Let me tell you that you can also add comments to your terminal commands and use them to search history using fzf. This might sound confusing but basically you do this:
commandwithweirdoptions --option1=value1 --option2=value2 # run the usual thing
Then you press Ctrl+R and type anything like «the thing», it uses fuzzy matching and finds the command in history, with a menu of other similar commands. Press enter, done.
Note that you need to have fzf installed, otherwise there is no fuzzy matching and no menu of matching history results.
Sure, just as I said, this would work id you don’t need menu or fuzzy matching. But I would recommend using fzf history search anyway, it’s just too good.
This looks super neat but I don’t really like the idea of sending my shell history to a third party, nor can I host my own server right now.
Wish it was peer-to-peer like Syncthing
Perhaps pressing [Ctrl]+[R] and typing to search makes it easier, I mean instead of grepping history?
Most terminal emulators support it.
You can also change your query (backspacing and typing again) and press [Ctrl]+[R] multiple times to go to older matches.
I will have to try that, I didn’t know that functionality existed, thanks!
Let me tell you that you can also add comments to your terminal commands and use them to search history using fzf. This might sound confusing but basically you do this:
commandwithweirdoptions --option1=value1 --option2=value2 # run the usual thing
Then you press Ctrl+R and type anything like «the thing», it uses fuzzy matching and finds the command in history, with a menu of other similar commands. Press enter, done.
Note that you need to have fzf installed, otherwise there is no fuzzy matching and no menu of matching history results.
Seems to work with [Ctrl]+[R] as well, though of course only with exact matches.
I’ve never understood prompt decoration like this.
How.
Does.
Punctuating.
Every.
Statement.
Increase.
Readability.
Sure, just as I said, this would work id you don’t need menu or fuzzy matching. But I would recommend using fzf history search anyway, it’s just too good.
M-hm, I will try it as well! I was just letting people know the comment trick works regardless, cause that’s a nice tip as well!
Also, atuin.sh.
This looks super neat but I don’t really like the idea of sending my shell history to a third party, nor can I host my own server right now.
Wish it was peer-to-peer like Syncthing
I don’t either, but you don’t have to use that feature. I don’t. I just use with local db for that machine.