Whenever I’m looking at backtraces, logs, or failing tests in the terminal, I often need to open one of those files in my text editor. It was previously a semi-arduous process that involved highlighting, copying, pasting and the return key. Now, all I need to do is double-click or highlight a line, and then press a keyboard shortcut to open that file & line in my text editor (currently Sublime Text 2.) I’ve also added a thing to my $PROMPT_SCRIPT that stores my terminal’s most recent directory in ~/.cwd~ , so that the script can handle relative paths. (Most of the time I’m just in the root folder of a given project.)

One extra feature for Ruby developers is support for backtrace lines like this:

app /models/ post . rb : 225 :in `sharing_is_caring'

If you double-click that file, you’ll end up with the following selection: app/models/post.rb:225:in. The script will automatically strip the trailing :in, so you can just double-click instead of manually highlighting.

Requirements

Ubuntu

xclip (install with sudo apt-get install xclip )

) A text editor, such as Sublime Text 2.

Installation

Download the open_selected_in_editor script to somewhere like ~/bin .

mkdir -p ~/bin wget https://raw.github.com/ndbroadbent/dotfiles/master/bin/open_selected_in_editor -O ~/bin/open_selected_in_editor chmod +x ~/bin/open_selected_in_editor

Modify the script to use your preferred text editor

Set up current working directory support

Add the following line to your ~/.bashrc :

PROMPT_COMMAND += "pwd > ~/.cwd~;"

This means that every time you press return in the terminal, the script can use your current directory to determine an absolute path for a highlighted file. It’s not completely foolproof, but good enough for me.

Set up a keyboard shortcut in Ubuntu 12.04

Go to System Settings -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Custom Shortcuts

-> -> -> Click the + to add a new shortcut with: Name: Open selected in editor Command: ~/bin/open_selected_in_editor

to add a new shortcut with: Set the keyboard shortcut. I like Ctrl+Shift+X.

All done! Now you can highlight a filename in the terminal, press your keyboard shortcut, and open it in your editor without the need to copy & paste filenames. Please let me know if you need any help, but I’m sorry I don’t know how to do this in OS X or Windows.