2.3 KiB
Let's consider the last command to be:
mv foo bar
up , Ctrl+w: last command without the last word = mv foo
Alt+0+.: first argument of last command = mv
Some useful shortcuts:
-
Alt+.: insert last argument from last command (repeat to go back in history)
-
Alt+number+.: insert #nth last argument from last command (repeat to go back in history)
-
Alt+- , number , Alt+., zsh: Alt+-+#+.: insert #nth first argument from last command (repeat to go back in history)
-
Cut commands (relative to cursor's position)
- Ctrl+w: cuts last word
-
Alt+d: cuts next word
-
Ctrl+k: cuts everything after
-
Ctrl+u, zsh: Alt+w: cuts everything before
-
zsh: Ctrl+u: cuts the entire command (In bash you can combine Ctrl+u , Ctrl+k)
-
Ctrl+y: paste characters previously cut with any Cut command. In bash You can chain cut commands, and Ctrl+y will paste them all.
-
Ctrl+_: undo last edit (very useful when exceeding Ctrl+w)
-
Ctrl+left: move to last word
-
Ctrl+right: move to next word
-
home or Ctrl+a: move to start of command
-
end or Ctrl+e: move to end of command
To see all shortcuts available
- bash:
bind -lp
- zsh:
bindkey -L
Unfortunately there are some limitations
"words" only includes a-zA-Z
characters, so any symbol character will stop word-shortcuts.
So if last argument was a url and you want to erase it with Ctrl+w it will be a pain.
E.g: curl -I --header "Connection: Keep-Alive" https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38176514/re-run-previous-command-with-different-arguments
To erase that url using Ctrl+w, you'd have to repeat it 12 times.
It would be great to have similar shortcuts that only stops at the space character