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In a bash completion script, suppose COMPREPLY=(aa/ba/ aa/bb/). When the script is invoked, the completion options looks like this to the user:

$ foo aa/b<TAB>
aa/ba/
aa/bb/

However, I want to have a bit more control over how these options are displayed. In particular, I want to show only a substring of each COMPREPLY option to the user, similar to how directory completion works in bash now:

$ foo aa/b<TAB>
ba/
bb/

Is there any way of doing this in bash?

Roman Nurik
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2 Answers2

6

I was having the same problem and I fixed it by adjusting how I bound the completion function to the command. I know this works when you are dealing with actual files in the filesystem, I think it will work with any sort of file path like options, but I'm not sure.

Before:

complete -F _fubar fubar

After:

complete -o filenames -F _fubar fubar

For more details: Programmable Completion Builtins

zimbu668
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  • Awesome! Now I just need to figure out how to selectively turn on/off options for different `COMPREPLY` cases in my function, *without* using `compopt` – Roman Nurik Feb 29 '12 at 06:20
2

This piece of code taken from debian sid /etc/bash_completion should help:

# Remove colon-word prefix from COMPREPLY items
local colon_word=${1%${1##*:}}
local i=${#COMPREPLY[*]}
while [ $((--i)) -ge 0 ]; do
    COMPREPLY[$i]=${COMPREPLY[$i]#"$colon_word"}
done
enzotib
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  • Thanks enzotib. Unfortunately this technique doesn't work, because then the substring replaces the entire completion. That is, `foo aa/b` becomes `foo ba/` :-( – Roman Nurik Oct 17 '10 at 21:27