl-U | Delete from beginning of line to cursor. |
Ctrl-K | Delete from cursor to end-of-line. |
Command | Description |
---|---|
h or Ctrl-H | Move cursor back (left) one character. |
l or SPACE | Move cursor forward (right) one character. |
w | Move cursor forward (right) one word. |
b | Move cursor back (left) one word. |
e | Move cursor to next word ending. |
W, B, E |
Like w, b, and e, but treat just whitespace as word separator instead of any non-alphanumeric character. |
^ or Ctrl-A | Move cursor to beginning of line (first nonwhitespace character). |
0 | Move cursor to beginning of line. |
$ or Ctrl-E | Move cursor to end-of-line. |
Command | Description |
---|---|
a | Append new text after cursor until Esc. |
i | Insert new text before cursor until Esc. |
A | Append new text after end of line until Esc. |
I | Insert new text before beginning of line until Esc. |
Command | Description |
---|---|
x | Delete character under cursor. |
X or Del | Delete character to left of cursor. |
dm | Delete from cursor to end of motion command m. |
D | Same as d$. |
Ctrl-W | Delete word backward. |
Ctrl-U | Delete from beginning of line to cursor. |
Ctrl-K | Delete from cursor to end of line. |
Command | Description |
---|---|
cm | Change characters from cursor to end of motion command m until Esc. |
C | Same as c$. |
rc | Replace character under cursor with character c. |
R | Replace multiple characters until Esc. |
s | Substitute character under cursor with characters typed until Esc. |
Command | Description |
---|---|
fc | Move cursor to next instance of c in line. |
Fc | Move cursor to previous instance of c in line. |
tc | Move cursor just before next instance of c in line. |
Tc | Move cursor just after previous instance of c in line. |
; | Repeat previous f or F command. |
, | Repeat previous f or F command in opposite direction. |
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