Plugin for cycling through the directory stack
This plugin enables directory navigation similar to using back and forward on browsers or common file explorers like Finder or Nautilus. It uses a small zle trick that lets you cycle through your directory stack left or right using Ctrl + Shift + Left / Right . This is useful when moving back and forth between directories in development environments, and can be thought of as kind of a nondestructive pushd/popd.
.zshrc
file and add dircycle
in the plugins section: plugins=(
# all your enabled plugins
dircycle
)
$ source ~/.zshrc
$
Say you opened these directories on the terminal:
~$ cd Projects
~/Projects$ cd Hacktoberfest
~/Projects/Hacktoberfest$ cd oh-my-zsh
~/Projects/Hacktoberfest/oh-my-zsh$ dirs -v
0 ~/Projects/Hacktoberfest/oh-my-zsh
1 ~/Projects/Hacktoberfest
2 ~/Projects
3 ~
By pressing Ctrl + Shift + Left, the current working directory or $CWD
will be from oh-my-zsh
to Hacktoberfest
. Press it again and it will be at Projects
.
And by pressing Ctrl + Shift + Right, the $CWD
will be from Projects
to Hacktoberfest
. Press it again and it will be at oh-my-zsh
.
Here's a example history table with the same accessed directories like above:
Current $CWD |
Key press | New $CWD |
---|---|---|
oh-my-zsh |
Ctrl + Shift + Left | Hacktoberfest |
Hacktoberfest |
Ctrl + Shift + Left | Projects |
Projects |
Ctrl + Shift + Left | ~ |
~ |
Ctrl + Shift + Right | Projects |
Projects |
Ctrl + Shift + Right | Hacktoberfest |
Hacktoberfest |
Ctrl + Shift + Right | oh-my-zsh |
oh-my-zsh |
Ctrl + Shift + Right | ~ |
Note the last traversal, when pressing Ctrl + Shift + Right on a last known $CWD
, it will change back to the first known $CWD
, which in the example is ~
.
Here's an asciinema cast demonstrating the example above:
Function | Description |
---|---|
insert-cycledleft |
Change $CWD to the previous known stack, binded on Ctrl + Shift + Left |
insert-cycledright |
Change $CWD to the next known stack, binded on Ctrl + Shift + Right |
You can bind these functions to other key sequences, as long as you know the bindkey sequence. For example, these commands bind to Alt + Shift + Left / Right in xterm-256color
:
bindkey '^[[1;4D' insert-cycledleft
bindkey '^[[1;4C' insert-cycledright
You can get the bindkey sequence by pressing Ctrl + V, then pressing the keyboard shortcut you want to use.