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- .TH "Z" "1" "January 2013" "z" "User Commands"
- .SH
- NAME
- z \- jump around
- .SH
- SYNOPSIS
- z [\-chlrtx] [regex1 regex2 ... regexn]
- .SH
- AVAILABILITY
- bash, zsh
- .SH
- DESCRIPTION
- Tracks your most used directories, based on 'frecency'.
- .P
- After a short learning phase, \fBz\fR will take you to the most 'frecent'
- directory that matches ALL of the regexes given on the command line, in order.
- For example, \fBz foo bar\fR would match \fB/foo/bar\fR but not \fB/bar/foo\fR.
- .SH
- OPTIONS
- .TP
- \fB\-c\fR
- restrict matches to subdirectories of the current directory
- .TP
- \fB\-h\fR
- show a brief help message
- .TP
- \fB\-l\fR
- list only
- .TP
- \fB\-r\fR
- match by rank only
- .TP
- \fB\-t\fR
- match by recent access only
- .TP
- \fB\-x\fR
- remove the current directory from the datafile
- .SH EXAMPLES
- .TP 14
- \fBz foo\fR
- cd to most frecent dir matching foo
- .TP 14
- \fBz foo bar\fR
- cd to most frecent dir matching foo, then bar
- .TP 14
- \fBz -r foo\fR
- cd to highest ranked dir matching foo
- .TP 14
- \fBz -t foo\fR
- cd to most recently accessed dir matching foo
- .TP 14
- \fBz -l foo\fR
- list all dirs matching foo (by frecency)
- .SH
- NOTES
- .SS
- Installation:
- .P
- Put something like this in your \fB$HOME/.bashrc\fR or \fB$HOME/.zshrc\fR:
- .RS
- .P
- \fB. /path/to/z.sh\fR
- .RE
- .P
- \fBcd\fR around for a while to build up the db.
- .P
- PROFIT!!
- .P
- Optionally:
- .RS
- Set \fB$_Z_CMD\fR to change the command name (default \fBz\fR).
- .RE
- .RS
- Set \fB$_Z_DATA\fR to change the datafile (default \fB$HOME/.z\fR).
- .RE
- .RS
- Set \fB$_Z_NO_RESOLVE_SYMLINKS\fR to prevent symlink resolution.
- .RE
- .RS
- Set \fB$_Z_NO_PROMPT_COMMAND\fR to handle \fBPROMPT_COMMAND/precmd\fR yourself.
- .RE
- .RS
- Set \fB$_Z_EXCLUDE_DIRS\fR to an array of directory trees to exclude.
- .RE
- .RS
- Set \fB$_Z_OWNER\fR to allow usage when in 'sudo -s' mode.
- .RE
- .RS
- (These settings should go in .bashrc/.zshrc before the line added above.)
- .RE
- .RS
- Install the provided man page \fBz.1\fR somewhere like \fB/usr/local/man/man1\fR.
- .RE
- .SS
- Aging:
- The rank of directories maintained by \fBz\fR undergoes aging based on a simple
- formula. The rank of each entry is incremented every time it is accessed. When
- the sum of ranks is over 9000, all ranks are multiplied by 0.99. Entries with a
- rank lower than 1 are forgotten.
- .SS
- Frecency:
- Frecency is a portmanteau of 'recent' and 'frequency'. It is a weighted rank
- that depends on how often and how recently something occurred. As far as I
- know, Mozilla came up with the term.
- .P
- To \fBz\fR, a directory that has low ranking but has been accessed recently
- will quickly have higher rank than a directory accessed frequently a long time
- ago.
- .P
- Frecency is determined at runtime.
- .SS
- Common:
- When multiple directories match all queries, and they all have a common prefix,
- \fBz\fR will cd to the shortest matching directory, without regard to priority.
- This has been in effect, if undocumented, for quite some time, but should
- probably be configurable or reconsidered.
- .SS
- Tab Completion:
- \fBz\fR supports tab completion. After any number of arguments, press TAB to
- complete on directories that match each argument. Due to limitations of the
- completion implementations, only the last argument will be completed in the
- shell.
- .P
- Internally, \fBz\fR decides you've requested a completion if the last argument
- passed is an absolute path to an existing directory. This may cause unexpected
- behavior if the last argument to \fBz\fR begins with \fB/\fR.
- .SH
- ENVIRONMENT
- A function \fB_z()\fR is defined.
- .P
- The contents of the variable \fB$_Z_CMD\fR is aliased to \fB_z 2>&1\fR. If not
- set, \fB$_Z_CMD\fR defaults to \fBz\fR.
- .P
- The environment variable \fB$_Z_DATA\fR can be used to control the datafile
- location. If it is not defined, the location defaults to \fB$HOME/.z\fR.
- .P
- The environment variable \fB$_Z_NO_RESOLVE_SYMLINKS\fR can be set to prevent
- resolving of symlinks. If it is not set, symbolic links will be resolved when
- added to the datafile.
- .P
- In bash, \fBz\fR appends a command to the \fBPROMPT_COMMAND\fR environment
- variable to maintain its database. In zsh, \fBz\fR appends a function
- \fB_z_precmd\fR to the \fBprecmd_functions\fR array.
- .P
- The environment variable \fB$_Z_NO_PROMPT_COMMAND\fR can be set if you want to
- handle \fBPROMPT_COMMAND\fR or \fBprecmd\fR yourself.
- .P
- The environment variable \fB$_Z_EXCLUDE_DIRS\fR can be set to an array of
- directory trees to exclude from tracking. \fB$HOME\fR is always excluded.
- Directories must be full paths without trailing slashes.
- .P
- The environment variable \fB$_Z_OWNER\fR can be set to your username, to
- allow usage of \fBz\fR when your sudo environment keeps \fB$HOME\fR set.
- .SH
- FILES
- Data is stored in \fB$HOME/.z\fR. This can be overridden by setting the
- \fB$_Z_DATA\fR environment variable. When initialized, \fBz\fR will raise an
- error if this path is a directory, and not function correctly.
- .P
- A man page (\fBz.1\fR) is provided.
- .SH
- SEE ALSO
- regex(7), pushd, popd, autojump, cdargs
- .P
- Please file bugs at https://github.com/rupa/z/
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