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authorGeo Maciolek <geoffmaciolek@gmail.com>2023-12-14 10:29:13 -0500
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2023-12-14 16:29:13 +0100
commitb73467ba0dd5eb5f57b735b5ca9b2668b8c59b61 (patch)
tree7f72ab9e6ba64de9b9c78110b35b3bee854a1b81 /fish.html.markdown
parentc8727c12961f4a1e66e84fe41bee3bff9eb22357 (diff)
Formatting fixes (#4305)
Diffstat (limited to 'fish.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r--fish.html.markdown109
1 files changed, 69 insertions, 40 deletions
diff --git a/fish.html.markdown b/fish.html.markdown
index edbd8909..4b70f883 100644
--- a/fish.html.markdown
+++ b/fish.html.markdown
@@ -3,6 +3,7 @@ category: tool
tool: fish
contributors:
- ["MySurmise", "https://github.com/MySurmise"]
+ - ["Geo Maciolek", "https://github.com/GeoffMaciolek"]
filename: learn.fish
---
@@ -14,45 +15,64 @@ Examples of these features are autosuggestions, 24-bit colors, Man Page Completi
It was released in February 2005.
-[Read more](https://fishshell.com/docs/current/language.html)
+- [Read more](https://fishshell.com/docs/current/language.html)
+- [Installation guide](https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell#getting-fish)
-[Installation guide](https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell#getting-fish)
-
-# Guide
+## Guide
Be sure you have the newest fish shell. This was made with version 3.3.0. To test, type:
+
+```
> fish -v
+```
To start the fish shell, type:
+
+```
> fish
+```
to exit, type:
+
+```
> exit
+```
or press <kbd>Ctrl + D</kbd>
Now, right out of the gate, there's one annoying thing in fish. It's the welcome message. Who needs that, right? When your shell is started, just type:
-> set -U fish_greeting ""
-
-To set that to the wanted value,  .
+```
+> set -U fish_greeting ""
+```
If you want to execute a single command written in bash, without switching to that shell, you can type:
+
+```
> bash -c 'echo "fish is better than bash"'
+```
In fish, you can use single or double quotes.
The escape character is a `\`
You can change your configuration of fish either by editing the config file
+
+```
> vim ~/.config/fish/config.fish
+```
or by opening the aforementioned web settings:
->fish_config
+```
+> fish_config
+```
Adding something to your fish PATH Variable is easy:
+
+```
> fish_path_add ~/cowsay
+```
Can you do that with bash, huh? No, you always have to look it up... It's just that easy!
@@ -60,21 +80,28 @@ But there's more. Most fish-specific commands start, you guessed it, with 'fish'
Now you can navigate with <kbd>TAB</kbd>, <kbd>Shift + TAB</kbd> and your Arrow-Keys <kbd>←</kbd><kbd>↑</kbd><kbd>→</kbd><kbd>↓</kbd>.
To get help, contact your local psychiatrist or type `man`. That will bring up the manual for that command, for example:
+
+```
> man set
+```
If you finally tried fish, you can see something other in fish that's really cool. Everything has cool colors, if you type in something wrong, it is red, without even executing, if you put something in quotes, you see where it ends and why that quote doesn't work, because there's another qoutation mark in the quote at position 26.
fish has even more cool things, like wildcards.
For example, type
+
+```
> ls *.fish
+```
That will list all fish files in your current directory.
You can have multiple wildcards per command or even a recursive wildcard, `**`, which basically means it includes files and directories, that fit.
For example the following command would return (in your case):
-> ls ~/images/**.jpg
```
+> ls ~/images/**.jpg
+
~/images/nudes/pewdiepie.jpg
~/images/nudes/peppa.jpg
~/images/screenshots/2020-42-69.jpg
@@ -83,72 +110,77 @@ For example the following command would return (in your case):
Of course, you can also pipe the output of a command to another command
+```
>echo sick egg, nadia. no u do really goofy shit. | grep [udense]
+```
write to a file:
+```
>echo This\ is\ text > file.txt
+```
(noticed the escape character?)
Add to a file:
+```
>echo This\ is\ a\ line >> file.txt
-
>echo This\ is\ a\ second\ line >> file.txt
+```
For Autocompletion, just always press <kbd>TAB</kbd>. You will be surprised how many things fish knows.
To use variables, just type `$VAR`, like in bash.
+```
> echo "My home is $HOME"
-
-> My home is /home/myuser
+My home is /home/myuser
+```
Here comes a difference between single and double quotes. If you use a variable in single quotes, it will not substitute it.
+```
> echo 'My home is $HOME'
-
-> My home is $HOME
+My home is $HOME
+```
More on variables later.
To execute two commands, separate them with `;`
+
+```
> echo Lol; echo this is fun
+```
The status code of the last command is stored in `$status`
You can use && for two commands that depend on each other.
+```
> set var lol && echo $var
+```
-You can also use and,
-which executes if the previous command was successful
-
-or
-which executes if the previous command was not successful
-
-and not
+You can also use `and` which executes if the previous command was successful,
+`or` which executes if the previous command was not successful, and `not`
which inverts the exit status of a command.
For example:
-
-> if not echo It's very late I should not waste my time with this
-
->> echo Nobody heard you
-
->end
+```
+> if not echo It's very late I should not waste my time with this
+ echo Nobody heard you
+ end
+```
(You can of course do all of that in the shell)
-
---
-Now let's start with the scripting part of fish.
+Now let's start with the scripting part of fish.
As with every shell, you can not only execute commands in the shell, but also as files, saved as a `.fish` file.
(You can also execute `.sh` files with fish syntax, but I always use `.fish` for fish-syntax scripts to distinguish them from bash script files)
-```bash
+```fish
# This is a comment in fish.
#
# If you execute a file without specifying an interpreter,
@@ -165,10 +197,9 @@ As with every shell, you can not only execute commands in the shell, but also as
# for use inside a program, you can use the syntax
set name = 'My Variable'
-
-# use
+# Use...
set -x name value
-# to eXport
+# to eXport, or
set -e name
# to Erase
@@ -188,20 +219,21 @@ count $PATH
# So $PWD for example is a list of length 1.
# To make a list, just give the set command multiple arguments:
set list entry1 entry2 entry3
+
# that way you can also append something to an existing variable:
set PATH $PATH ~/cowsay/
# But, as previously mentioned, we also have a simpler way to do that specifically in fish.
# As with every Array/List, you can access it with
$listvar[2]
+
# there's also ranges with
-$listvar[1..5]
+$listvar[1..5]
+
# and you can use negative numbers like
$listvar[-1]
# e.g to access the last element.
-
-
# You can also do fancy cartesian products when you combine two list variables:
set a 1 2 3
set 1 a b c
@@ -239,7 +271,7 @@ else
echo Got nothing
end
-# A little weird is that you compare stuff with one = sign , of course because we don't need it to set variables, but still... and the keyword "test":
+# A little weird is that you compare stuff with one = sign, of course because we don't need it to set variables, but still... and the keyword "test":
if test $var = "test"
echo yes
else
@@ -304,10 +336,7 @@ end
# Cool!
# The bashrc equivalent is not fishrc, but the previously mentioned config.fish file in ~/.config/fish/
-
# To add a function to fish, though, you should create a simple .fish file in that directory. Don't just paste that function in the config.fish. That's ugly.
-
# If you have more, just add it, but those are the most important basics.
```
-