I’m horrible at waiting, so when things are slow or repetitive I tend to automate them. So when I started working on my first Java project I quickly got fed up by navigating in and out of these crazy paths. For instance moving from src/main/java/com/example/application/package/ to the test path, or back to the root of the project got boring real quick.

function backto () { # Go back to folder in path local path = ${ PWD%/* } while [[ $path ]] ; do if [[ " ${ path##*/ } " == " $1 " ]] ; then cd " $path " || return 1 break else path = ${ path%/* } fi done } function _backto () { # completion for backto local cur dir all _get_comp_words_by_ref cur all = $( cut -c 2- <<< " ${ PWD%/* } " | tr '/' '

' ) if [[ -z " $cur " ]] ; then COMPREPLY =( $( compgen -W " $all " ) ) else COMPREPLY =( $( grep -i "^ $cur " < ( echo " ${ all } " ) | sort -u ) ) fi } complete -o nospace -F _backto backto

The function backto and it’s auto completion counterpart, will let me chose one of the directories in my current path to jump back to. The only caveat is if there are duplicate names it will jump to the one closest to my current working directory.

There are also some places I visit more often than others. For those I’ve created the src function. It let’s me set a base directory and then I get auto completion to cd into that path, no matter what my current working directory is.

function src () { # cd into $SRC cd " $SRC_DIR / $1 " || return 1 } function _src () { # completion for src local cur temp_compreply dir _get_comp_words_by_ref cur dir = $SRC_DIR/ if [[ $dir ! = " ${ cur:0: ${# dir }} " ]] ; then cur = ${ dir }${ cur } fi temp_compreply = $( compgen -d " ${ cur } " ) COMPREPLY =( ${ temp_compreply[*]//$dir/ } ) } complete -o nospace -S "/" -F _src src

The function itself is quite simple, the main logic is in the auto completion. However, sometimes I want to jump to somewhere that’s not my source dir. For those cases I use rupa/z. After installing it, z will take notes on what directories you visit the most, and allow you to jump instantly by adding a query such as z some_directory . If there are several matches it will choose based and frequency and how well the path matches your query. Super useful.

I’ve also become completely reliant on junegunn/fzf. It’s a fuzzy finder which can be used directly on the command line or in your interactive functions. It takes a list of strings as input, and while you type it filters the results. During installation it asks you if you would like to use fzf for reverse history search, and you definitely want to do this. ctrl-r has never been this useful, responsive and easy to use.

One way I’ve used fzf to improve my helpers is with this alias to check out a git branch.

alias gcb = 'git co "$(git branch -a | sed "s/ //" | grep -v "^*" | fzf)"'

There are also some bash specific settings I like to set, to be able to move around faster. For instance:

bind 'set completion-ignore-case on' # Case-insensitive autocompletion shopt -s nocaseglob # Case-insensitive globbing (used in pathname expansion) shopt -s cdspell # Autocorrect typos in path names when using `cd`

Now I don’t need to bother with getting the case right for auto completion, and I can even be a bit sloppy and cd will adjust my input to match the available results.

I’m also a big fan of vi, and as such my prompt should reflect that.

set -o vi bind 'set show-mode-in-prompt on' bind 'set vi-cmd-mode-string "\1\e[38;5;4m\e[49m\2 ➜ \1\e[39m\e[00m\2"' bind 'set vi-ins-mode-string "\1\e[38;5;8m\e[49m\2 ➜ \1\e[39m\e[00m\2"'

With these settings I get vi mode enabled, and at the end of my prompt bash will insert an arrow, which is light green when in normal mode, and gray in insert mode. But the vi-mode does remove a few useful key bindings I’ve gotten used to, so to remedy that, I’ve got these defined.

bind -m vi-insert "\C-l" :clear-screen bind -m vi-insert "\C-a" :beginning-of-line bind -m vi-insert "\C-e" :end-of-line bind -m vi-insert "\C-w" :delete-word

I should probably add that all of the above settings are set in my bash config, even the bind commands which should probably be set in ~/.inputrc . One day I’ll read up on the best practices for this, but not today.

Also, a proper keyboard will speed things up :D

Discussion: reddit.com/r/bash - post