410 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
410 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
= Expansions
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While parsing a command (see <<command-parsing#,`:doc command-parsing`>>),
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Kakoune recognises certain patterns and will replace them with their
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associated value before executing the command. These patterns are called
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expansions.
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Every expansion consists of a `%`, followed by the expansion _type_ (one
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or more alphabetic characters), a quoting character, and then all the text
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up to and including its matching character.
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If a nestable punctuation character (`(`, `[`, `{`, or `<`) is used as the
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opening quoting character, the expansion will end at its matching opposite
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(`)`, `]`, `}`, or `>`). Nested pairs of the braces used in the expansion are
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allowed, but they must be balanced. Braces other than the ones used in the
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expansion need not be balanced, however. For example, `%{nest{ed} non[nested}`
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is valid and expands to `nest{ed} non[nested`.
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If any other character is used, the expansion will end at the next occurrence of
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that character. The quoting character can be escaped inside the expansion if it
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is doubled-up. For example, `%|abc||def|` expands to the text `abc|def`.
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It doesn't matter which character is used, but `{}` are most common.
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There are 2 types of quoting which can be used to group together words separated
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by whitespace into a single argument or prevent expansions from expanding:
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"double quoted strings"::
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Double quoted strings are mainly for grouping multiple `%` expansions or
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`%` expansions and regular text as a single argument. `%` and `"` can be
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escaped by doubling the characters (i.e. `%%` and `""`).
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'single quoted strings'::
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Expansions are not processed inside single quoted strings. Single quotes can
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be escaped by doubling up (i.e. `''`).
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Expansions are processed when unquoted and anywhere inside double-quoted
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strings, but not inside unquoted words, inside single-quoted strings, or
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inside %-strings or other expansions (see
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<<command-parsing#typed-expansions, `:doc command-parsing typed-expansions`>>
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for full details). For example:
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* `echo %val{session}` echoes the current session ID
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* `echo x%val{session}x` echoes the literal text `x%val{session}x`
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* `echo '%val{session}'` echoes the literal text `%val{session}`
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* `echo "x%val{session}x"` echoes the current session ID, surrounded by `x`
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* `echo %{%val{session}}` echoes the the literal text `%val{session}`
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* `echo %sh{ echo %val{session} }` echoes the literal text `%val{session}`
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Like "variable expansion" and "command substitution" in shell programming,
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Kakoune expansions can expand to multiple "words" - that is, separate
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arguments on the resulting command-line. However, unlike shell programming,
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Kakoune expansions cannot _accidentally_ expand to multiple words because they
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contain whitespace or other special characters. Only expansions which
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semantically contain a list of values (list-type options, registers, selections,
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etc.) expand to multiple arguments. While in shell-programming it's good
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practice to always wrap expansions in double-quotes, in Kakoune it's perfectly
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safe to leave expansions unquoted.
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== Argument expansions
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Expansions with the type `arg` can only be used inside the "commands" parameter
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of the `define-command` command (See <<commands#declaring-new-commands,`:doc
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commands declaring-new-commands`>>).
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The following expansions are available:
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*%arg{n}*::
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(where _n_ is a decimal number) +
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expands to argument number _n_ of the current command
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*%arg{@}*::
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expands to all the arguments of the current command, as individual words
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== Option expansions
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Expansions with the type `opt` expand to the value associated with the named
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option in the current scope (See <<options#,`:doc options`>>).
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For example, `%opt{BOM}` expands to `utf8` or to `none`, according to the
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current state of the `BOM` option.
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== Register expansions
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Expansions with the type `reg` expand to the contents of the named
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register. For registers named after symbols (like the search register
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`/`), the expansion can use either the symbol or the alphabetic name (See
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<<registers#,`:doc registers`>>).
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For example, `%reg{/}` expands to the content of the `/` register, and so does
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`%reg{slash}`.
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== Shell expansions
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Expansions with the type `sh` are executed as shell-scripts, and whatever
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the script prints to standard output replaces the expansion. For example,
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the command `echo %sh{date}` will echo the output of the `date` command.
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TIP: If a shell expansion writes to standard error, that output is appended to
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Kakoune's `\*debug*` buffer. If you're trying to debug a shell expansion,
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check the debug buffer with `:buffer \*debug*` to see if anything shows up.
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Because Kakoune does not expand expansions inside the text of an expansion,
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you can't use normal expansions inside `%sh{}`. Instead, Kakoune can export
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expansions as environment variables to make them available to the shell.
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Here's how expansion patterns map to variable names:
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*%arg{n}*::
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(where _n_ is a decimal number) +
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becomes `$_n_`. For example, `%arg{3}` becomes `$3`.
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*%arg{@}*::
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becomes `$@`
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*%opt{x}*::
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becomes `$kak_opt_x`
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*%reg{x}*::
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(where _x_ is the alphabetic name of a register) +
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`$kak_reg_x` contains all the selections in register _x_ +
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`$kak_main_reg_x` contains only the main selection
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*%val{x}*::
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becomes `$kak_x`
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Values can be quoted with a shell compatible quoting by using `$kak_quoted_`
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as a prefix, this is mostly useful for list-type options and registers, as
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it allows to correctly work with lists where elements might contains
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whitespaces:
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----
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eval set -- "$kak_quoted_selections"
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while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
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# ... do a thing with $1 ...
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shift
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done
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----
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The `eval` command will take the expanded `$kak_quoted_selections`
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and unquote them, then execute the resulting `set` command, which sets
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the shell's argument variables to the items from `$kak_selections`. The
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`while` loop with `shift` iterates through the arguments one by one.
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Only variables actually mentioned in the body of the shell expansion will
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be exported into the shell's environment. For example:
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----
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echo %sh{ env | grep ^kak_ }
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----
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... will find none of Kakoune's special environment variables, but:
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----
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echo %sh{ env | grep ^kak_ # kak_session }
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----
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... will find the `$kak_session` variable because it was mentioned by name
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in a comment, even though it wasn't directly used.
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TIP: These environment variables are also available in other contexts where
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Kakoune uses a shell command, such as the `|`, `!` or `$` normal mode commands
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(See <<keys#,`:doc keys`>>).
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== File expansions
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Expansions with the type `file` will expand to the content of the filename
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given in argument as read from the host filesystem.
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For example, this command stores the entire content of `/etc/passwd` into the
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`a` register.
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----
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set-register a %file{/etc/passwd}
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----
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== Value expansions
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Expansions with the type `val` give access to Kakoune internal data that is
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not stored in an option or a register. Some value expansions can only be used
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in certain contexts, like `%val{hook_param}` that expands to the parameter
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string of the currently-executing hook, and is not available outside a hook.
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The following expansions are supported (with required context _in italics_):
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*%val{buffile}*::
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_in buffer, window scope_ +
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full path of the file or same as `%val{bufname}` when there’s no
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associated file
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*%val{buf_line_count}*::
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_in buffer, window scope_ +
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number of lines in the current buffer
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*%val{buflist}*::
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quoted list of the names of currently-open buffers (as seen in
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`%val{bufname}`)
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*%val{bufname}*::
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_in buffer, window scope_ +
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name of the current buffer
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*%val{client_env_X}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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value of the `$X` environment variable in the client displaying the current
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window (e.g. `%val{client_env_SHELL}` is `$SHELL` in the client's
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environment)
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*%val{client_list}*::
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unquoted list of the names of clients (as seen in `%val{client}`)
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connected to the current session
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*%val{client}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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name of the client displaying the current window
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*%val{client_pid}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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process id of the client displaying the current window
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*%val{config}*::
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directory containing the user configuration
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*%val{count}*::
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_in `map` command <keys> parameter and `<a-;>` from object menu_ +
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current count when the mapping was triggered, defaults to 0 if no
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count given
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*%val{cursor_byte_offset}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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offset of the main cursor from the beginning of the buffer (in bytes)
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*%val{cursor_char_column}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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1-based offset from the start of the line to the cursor position in
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Unicode codepoints, which may differ from visible columns if the document
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contains full-width codepoints (which occupy two columns) or zero-width
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codepoints
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*%val{cursor_display_column}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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1-based offset from the start of the line to the cursor position in
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display column, taking into account tabs and character width.
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*%val{cursor_char_value}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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unicode value of the codepoint under the main cursor
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*%val{cursor_column}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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1-based offset from the start of the line to the first byte of the
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character under the main cursor (in bytes), the fourth component of
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`%val{selection_desc}`
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*%val{cursor_line}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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line of the main cursor, the third component of `%val{selection_desc}`
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*%val{error}*::
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_in `try` command's <on_error_commands> parameter_ +
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the text of the error that cancelled execution of the <commands> parameter
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(or the previous <on_error_commands> parameter)
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*%val{history}*::
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_in buffer, window scope_ +
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the full change history of the buffer, including undo forks, in terms
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of `parent committed redo_child modification0 modification1 ...`
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entries, where _parent_ is the index of the entry's predecessor (entry
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0, which is the root of the history tree, will always have `-` here),
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_committed_ is a count in seconds from Kakoune's steady clock's epoch
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of the creation of the history entry, _redo_child_ is the index of the
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child which will be visited for `U` (always `-` at the leaves of the
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history), and each _modification_ is presented as in
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`%val{uncommitted_modifications}`.
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*%val{history_id}*::
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_in buffer, window scope_ +
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history id of the current buffer, an integer value which refers to a
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specific buffer version in the undo tree (see also `%val{timestamp}`)
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*%val{hook_param_capture_n}*::
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_in `hook` command <command> parameter_ +
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text captured by capture group _n_, if the executing hook's filter regex
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used capture groups
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*%val{hook_param}*::
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_in `hook` command <command> parameter_ +
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the complete parameter string of the executing hook
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*%val{modified}*::
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_in buffer, window scope_ +
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`true` if the buffer has modifications not saved, otherwise `false`
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*%val{object_flags}*::
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_for commands executed from the object menu's `<a-;>` only_ +
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a pipe-separted list of words including `inner` if the user wants
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an inner selection, `to_begin` if the user wants to select to the
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beginning, and `to_end` if the user wants to select to the end
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*%val{register}*::
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_in `map` command <keys> parameter and `<a-;>` from the object menu_ +
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current register when the mapping was triggered
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*%val{runtime}*::
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the directory containing the kak support files, which is determined from
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Kakoune's binary location if `$KAKOUNE_RUNTIME` is not set
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*%val{select_mode}*::
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_for commands executed from the object menu's `<a-;>` only_ +
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`replace` if the new selection should replace the existing, `extend`
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otherwise
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*%val{selection}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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content of the main selection
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*%val{selections}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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quoted list of the contents of all selections
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*%val{selection_desc}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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range of the main selection, represented as `a.b,c.d` where _a_ is the
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anchor line, _b_ is the number of bytes from the start of the line to the
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anchor, _c_ is the cursor line (like `%val{cursor_line}`), _d_ is
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the number of bytes from the start of the line to the cursor (like
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`%val{cursor_column}`), and all are 1-based decimal integers
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*%val{selections_char_desc}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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unquoted list of the ranges of all selections, in the same format as
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`%val{selection_desc}`, except that the columns are in codepoints rather
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than bytes
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*%val{selections_display_column_desc}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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unquoted list of the ranges of all selections, in the same format as
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`%val{selection_desc}`, except that the columns are in display columns rather
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than bytes
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*%val{selections_desc}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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unquoted list of the ranges of all selections, in the same format as
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`%val{selection_desc}`
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*%val{selection_length}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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length (in codepoints) of the main selection
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*%val{selections_length}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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unquoted list of the lengths (in codepoints) of the selections
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*%val{session}*::
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name of the current session
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*%val{source}*::
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_in `.kak` file_ +
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path of the file currently getting executed (through the source command)
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*%val{text}*::
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_in `prompt` command <command> parameter_ +
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the text entered by the user in response to the `prompt` command
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*%val{timestamp}*::
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_in buffer, window scope_ +
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timestamp of the current buffer, an integer that increments each time the
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buffer is modified, including undoing and redoing previous modifications
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(see also `%val{history_id}`)
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*%val{uncommitted_modifications}*::
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_in buffer, window scope_ +
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a list of quoted insertions (in the format `+line.column|text`) and
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deletions (`-line.column|text`) not yet saved to the history (e.g. typing
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in insert mode before pressing `<esc>`), where _line_ is the 1-based line
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of the change, _column_ is the 1-based _byte_ of the change start (see
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`%val{cursor_column}`), and _text_ is the content of the insertion or
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deletion (see also `%val{history}`)
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*%val{user_modes}*::
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unquoted list of user modes.
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*%val{version}*::
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version of the current Kakoune server (git hash or release name)
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*%val{window_height}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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height of the current Kakoune window
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*%val{window_width}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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width of the current Kakoune window
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*%val{window_range}*::
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_in window scope_ +
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list of coordinates and dimensions of the buffer-space
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available on the current window, in the following format:
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`<coord_x> <coord_y> <width> <height>`
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Values in the above list that do not mention a context are available
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everywhere.
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A value described as a "quoted list" will follow the rules of Kakoune string
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quoting (See <<command-parsing#,`:doc command-parsing`>>). An "unquoted list"
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cannot contain any special characters that would require quoting.
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