All the workarounds using `config` aren't necessary anymore. Only `config path` is still of interest.
1.5 KiB
alias
This command allows you to define shortcuts for other common commands. By default, they only apply to the current session. To persist them, add --save
.
Syntax: alias {flags} <name> [<parameters>] {<body>}
The command expects three parameters:
- The name of the alias
- The parameters as a space-separated list (
[a b ...]
), can be empty ([]
) - The body of the alias as a
{...}
block
Flags
-s
,--save
: Save the alias to your config (seeconfig path
to edit them later)
Examples
Define a custom myecho
command as an alias:
> alias myecho [msg] { echo $msg }
> myecho "hello world"
hello world
Since the parameters are well defined, calling the command with the wrong number of parameters will fail properly:
> myecho hello world
error: myecho unexpected world
- shell:1:18
1 | myecho hello world
| ^^^^^ unexpected argument (try myecho -h)
The suggested help command works!
> myecho -h
Usage:
> myecho ($msg) {flags}
parameters:
($msg)
flags:
-h, --help: Display this help message
Persistent aliases
Aliases are most useful when they are persistent. For that, use the --save
flag:
> alias --save myecho [msg] { echo $msg }
This will store the alias in your config, under the startup
key. To edit the saved alias, run it again with the same name, or edit your config file directly. You can find the location of the file using config path
.
For example, to edit your config file in vi
, run:
> vi $(config path)