Starting with autojump 21.0.3+ there is no file autojump in etc/
directory, so we source the autojump.zsh file directly. Version 20 has
it as well, so there should be no problems with earlier versions.
Comments on autojump's update in homebrew:
5da9c4d5eb (Library)/Formula/autojump.rb
Keeps track of the last changed directory. When a new shell is created,
the last directory will be restored. Mimics how tabs works in many
terminal emulators.
* Added urlencode -- alias to encode URLs from the command line using Python
* Added urldecode -- alias to decode URLs from the command line using Python
Use the HISTFILE environment variable in place of copying it to
_per_directory_history_global so that users can change the environment variable
after sourcing per-directory-history and have the global variable set correctly
a plugin for useing the colemak[1] keyboard layout and vi-mode in zsh, rotates
some keys around in vi command mode so that the physical hjkl keys are still
used for movement, all the rotated keys are either in colemak's location or
qwerty's location, so it is easy to pick up
[1] www.colemak.com
This is a implementation of per directory history for zsh, some
implementations of which exist in bash[1,2]. It also implements
a per-directory-history-toggle-history function to change from using the
directory history to using the global history. In both cases the history is
always saved to both the global history and the directory history, so the
toggle state will not effect the saved histories. Being able to switch
between global and directory histories on the fly is a novel feature as far
as I am aware.
[1]: http://www.compbiome.com/2010/07/bash-per-directory-bash-history.html
[2]: http://dieter.plaetinck.be/per_directory_bash
the vi-mode plugin destroys any bindings made before it is sourced due to the
'bindkey -v' call to switch to using vi-mode. This patch saves the bindings
before invoking 'bindkey -v' then rebinds them afterwards, this fixes a number
of outstanding issues due to people using vi-mode and having things in oh-my-zsh
break due to the bindings being destroyed