functions.zsh 6.11 KB
Newer Older
1
function zsh_stats() {
2
  fc -l 1 | awk '{CMD[$2]++;count++;}END { for (a in CMD)print CMD[a] " " CMD[a]/count*100 "% " a;}' | grep -v "./" | column -c3 -s " " -t | sort -nr | nl |  head -n20
Robby Russell's avatar
Robby Russell committed
3
4
5
}

function uninstall_oh_my_zsh() {
6
  env ZSH=$ZSH sh $ZSH/tools/uninstall.sh
Robby Russell's avatar
Robby Russell committed
7
8
}

9
function upgrade_oh_my_zsh() {
10
  env ZSH=$ZSH sh $ZSH/tools/upgrade.sh
11
12
}

Geoff Garside's avatar
Geoff Garside committed
13
function take() {
14
  mkdir -p $@ && cd ${@:$#}
Geoff Garside's avatar
Geoff Garside committed
15
}
16

17
18
19
20
21
function open_command() {
  local open_cmd

  # define the open command
  case "$OSTYPE" in
22
23
    darwin*)  open_cmd='open' ;;
    cygwin*)  open_cmd='cygstart' ;;
24
25
26
27
    linux*)   ! [[ $(uname -a) =~ "Microsoft" ]] && open_cmd='xdg-open' || {
                open_cmd='cmd.exe /c start ""'
                [[ -e "$1" ]] && { 1="$(wslpath -w "${1:a}")" || return 1 }
              } ;;
28
    msys*)    open_cmd='start ""' ;;
29
30
31
32
33
    *)        echo "Platform $OSTYPE not supported"
              return 1
              ;;
  esac

34
  # don't use nohup on OSX
Marc Cornellà's avatar
Marc Cornellà committed
35
  if [[ "$OSTYPE" == darwin* ]]; then
Marc Cornellà's avatar
Marc Cornellà committed
36
    ${=open_cmd} "$@" &>/dev/null
Marc Cornellà's avatar
Marc Cornellà committed
37
  else
Marc Cornellà's avatar
Marc Cornellà committed
38
    nohup ${=open_cmd} "$@" &>/dev/null
Marc Cornellà's avatar
Marc Cornellà committed
39
  fi
40
41
}

42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
#
# Get the value of an alias.
#
# Arguments:
#    1. alias - The alias to get its value from
# STDOUT:
#    The value of alias $1 (if it has one).
# Return value:
#    0 if the alias was found,
#    1 if it does not exist
#
function alias_value() {
54
    (( $+aliases[$1] )) && echo $aliases[$1]
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
}

#
# Try to get the value of an alias,
# otherwise return the input.
#
# Arguments:
#    1. alias - The alias to get its value from
# STDOUT:
#    The value of alias $1, or $1 if there is no alias $1.
# Return value:
#    Always 0
#
function try_alias_value() {
    alias_value "$1" || echo "$1"
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
}

#
# Set variable "$1" to default value "$2" if "$1" is not yet defined.
#
# Arguments:
#    1. name - The variable to set
77
#    2. val  - The default value
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
# Return value:
#    0 if the variable exists, 3 if it was set
#
function default() {
    test `typeset +m "$1"` && return 0
    typeset -g "$1"="$2"   && return 3
}

#
87
# Set environment variable "$1" to default value "$2" if "$1" is not yet defined.
88
89
90
#
# Arguments:
#    1. name - The env variable to set
91
#    2. val  - The default value
92
93
94
95
# Return value:
#    0 if the env variable exists, 3 if it was set
#
function env_default() {
96
    env | grep -q "^$1=" && return 0
97
    export "$1=$2"       && return 3
98
}
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110


# Required for $langinfo
zmodload zsh/langinfo

# URL-encode a string
#
# Encodes a string using RFC 2396 URL-encoding (%-escaped).
# See: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt
#
# By default, reserved characters and unreserved "mark" characters are
# not escaped by this function. This allows the common usage of passing
111
# an entire URL in, and encoding just special characters in it, with
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
# the expectation that reserved and mark characters are used appropriately.
# The -r and -m options turn on escaping of the reserved and mark characters,
# respectively, which allows arbitrary strings to be fully escaped for
# embedding inside URLs, where reserved characters might be misinterpreted.
#
# Prints the encoded string on stdout.
# Returns nonzero if encoding failed.
#
# Usage:
121
#  omz_urlencode [-r] [-m] [-P] <string>
122
#
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
#    -r causes reserved characters (;/?:@&=+$,) to be escaped
#
#    -m causes "mark" characters (_.!~*''()-) to be escaped
#
#    -P causes spaces to be encoded as '%20' instead of '+'
function omz_urlencode() {
  emulate -L zsh
  zparseopts -D -E -a opts r m P

  local in_str=$1
  local url_str=""
  local spaces_as_plus
  if [[ -z $opts[(r)-P] ]]; then spaces_as_plus=1; fi
  local str="$in_str"

  # URLs must use UTF-8 encoding; convert str to UTF-8 if required
  local encoding=$langinfo[CODESET]
  local safe_encodings
  safe_encodings=(UTF-8 utf8 US-ASCII)
  if [[ -z ${safe_encodings[(r)$encoding]} ]]; then
    str=$(echo -E "$str" | iconv -f $encoding -t UTF-8)
    if [[ $? != 0 ]]; then
      echo "Error converting string from $encoding to UTF-8" >&2
      return 1
    fi
  fi

  # Use LC_CTYPE=C to process text byte-by-byte
  local i byte ord LC_ALL=C
  export LC_ALL
  local reserved=';/?:@&=+$,'
  local mark='_.!~*''()-'
  local dont_escape="[A-Za-z0-9"
  if [[ -z $opts[(r)-r] ]]; then
    dont_escape+=$reserved
  fi
  # $mark must be last because of the "-"
  if [[ -z $opts[(r)-m] ]]; then
    dont_escape+=$mark
  fi
  dont_escape+="]"

  # Implemented to use a single printf call and avoid subshells in the loop,
  # for performance (primarily on Windows).
  local url_str=""
  for (( i = 1; i <= ${#str}; ++i )); do
    byte="$str[i]"
    if [[ "$byte" =~ "$dont_escape" ]]; then
      url_str+="$byte"
    else
      if [[ "$byte" == " " && -n $spaces_as_plus ]]; then
        url_str+="+"
      else
        ord=$(( [##16] #byte ))
        url_str+="%$ord"
      fi
    fi
  done
  echo -E "$url_str"
}

# URL-decode a string
#
# Decodes a RFC 2396 URL-encoded (%-escaped) string.
187
188
# This decodes the '+' and '%' escapes in the input string, and leaves
# other characters unchanged. Does not enforce that the input is a
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
# valid URL-encoded string. This is a convenience to allow callers to
# pass in a full URL or similar strings and decode them for human
# presentation.
#
# Outputs the encoded string on stdout.
# Returns nonzero if encoding failed.
#
# Usage:
#   omz_urldecode <urlstring>  - prints decoded string followed by a newline
function omz_urldecode {
  emulate -L zsh
  local encoded_url=$1

  # Work bytewise, since URLs escape UTF-8 octets
  local caller_encoding=$langinfo[CODESET]
  local LC_ALL=C
  export LC_ALL
206

207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
  # Change + back to ' '
  local tmp=${encoded_url:gs/+/ /}
  # Protect other escapes to pass through the printf unchanged
  tmp=${tmp:gs/\\/\\\\/}
  # Handle %-escapes by turning them into `\xXX` printf escapes
  tmp=${tmp:gs/%/\\x/}
  local decoded
  eval "decoded=\$'$tmp'"

  # Now we have a UTF-8 encoded string in the variable. We need to re-encode
  # it if caller is in a non-UTF-8 locale.
  local safe_encodings
  safe_encodings=(UTF-8 utf8 US-ASCII)
  if [[ -z ${safe_encodings[(r)$caller_encoding]} ]]; then
    decoded=$(echo -E "$decoded" | iconv -f UTF-8 -t $caller_encoding)
    if [[ $? != 0 ]]; then
      echo "Error converting string from UTF-8 to $caller_encoding" >&2
      return 1
    fi
  fi

  echo -E "$decoded"
}