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Author SHA1 Message Date
Ingo Karkat
7b91d41c66 Add hint for OR'ing TERMs to help text for ls/list.
The regexp syntax and quoting rules aren't known to many who are not well versed in the Bash shell, and difficult to get right even for people in the know. This question came up just recently on the mailing list, too.
2012-01-07 22:42:56 +01:00
Ingo Karkat
c8e35bbb50 Cosmetics: Correct double-spacing in help text. 2012-01-07 22:23:00 +01:00
Ingo Karkat
c0eb143839 Cosmetics: Consistently use "TERM(s)" in help text.
Two places only used "TERM" although multiple are supported. This can be misleading: do one or all have to match?
2012-01-07 22:22:18 +01:00
2 changed files with 21 additions and 26 deletions

19
todo.sh
View File

@@ -87,10 +87,10 @@ help()
Options:
-@
Hide context names in list output. Use twice to show context
Hide context names in list output. Use twice to show context
names (default).
-+
Hide project names in list output. Use twice to show project
Hide project names in list output. Use twice to show project
names (default).
-c
Color mode
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ help()
-p
Plain mode turns off colors
-P
Hide priority labels in list output. Use twice to show
Hide priority labels in list output. Use twice to show
priority labels (default).
-a
Don't auto-archive tasks automatically on completion
@@ -199,12 +199,15 @@ help()
list [TERM...]
ls [TERM...]
Displays all tasks that contain TERM(s) sorted by priority with line
numbers. If no TERM specified, lists entire todo.txt.
numbers. Each task must match all TERMs (logical AND); to display
tasks that contain any TERM (logical OR), use
"TERM1\|TERM2\|..." (with quotes), or TERM1\\\|TERM2 (unquoted).
If no TERM specified, lists entire todo.txt.
listall [TERM...]
lsa [TERM...]
Displays all the lines in todo.txt AND done.txt that contain TERM(s)
sorted by priority with line numbers. If no TERM specified, lists
sorted by priority with line numbers. If no TERM specified, lists
entire todo.txt AND done.txt concatenated and sorted.
listcon
@@ -214,8 +217,8 @@ help()
listfile [SRC [TERM...]]
lf [SRC [TERM...]]
Displays all the lines in SRC file located in the todo.txt directory,
sorted by priority with line numbers. If TERM specified, lists
all lines that contain TERM in SRC file.
sorted by priority with line numbers. If TERM specified, lists
all lines that contain TERM(s) in SRC file.
Without any arguments, the names of all text files in the todo.txt
directory are listed.
@@ -223,7 +226,7 @@ help()
lsp [PRIORITY] [TERM...]
Displays all tasks prioritized PRIORITY.
If no PRIORITY specified, lists all prioritized tasks.
If TERM specified, lists only prioritized tasks that contain TERM.
If TERM specified, lists only prioritized tasks that contain TERM(s).
listproj
lsprj

View File

@@ -38,28 +38,20 @@ _todo()
+*) completions=$(TODOTXT_VERBOSE=0 todo.sh command listproj);;
@*) completions=$(TODOTXT_VERBOSE=0 todo.sh command listcon);;
*) if [[ "$cur" =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]; then
local item=$(TODOTXT_VERBOSE=0 todo.sh -@ -+ -p -x command ls "^ *${cur} " | head -n 1)
# Remove the (padded) task number; we prepend the
# user-provided $cur instead.
# Remove the timestamp prepended by the -t option,
# and the done date (for done tasks); there's no
# todo.txt option for that yet.
# But keep priority and "x"; they're short and may
# provide useful context.
# Remove any trailing whitespace; the Bash
# completion inserts a trailing space itself.
# Finally, limit the output to a single line just as
# a safety check of the ls action output.
local todo=$( \
TODOTXT_VERBOSE=0 todo.sh -@ -+ -p -x command ls "^ *${cur} " | \
sed -e 's/^ *[0-9]\+ //' -e 's/\((.) \)[0-9]\{2,4\}-[0-9]\{2\}-[0-9]\{2\} /\1/' \
-e 's/\([xX] \)\([0-9]\{2,4\}-[0-9]\{2\}-[0-9]\{2\} \)\{1,2\}/\1/' \
-e 's/[[:space:]]*$//' \
-e '1q' \
)
# user-provided $cur.
item=${item#* }
# Remove the timestamp prepended by the -t option;
# there's no todo.txt option for that yet.
item=${item#[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9] }
# Append task text as a shell comment. This
# completion can be a safety check before a
# destructive todo.txt operation.
[ "$todo" ] && COMPREPLY[0]="$cur # $todo"
[ "$item" ] && COMPREPLY[0]="$cur # $item"
return 0
else
return 0