functions - print or erase functions
Synopsis
functions [ -a | --all ] [ -n | --names ] functions [ -D | --details ] [ -v ] FUNCTION functions -c OLDNAME NEWNAME functions -d DESCRIPTION FUNCTION functions [ -e | -q ] FUNCTIONS...
Description
functions
prints or erases functions.
The following options are available:
-
-a
or--all
lists all functions, even those whose name starts with an underscore. -
-c OLDNAME NEWNAME
or--copy OLDNAME NEWNAME
creates a new function named NEWNAME, using the definition of the OLDNAME function. -
-d DESCRIPTION
or--description=DESCRIPTION
changes the description of this function. -
-e
or--erase
causes the specified functions to be erased. This also means that it is prevented from autoloading. -
-D
or--details
reports the path name where the specified function is defined or could be autoloaded,stdin
if the function was defined interactively or on the command line or by reading stdin,-
if the function was created via source, andn/a
if the function isn't available. (Functions created via alias will return-
, becausealias
usessource
internally.) If the--verbose
option is also specified then five lines are written:- the pathname as already described,
-
autoloaded
,not-autoloaded
orn/a
, - the line number within the file or zero if not applicable,
-
scope-shadowing
if the function shadows the vars in the calling function (the normal case if it wasn't defined with--no-scope-shadowing
), elseno-scope-shadowing
, orn/a
if the function isn't defined, - the function description minimally escaped so it is a single line or
n/a
if the function isn't defined.
You should not assume that only five lines will be written since we may add additional information to the output in the future.
-
-n
or--names
lists the names of all defined functions. -
-q
or--query
tests if the specified functions exist. -
-v
or--verbose
will make some output more verbose. -
-H
or--handlers
will show all event handlers. -
-t
or--handlers-type TYPE
will show all event handlers matching the given type
The default behavior of functions
, when called with no arguments, is to print the names of all defined functions. Unless the -a
option is given, no functions starting with underscores are included in the output.
If any non-option parameters are given, the definition of the specified functions are printed.
Automatically loaded functions cannot be removed using functions -e
. Either remove the definition file or change the $fish_function_path variable to remove autoloaded functions.
Copying a function using -c
copies only the body of the function, and does not attach any event notifications from the original function.
Only one function's description can be changed in a single invocation of functions -d
.
The exit status of functions
is the number of functions specified in the argument list that do not exist, which can be used in concert with the -q
option.
Examples
functions -n # Displays a list of currently-defined functions functions -c foo bar # Copies the 'foo' function to a new function called 'bar' functions -e bar # Erases the function ``bar``
© 2020 fish-shell developers
Licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.
https://fishshell.com/docs/3.2/cmds/functions.html