twisted.python.usage.Completions(object)
class documentationtwisted.python.usage
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Extra metadata for the shell tab-completion system.
Instance Variable | descriptions | ex. {"foo" : "use this description for foo
instead"} A dict mapping long option names to alternate
descriptions. When this variable is defined, the descriptions contained
here will override those descriptions provided in the optFlags and
optParameters variables. (type: dict ) |
Instance Variable | multiUse | ex. ["foo", "bar"] An iterable
containing those long option names which may appear on the command line
more than once. By default, options will only be completed one time. (type: list ) |
Instance Variable | mutuallyExclusive | ex. [("foo", "bar"), ("bar",
"baz")] A sequence of sequences, with each sub-sequence
containing those long option names that are mutually exclusive. That is,
those options that cannot appear on the command line together. (type: list of tuple ) |
Instance Variable | optActions | A dict mapping long option names to shell "actions". These
actions define what may be completed as the argument to the given option.
By default, all files/dirs will be completed if no action is given. For
example:
{"foo" : CompleteFiles("*.py", descr="python files"), "bar" : CompleteList(["one", "two", "three"]), "colors" : CompleteMultiList(["red", "green", "blue"])} Callables may instead be given for the values in this dict. The callable
should accept no arguments, and return a As you can see in the example above. The "foo" option will have files that end in .py completed when the user presses Tab. The "bar" option will have either of the strings "one", "two", or "three" completed when the user presses Tab. "colors" will allow multiple arguments to be completed, separated by commas. The possible arguments are red, green, and blue. Examples: my_command --foo some-file.foo --colors=red,green my_command --colors=green my_command --colors=green,blue Descriptions for the actions may be given with the optional
Normally Zsh does not show these descriptions unless you have "verbose" completion turned on. Turn on verbosity with this in your ~/.zshrc: zstyle ':completion:*' verbose yes zstyle ':completion:*:descriptions' format '%B%d%b'(type: dict ) |
Instance Variable | extraActions | Extra arguments are those arguments typically appearing at the end of the
command-line, which are not associated with any particular named option.
That is, the arguments that are given to the parseArgs() method of your
usage.Options subclass. For example:
[CompleteFiles(descr="file to read from"), Completer(descr="book title")] In the example above, the 1st non-option argument will be described as "file to read from" and all file/dir names will be completed (*). The 2nd non-option argument will be described as "book title", but no actual completion matches will be produced. See the various Also note the list ) |
Method | __init__ | Undocumented |
{"foo" : "use this description for foo
instead"}
A dict mapping long option names to alternate
descriptions. When this variable is defined, the descriptions contained
here will override those descriptions provided in the optFlags and
optParameters variables. (type: dict
)
["foo", "bar"]
An iterable
containing those long option names which may appear on the command line
more than once. By default, options will only be completed one time. (type: list
)
[("foo", "bar"), ("bar",
"baz")]
A sequence of sequences, with each sub-sequence
containing those long option names that are mutually exclusive. That is,
those options that cannot appear on the command line together. (type: list
of tuple
)
{"foo" : CompleteFiles("*.py", descr="python files"), "bar" : CompleteList(["one", "two", "three"]), "colors" : CompleteMultiList(["red", "green", "blue"])}
Callables may instead be given for the values in this dict. The callable
should accept no arguments, and return a Completer
instance
used as the action in the same way as the literal actions in the example
above.
As you can see in the example above. The "foo" option will have files that end in .py completed when the user presses Tab. The "bar" option will have either of the strings "one", "two", or "three" completed when the user presses Tab.
"colors" will allow multiple arguments to be completed, separated by commas. The possible arguments are red, green, and blue. Examples:
my_command --foo some-file.foo --colors=red,green my_command --colors=green my_command --colors=green,blue
Descriptions for the actions may be given with the optional
descr
keyword argument. This is separate from the description
of the option itself.
Normally Zsh does not show these descriptions unless you have "verbose" completion turned on. Turn on verbosity with this in your ~/.zshrc:
zstyle ':completion:*' verbose yes zstyle ':completion:*:descriptions' format '%B%d%b'(type:
dict
)
[CompleteFiles(descr="file to read from"), Completer(descr="book title")]
In the example above, the 1st non-option argument will be described as "file to read from" and all file/dir names will be completed (*). The 2nd non-option argument will be described as "book title", but no actual completion matches will be produced.
See the various Completer
subclasses for other types of
things which may be tab-completed (users, groups, network interfaces,
etc).
Also note the repeat=True
flag which may be passed to any
of the Completer
classes. This is set to allow the
Completer
instance to be re-used for subsequent command-line
words. See the Completer
docstring for details.
list
)