# zsh-history-substring-search

This is a clean-room implementation of the [Fish shell][1]'s history search
feature, where you can type in any part of any command from history and then
press chosen keys, such as the UP and DOWN arrows, to cycle through matches.

[1]: http://fishshell.com
[2]: http://www.zsh.org/mla/users/2009/msg00818.html
[3]: http://sourceforge.net/projects/fizsh/
[4]: https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/pull/215
[5]: https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-history-substring-search
[6]: https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-syntax-highlighting


Requirements
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* [ZSH](http://zsh.sourceforge.net) 4.3 or newer

Install
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Using the [Homebrew]( https://brew.sh ) package manager:

    brew install zsh-history-substring-search
    echo 'source /usr/local/share/zsh-history-substring-search/zsh-history-substring-search.zsh' >> ~/.zshrc

Using [Oh-my-zsh](https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh):

1. Clone this repository in oh-my-zsh's plugins directory:

        git clone https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-history-substring-search ${ZSH_CUSTOM:-~/.oh-my-zsh/custom}/plugins/zsh-history-substring-search

2. Activate the plugin in `~/.zshrc`:

        plugins=( [plugins...] history-substring-search)

3. Source `~/.zshrc`  to take changes into account:

        source ~/.zshrc

Usage
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1.  Load this script into your interactive ZSH session:

        % source zsh-history-substring-search.zsh

    If you want to use [zsh-syntax-highlighting][6] along with this script,
    then make sure that you load it *before* you load this script:

        % source zsh-syntax-highlighting.zsh
        % source zsh-history-substring-search.zsh

2.  Bind keyboard shortcuts to this script's functions.

    Users typically bind their UP and DOWN arrow keys to this script, thus:
    * Run `cat -v` in your favorite terminal emulator to observe key codes.
      (**NOTE:** In some cases, `cat -v` shows the wrong key codes.  If the
      key codes shown by `cat -v` don't work for you, press `<C-v><UP>` and
      `<C-v><DOWN>` at your ZSH command line prompt for correct key codes.)
    * Press the UP arrow key and observe what is printed in your terminal.
    * Press the DOWN arrow key and observe what is printed in your terminal.
    * Press the Control and C keys simultaneously to terminate the `cat -v`.
    * Use your observations from the previous steps to create key bindings.
      For example, if you observed `^[[A` for UP and `^[[B` for DOWN, then:

          bindkey '^[[A' history-substring-search-up
          bindkey '^[[B' history-substring-search-down

      However, if the observed values don't work, you can try using terminfo:

          bindkey "$terminfo[kcuu1]" history-substring-search-up
          bindkey "$terminfo[kcud1]" history-substring-search-down

      You might also want to bind the Control-P/N keys for use in EMACS mode:

          bindkey -M emacs '^P' history-substring-search-up
          bindkey -M emacs '^N' history-substring-search-down

      You might also want to bind the `k` and `j` keys for use in VI mode:

          bindkey -M vicmd 'k' history-substring-search-up
          bindkey -M vicmd 'j' history-substring-search-down

3.  Type any part of any previous command and then:

    * Press the `history-substring-search-up` key, which was configured in
      step 2 above, to select the nearest command that (1) contains your query
      and (2) is also older than the current command in your command history.

    * Press the `history-substring-search-down` key, which was configured in
      step 2 above, to select the nearest command that (1) contains your query
      and (2) is also newer than the current command in your command history.

    * Press `^U` the Control and U keys simultaneously to abort the search.

4.  If a matching command spans more than one line of text, press the LEFT
    arrow key to move the cursor away from the end of the command, and then:

    * Press the `history-substring-search-up` key, which was configured in
      step 2 above, to move the cursor to the line above the cursored line.
      When the cursor reaches the first line of the command, pressing the
      `history-substring-search-up` key again will cause this script to
      perform another search.

    * Press the `history-substring-search-down` key, which was configured in
      step 2 above, to move the cursor to the line below the cursored line.
      When the cursor reaches the last line of the command, pressing the
      `history-substring-search-down` key, which was configured in step 2
      above, again will cause this script to perform another search.


Configuration
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This script defines the following global variables. You may override their
default values only after having loaded this script into your ZSH session.

* `HISTORY_SUBSTRING_SEARCH_HIGHLIGHT_FOUND` is a global variable that defines
  how the query should be highlighted inside a matching command. Its default
  value causes this script to highlight using bold, white text on a magenta
  background. See the "Character Highlighting" section in the zshzle(1) man
  page to learn about the kinds of values you may assign to this variable.

* `HISTORY_SUBSTRING_SEARCH_HIGHLIGHT_NOT_FOUND` is a global variable that
  defines how the query should be highlighted when no commands in the
  history match it. Its default value causes this script to highlight using
  bold, white text on a red background. See the "Character Highlighting"
  section in the zshzle(1) man page to learn about the kinds of values you
  may assign to this variable.

* `HISTORY_SUBSTRING_SEARCH_GLOBBING_FLAGS` is a global variable that defines
  how the command history will be searched for your query. Its default value
  causes this script to perform a case-insensitive search. See the "Globbing
  Flags" section in the zshexpn(1) man page to learn about the kinds of
  values you may assign to this variable.

* `HISTORY_SUBSTRING_SEARCH_FUZZY` is a global variable that defines
  how the command history will be searched for your query. If set to a non-empty
  value, causes this script to perform a fuzzy search by words, matching in
  given order e.g. `ab c` will match `*ab*c*`

* `HISTORY_SUBSTRING_SEARCH_ENSURE_UNIQUE` is a global variable that defines
  whether all search results returned are _unique_. If set to a non-empty
  value, then only unique search results are presented. This behaviour is off
  by default. An alternative way to ensure that search results are unique is
  to use `setopt HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS`. If this configuration variable is off
  and `setopt HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS` is unset, then `setopt HIST_FIND_NO_DUPS`
  is still respected and it makes this script skip duplicate _adjacent_ search
  results as you cycle through them, but this does not guarantee that search
  results are unique: if your search results were "Dog", "Dog", "HotDog",
  "Dog", then cycling them gives "Dog", "HotDog", "Dog". Notice that the "Dog"
  search result appeared twice as you cycled through them. If you wish to
  receive globally unique search results only once, then use this
  configuration variable, or use `setopt HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS`.


History
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

* September 2009: [Peter Stephenson][2] originally wrote this script and it
  published to the zsh-users mailing list.

* January 2011: Guido van Steen (@guidovansteen) revised this script and
  released it under the 3-clause BSD license as part of [fizsh][3], the
  Friendly Interactive ZSHell.

* January 2011: Suraj N. Kurapati (@sunaku) extracted this script from
  [fizsh][3] 1.0.1, refactored it heavily, and finally repackaged it as an
  [oh-my-zsh plugin][4] and as an independently loadable [ZSH script][5].

* July 2011: Guido van Steen, Suraj N. Kurapati, and Sorin Ionescu
  (@sorin-ionescu) [further developed it][4] with Vincent Guerci (@vguerci).

* March 2016: Geza Lore (@gezalore) greatly refactored it in pull request #55.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Oh My Zsh Distribution Notes
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

What you are looking at now is Oh My Zsh's repackaging of zsh-history-substring-search 
as an OMZ module inside the Oh My Zsh distribution.

The upstream repo, zsh-users/zsh-history-substring-search, can be found on GitHub at 
https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-history-substring-search.

This downstream copy was last updated from the following upstream commit:

  SHA:          0f80b8eb3368b46e5e573c1d91ae69eb095db3fb
  Commit date:  2019-05-12 17:35:54 -0700

Everything above this section is a copy of the original upstream's README, so things
may differ slightly when you're using this inside OMZ. In particular, you do not
need to set up key bindings for the up and down arrows yourself in `~/.zshrc`; the OMZ 
plugin does that for you. You may still want to set up additional emacs- or vi-specific
bindings as mentioned above.