-.TH "SELECTOR" "1.1.6" "February 2012" "Francois Fleuret" "User Commands"
+.TH "SELECTOR" "1.1.7" "February 2013" "Francois Fleuret" "User Commands"
\" This man page was written by Francois Fleuret <francois@fleuret.org>
\" and is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike
Selector is also a handy tool to test regexps, or to display menus
with many possible choices. For the latter, the -x option allows to
-specify a label delimiter: the part of each line before that character
-will appear during the selection, but only the part after that
-character will be returned.
+show different strings than the ones returned.
Note that because this is an interactive command, the standard input
-can not be used as one of the input files.
+cannot be used as one of the input files.
.SH "USING SELECTOR IN BASH"
The selector command comes with a shell script for bash. If you add
+.P
+.nf
.B source bash-selector.sh --hist --cd
+.fi
in your \fB~/.bashrc\fR, it will remap M-r to the smart history search,
-and redefine cd so that M-c provides a smart cd history.
+and redefine \fBcd\fR so that M-c provides a smart cd history.
+
+This script relies on readline being configured with the default
+emacs-style key bindings. You may have to hack a bit if you want to
+use it with the vi-style mode.
.SH "KEY BINDINGS"
start in case-sensitive mode
.TP
\fB-j\fR, \fB--show-long-lines\fR
-print three dots at the end of truncated lines
+print a long-line indicator at the end of truncated lines
.TP
\fB-y\fR, \fB--show-hits\fR
-highlight the part(s) of each line which match the substrings or regexp
+highlight the part(s) of each line which match(es) the substrings or regexp
.TP
\fB-u\fR, \fB--upper-case-makes-case-sensitive\fR
using an upper case in the matching string makes the matching
\fB-t \fI<title>\fR, \fB--title \fI<title>\fR
add a title in the modeline
.TP
+\fB-r \fI<pattern>\fR, \fB--pattern \fI<pattern>\fR
+set a pattern
+.TP
\fB-c \fI<colors>\fR, \fB--colors \fI<colors>\fR
select the modeline and highlight color numbers with a color list of
the form
.TP
\fB-x \fI<separator>\fR, \fB--label-separator \fI<separator>\fR
specify the character to separate what to show to the user during the
-selection from the line to return
+selection from the line to return. If the provided separator is "\\n",
+the lines to show to the user alternate with the lines to return
.TP
\fB-l \fI<number>\fR, \fB--number-of-lines \fI<number>\fR
specify the maximum number of lines to take into account
To use selector to search into your bash history
+.P
+.nf
.B selector -q --bash <(history)
+.fi
To show a list of directories and insert a cd command to the selected
-one (using @ as a separator)
+one
-.B selector -v -x @ <(find . -type d | awk \(aq{print $0\(dq@cd \(dq$0}\(aq)
+.P
+.nf
+.B selector -v -x \(dq\\n\(dq <(find . -type d | awk \(aq{ print $0\(dq\\ncd \(dq$0 }\(aq)
-To select a line in a long text and returns the line number (this
-command uses ^A as a separator, hence there will be problems if the
-file contains ^A)
+.fi
+To select a line in a long text and write the line number in /tmp/nb
-.B selector -v -x ^A <(awk < something.txt \(aq{ print $0\(dq^A\(dqNR }\(aq)
+.P
+.nf
+.B selector -o /tmp/nb -x \(dq\\n\(dq <(awk < something.txt \(aq{ print $0\(dq\\n\(dqNR }\(aq)
.SH "BUGS"