2 KiB
fzf
The fzf plugin automatically configures fzf, a general-purpose command-line fuzzy finder. This plugin enables interactive fuzzy search, auto-completion, and key bindings for a more efficient shell experience.
It detects your platform and attempts to automatically source the necessart fzf scripts, enabling features like CTRL-T, CTRL-R, and ALT-C.
To use it, add fzf to the plugins array in your .zshrc file:
plugins=(... fzf)
Make sure you have
fzfinstalled before enabling this plugin.
Settings
All variables should be defined before Oh My Zsh is sourced in your .zshrc file.
FZF_BASE
If fzf is installed in a non-standard location, you can manually specift the base installation directory by setting:
export FZF_BASE=/path/to/fzf
The plugin will look for shell integration files under $FZF_BASE/shell, or $FZF_BASE directly.
FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND
This variable defines the default command used by fzf when there is no piped input (e.g., when used with CTRL-T).
You can cutomize it:
export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='fd --type f --hidden --exlude .git'
If not defined, the plugin will automatically set it to the first available tool in the following priority:
These tools allow for fast, filesystem-aware searches and greatly improve fzf performance.
DISABLE_FZF_AUTO_COMPLETION
If you do not want fzf to override or enchance Zsh's auto-completion, disable it by setting:
DISABLE_FZF_AUTO_COMPLETION="true"
Auto-completion provides fuzzy matches for commands, files, and directories.
DISABLE_FZF_KEY_BINDINGS
To disable the key bindings provided by fzf, set:
DISABLE_FZF_KEY_BINDINGS="true"
Key bindings enabled by default:
CTRL-T: Paste selected file path(s)CTRL-R: Search command historyALT-C: Change to selected directory