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Tips
Note
The following tips assume that the ifs
option is set to "\n"
, the shell
option is set to a POSIX compatible shell, and the XDG_CONFIG_HOME
and XDG_DATA_HOME
environment variables are either unset or set to their default values (according to the XDG Base Directory Specification).
You may need to adjust these to your setup accordingly.
Note
Because of the nature of lf -remote
, in many of the examples below sed
is used as a means of escaping special characters.
This is necessary for arguments which contain single or double quotes, a backslash, or even a newline.
If you find yourself with repeated uses of sed
in your configuration, consider using the following script instead:
#!/bin/sh
exec sed -z 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g;s/\n/\\n/g;s/^/"/;s/$/"/'
Name the script lf-escape
and use it like so:
lf -remote "send $id select $(printf '%s' "$file" | lf-escape)"
This has the advantage (over the command used in many of the examples) of correctly escaping newlines and automatically adding quotes around the given argument.
This was omitted from the sed
commands below for the sake of brevity.
If, for whatever reason, you have filenames containing newlines on your system (unlikely but possible), consider using the above script.
Tip
For shell scripting, you can use https://shellcheck.net/ to check for common errors.
- Use a shebang of
#!/bin/sh
for POSIXsh
scripts. - Use a shebang of
#!/bin/bash
forbash
scripts.
It is possible to assign a keybinding for editing and reloading the config file. This is convenient especially when you are making config changes as a new user:
cmd edit-config ${{
$EDITOR ~/.config/lf/lfrc
lf -remote "send $id source ~/.config/lf/lfrc"
}}
map C edit-config
It is possible to start lf
with the default settings by passing a dummy blank file for the -config
option, which will prevent the user config file lfrc
from being loaded:
lf -config /dev/null
You can't use environment variables directly in mappings and internal commands.
In order to utilize environment variables, lf -remote
must be called. For example, here's a configuration line which maps gG
to cd $GOPATH
:
map gG $lf -remote "send $id cd $GOPATH"
It is possible to wrap this in a utility command which uses eval
to expand the environment variables and then invoke lf -remote
to send the result back to lf
:
cmd eval &{{
cmd="send $id"
for arg; do
cmd="$cmd $(eval "printf '%s' \"$arg\"" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/ /\\ /g;s/"/\\"/g')"
done
lf -remote "$cmd"
}}
This makes it possible to use environment variables in settings:
eval set previewer "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/lf/previewer"
eval set cleaner "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/lf/cleaner"
Environment variables can also be used in commands:
eval cd "$HOME/Documents"
Command substitution works too:
eval echo "$(date)"
Although lf
doesn't directly support profiles/themes, it is possible to emulate this by placing the profile settings inside separate files and loading them using the source
command. The profiles can be placed in a dedicated directory such as ~/.config/lf/profiles
.
~/.config/lf/profiles/foo
:
set info size
set promptfmt "\033[32m%u\033[34m%d\033[0m%f"
set ratios 1:1:1
~/.config/lf/profiles/bar
:
set info time
set promptfmt "\033[36m%d\033[33m%f"
set ratios 1:1:2
lfrc
file:
cmd profile &lf -remote "send $id source ~/.config/lf/profiles/$1"
With this, it should be possible to switch profiles using profile foo
and profile bar
. You may want to additionally create a profile with the default settings and source it before switching profiles, so that settings from the previous profile are not retained.
You might want to check your .lfrc
file into source control, or otherwise share it between machines with different versions of lf
installed. If you do this, you might run into a situation where you want to set options differently dependent on the version of lf
being used.
For example, set cursorpreviewfmt
is not supported on lf prior to version 29. You can work around this with some code in your .lfrc
like this:
${{
if [ "$(lf --version)" -ge 29 ]; then
# See https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/issues/1258
lf -remote "send $id set cursorpreviewfmt \"\\033[7m\""
fi
}}
This will create a custom command which checks the version of lf
, runs logic conditionally using remote commands, and then runs that command immediately.
Similarly to the tip above, you can also set configuration parameters based upon the operating system you are running on. As an example, this code snippet sets a mapping that yanks the current path differently, depending on whether you are using Linux or MacOS:
${{
if [ "$(uname -s)" = Darwin ]; then
lf -remote "send $id map Y \$printf '%s' \"\$fx\" | pbcopy"
else
lf -remote "send $id map Y \$printf '%s' \"\$fx\" | xclip -selection clipboard"
fi
}}
Since $id
seems unset on Windows, a work-around for Windows could be:
source ~/.config/lf/win32.lfrc
$lf -remote "send $id source ~/.config/lf/unix.lfrc"
Note
On UNIX OSes both files are sourced. Therefore, it is advised to override the relevant options in unix.lfrc
.
If you want to have borders around the columns:
set drawbox
If you are used to file managers with single column directory views (e.g. midnight commander or far manager), there are a few settings you can use to get a similar feeling:
set nopreview
set ratios 1
set info size:time
If you also want to have dual panes, you need to utilize a terminal multiplexer or your window manager. For tmux
you may consider using a shell alias to automatically create dual panes:
alias mc='tmux split -h lf; lf'
Alternatively, you can accomplish the same thing by dynamically defining lf's startup configuration like so:
mc() {
cmd='lf -config <(cat ~/.config/lf/lfrc; printf "set %s\n" nopreview "ratios 1" "info size:time")'
tmux split -h "$cmd"; eval "$cmd"
}
This has the advantage of not needing to modify your main lf configuration.
You can configure the on-redraw
hook command to set the number of columns based on the current terminal width:
cmd on-redraw %{{
if [ "$lf_width" -le 80 ]; then
lf -remote "send $id set ratios 1:2"
elif [ "$lf_width" -le 160 ]; then
lf -remote "send $id set ratios 1:2:3"
else
lf -remote "send $id set ratios 1:2:3:5"
fi
}}
Although previews can be toggled using the preview
option, the number of columns displayed remains the same, which results in the directories being shifted to a different column. To prevent the directories from being shifted, the number of columns also adjusted when toggling the preview:
cmd toggle-preview %{{
if [ "$lf_preview" = true ]; then
lf -remote "send $id :set preview false; set ratios 1:5"
else
lf -remote "send $id :set preview true; set ratios 1:2:3"
fi
}}
map zp toggle-preview
Note
The order of commands can matter. For example, preview
cannot be enabled if ratios
contains only a single number, so if ratios
is currently set to 1
, then you must use set ratios 1:1; set preview true
instead of set preview true; set ratios 1:1
.
Since release r29, lf
defaults to using an underline for the cursor in the preview pane, in order to distinguish it from the active cursor.
This is controlled by the cursorpreviewfmt
option.
Here are a few examples for different values of the option:
underline (default) | pre-r29 behavior | grey cursor | no cursor |
---|---|---|---|
set cursorpreviewfmt "\033[4m" |
set cursorpreviewfmt "\033[7m" |
set cursorpreviewfmt "\033[7;90m" |
set cursorpreviewfmt "" |
This uses ANSI codes, see for example this reference.
Although there is no native support for moving up
/down
in the parent directory, this can be achieved by chaining commands:
map J :updir; down; open
map K :updir; up; open
There is a caveat where if the next entry in the parent directory is a file, then it will be selected and opened instead. However, the dironly
option can be used to prevent a file from being selected:
cmd move-parent &{{
dironly="setlocal \"$(dirname -- "$PWD" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')\" dironly"
lf -remote "send $id :updir; $dironly true; $1; $dironly false; open"
}}
map J move-parent down
map K move-parent up
You can define a command to follow symbolic links:
cmd follow-link %{{
lf -remote "send $id select \"$(readlink -- "$f" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')\""
}}
map gL follow-link
cmd select-type &{{
set -f
[ "$#" -eq 0 ] && exit
files="$(
find "$PWD" -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -type "$1" $([ "$lf_hidden" = false ] && printf '%s\n' -not -name '.*') -print0 |
sed -z 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g;s/\n/\\n/g;s/^/"/;s/$/"/' |
tr '\0' ' ')"
lf -remote "send $id :unselect; toggle $files"
}}
cmd select-dirs select-type d
cmd select-files select-type f
cmd goto-file &{{
if [ -n "$(find -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -type d -print -quit)" ]; then
lf -remote "send $id :set dironly; bottom; set nodironly; down"
else
lf -remote "send $id top"
fi
}}
map M goto-file
This is useful on its own, however, it can also be combined with invert-below
to accomplish something similar to the above section:
map V invert-below
Selecting all files can be accomplished by chaining M
together with V
. Then, you may invert the selection with v
to select directories instead.
The incfilter
option is normally used for providing a preview of filtered files for the filter
modal command. However this can also be used as a file selector (similar to fzf
) for opening files.
set incfilter
map f filter
cmap <enter> &{{
# select and open file
if [ "$lf_mode" = filter ]; then
lf -remote "send $id :cmd-enter; setfilter; open"
else
lf -remote "send $id cmd-enter"
fi
}}
cmap <a-n> &{{
# go to next file
if [ "$lf_mode" = filter ]; then
lf -remote "send $id down"
fi
}}
cmap <a-p> &{{
# go to previous file
if [ "$lf_mode" = filter ]; then
lf -remote "send $id up"
fi
}}
By default, the list of selected files is cleared after executing cut
followed by paste
, but the list is retained after copy
followed by paste
. This matches the behavior of a number of other file managers. To ensure the selected files are cleared after copy
/paste
, you can add the clear
command:
map p :paste; clear
GNU cp
has the default option: --reflink=auto
, which performs a lightweight copy when possible. Hence, these mappings (and some of the ones below) have the advantage of utilizing CoW when this feature is available on the filesystem.
cmd paste %{{
set -- $(cat ~/.local/share/lf/files)
mode="$1"
shift
case "$mode" in
copy) cp -ri -- "$@" .;;
move)
mv -i -- "$@" .
lf -remote "send clear"
;;
esac
}}
Unfortunately POSIX cp
and mv
commands do not define an option to backup existing files, but if you have the GNU implementation, you can define a custom paste
command to use --backup
option with these commands:
cmd paste %{{
set -- $(cat ~/.local/share/lf/files)
mode="$1"
shift
case "$mode" in
copy) cp -r --backup=numbered -- "$@" .;;
move)
mv --backup=numbered -- "$@" .
lf -remote "send clear"
;;
esac
}}
See man cp
or man mv
for more information.
You can define an asynchronous paste command to do file copying and moving asynchronously:
cmd paste &{{
set -- $(cat ~/.local/share/lf/files)
mode="$1"
shift
case "$mode" in
copy) cp -rn -- "$@" .;;
move)
mv -n -- "$@" .
lf -remote "send clear"
;;
esac
}}
Tip
You can also define this command with a different name (e.g. cmd paste-async &{{ .. }}
) and then bind it to a different key (e.g. map P paste-async
) to use it selectively.
You can use an alternative file copying program that provides progress information such as rsync
and feed this information to lf
to display progress while coping files:
cmd paste &{{
set -- $(cat ~/.local/share/lf/files)
mode="$1"
shift
case "$mode" in
copy)
rsync -av --ignore-existing --progress -- "$@" . |
stdbuf -i0 -o0 -e0 tr '\r' '\n' |
while IFS= read -r line; do
line="$(printf '%s' "$line" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')"
lf -remote "send $id echo \"$line\""
done
;;
move)
mv -n -- "$@" .
lf -remote "send clear"
;;
esac
}}
Information is shown at the bottom of the screen every second but it is overwritten for each action that also uses this part of the screen.
By default the lf
server saves the names of files to be copied or moved so that you can copy files in one client and paste them in another. If you don't need such functionality then you may consider remapping existing keys to operate on the file selection instead of the copy/cut buffer:
map y %cp -ri -- $fs .
map d %mv -i -- $fs .
map p
Or, if you prefer to use the p
key:
map p %cp -ri -- $fs .
map P %mv -i -- $fs .
map y
map d
This results in a two-step method where you select the files, then either move or copy the files to the destination.
If you prefer to use lf's builtin paste mechanism, consider the bindings listed below. Do, however, take into consideration that using cp
may be more performant.
cmd alt-paste &{{
[ -n "$fs" ] && lf -remote "send $id $1"
lf -remote "send $id paste"
}}
map p alt-paste copy
map P alt-paste cut
If you want the file selection to be synced between multiple instances of lf
a more complex configuration can be used:
cmd load-select &{{
# skip if triggered via save-select from itself
if [ $# -eq 1 ] && [ "$1" = "$id" ]; then
exit
fi
lf -remote "send $id unselect"
if [ -s ~/.local/share/lf/select ]; then
files="$(sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g;s/^/"/;s/$/"/' ~/.local/share/lf/select | tr '\n' ' ')"
lf -remote "send $id toggle $files"
fi
}}
cmd save-select &{{
printf '%s\n' "$fs" > ~/.local/share/lf/select
lf -remote "send load-select $id"
}}
# redefine existing maps to invoke save-select afterwards
map <space> :toggle; down; save-select
map u :unselect; save-select
map v :invert; save-select
# define wrapper command for glob-select since it needs to forward an argument
cmd globsel &{{
glob="$(printf '%s' "$1" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')"
lf -remote "send $id :glob-select \"$glob\"; save-select"
}}
cmd alt-paste &{{
[ -n "$fs" ] && lf -remote "send $id :$1; save-select"
lf -remote "send $id paste"
}}
map p alt-paste copy
map P alt-paste cut
# load selection on startup
load-select
Like ranger's da
, dr
, and dt
. Implementing this for copying files is mostly the same, simply rename move
to copy
where applicable.
Note
This can also be used to switch a file selection from move to copy or vice versa.
cmd cut-add %{{
sed -i '1s/.*/move/' ~/.local/share/lf/files
printf '%s\n' "$fx" >> ~/.local/share/lf/files
lf -remote "send $id :unselect; sync"
}}
cmd cut-remove %{{
sed -i '1s/.*/move/' ~/.local/share/lf/files
printf '%s\n' "$fx" | while IFS= read -r file; do
sed -i "\|$file|d" ~/.local/share/lf/files
done
lf -remote "send $id :unselect; sync"
}}
cmd cut-toggle %{{
files="$(comm --output-delimiter= -3 \
<(tail -n+2 ~/.local/share/lf/files | sort) \
<(printf '%s\n' "$fx" | sort) | tr -d '\0')"
printf 'move\n%s\n' "$files" > ~/.local/share/lf/files
lf -remote "send $id :unselect; sync"
}}
The following command will set the file selection to the files specified in the copy/cut buffer.
cmd select-buffer &{{
files="$(sed -n 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g;s/^/"/;s/$/"/;2,$p' ~/.local/share/lf/files | tr '\n' ' ')"
if [ -z "$files" ]; then
lf -remote "send $id echoerr select-buffer: no files in copy/cut buffer"
exit
fi
lf -remote "send $id :unselect; toggle $files"
}}
After running this command, you can modify the selection the usual way, and finally issue either d
or y
again. This can be used as an alternative to ranger's da
, dr
, and dt
keybinds (and the section above). You can also this to switch from move to copy or vice versa.
You can use the underlying mkdir
command to create new directories.
It is possible to define a push mapping for such commands for easier typing as follows:
map a push %mkdir<space>
You can also create a custom command for this purpose
cmd mkdir %mkdir "$@"
map a push :mkdir<space>
This command creates a directory for each argument passed by lf.
For example, :mkdir foo 'bar baz'
creates two directories named foo
and bar baz
.
You can also join arguments with space characters to avoid the need to quote arguments as such:
cmd mkdir %IFS=" "; mkdir -- "$*"
map a push :mkdir<space>
This command creates a single directory with the given name.
For example, :mkdir foo bar
creates a single directory named foo bar
.
You can also consider passing -p
option to mkdir
command to be able to create nested directories (e.g. mkdir -p foo/bar
to create a directory named foo
and then a directory named bar
inside foo
).
If you want to select the new directory afterwards, you can call a remote select
command as such:
cmd mkdir %{{
IFS=" "
file="$*"
mkdir -p -- "$file"
lf -remote "send $id select \"$(printf '%s' "$file" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')\""
}}
Alternatively, if you want to enter the newly created directory automatically:
cmd mkdir %{{
IFS=" "
file="$*"
mkdir -p -- "$file"
lf -remote "send $id cd \"$(printf '%s' "$file" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')\""
}}
If you want to move selected items into the newly created directory:
cmd mkdir %{{
IFS=" "
file="$*"
mkdir -p -- "$file"
if [ -n "$fs" ]; then
mv -- $fs "$file"
lf -remote "send $id unselect"
fi
}}
Here's an example that uses raku
:
lf-mkdir
#!/usr/bin/env raku
my $dir = prompt "Directory Name: ";
mkdir $dir;
run "lf", "-remote",
"send {%*ENV<id>} select \"{$dir.match(/^<-[/]>+/).subst: '"', '\"', :g}\"";
lfrc
map Md %lf-mkdir
You can use the underlying touch
command to create new files.
Simply replace occurrences of mkdir
in the above section with touch
.
map a push %touch<space>
As a custom command:
cmd touch %touch "$@"
map a push :touch<space>
With all arguments joined into a single one:
cmd touch %IFS=" "; touch -- "$*"
map a push :touch<space>
With subsequent file selection:
cmd touch %{{
IFS=" "
file="$*"
touch -- "$file"
lf -remote "send $id select \"$(printf '%s' "$file" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')\""
}}
To create a new file, select it, and open it in your editor:
cmd touch %{{
IFS=" "
file="$*"
touch -- "$file"
file="$(printf '%s' "$file" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')"
lf -remote "send $id :select \"$file\"; \$\$EDITOR \"$file\""
}}
Here's an example that uses raku
:
lf-mkfile
#!/usr/bin/env raku
my $file = prompt "Filename: ";
open($file, :r, :create).close;
run "lf", "-remote", "send {%*ENV<id>} select \"{$file.subst: '"', '\"', :g}\"";
lfrc
map Mf %lf-mkfile
Here's a config snippet that adds a symbolic and hard linking command and mapping:
# y (select for copy) and P to paste symlink
# d (select for cut) and P to paste hard link
cmd link %{{
set -- $(cat ~/.local/share/lf/files)
mode="$1"
shift
if [ "$#" -lt 1 ]; then
lf -remote "send $id echoerr no files to link"
exit
fi
case "$mode" in
# 'copy' mode indicates a symlink
copy) ln -sr -t . -- "$@";;
# while 'move' mode indicates a hard link
move)
ln -t . -- "$@"
lf -remote "send clear"
;;
esac
}}
map P :link
P
is used for both symbolic and hard linking. The "cut" mode of files denotes a hard link, while a "copy" mode denotes a symlink.
Since #1162, lf
by default places the cursor right before the extension when renaming a file. However you can add additional bindings for other renaming schemes with the following config:
# unmap the default rename keybinding
map r
map i rename
map I :rename; cmd-home
map A :rename; cmd-end
map c :rename; cmd-delete-home
map C :rename; cmd-end; cmd-delete-home
This will give you the following behavior for the following keybindings:
Keybinding | Description | Effect of renaming foo.txt
|
---|---|---|
i |
rename with the cursor placed at the extension (original behavior) |
rename: foo|.txt |
I |
rename with the cursor placed at the beginning |
rename: |foo.txt |
A |
rename with the cursor placed at the end |
rename: foo.txt| |
c |
rename with the portion before the extension deleted |
rename: |.txt |
C |
rename with the entire filename deleted |
rename: | |
You can define a command to rename multiple files at the same time using your text editor to change the names.
cmd bulk-rename ${{
old="$(mktemp)"
new="$(mktemp)"
if [ -n "$fs" ]; then
fs="$(basename -a -- $fs)"
else
fs="$(ls)"
fi
printf '%s\n' "$fs" > "$old"
printf '%s\n' "$fs" > "$new"
$EDITOR "$new"
[ "$(wc -l < "$new")" -ne "$(wc -l < "$old")" ] && exit
paste "$old" "$new" | while IFS= read -r names; do
src="$(printf '%s' "$names" | cut -f1)"
dst="$(printf '%s' "$names" | cut -f2)"
if [ "$src" = "$dst" ] || [ -e "$dst" ]; then
continue
fi
mv -- "$src" "$dst"
done
rm -- "$old" "$new"
lf -remote "send $id unselect"
}}
map R bulk-rename
This command either works on selected files or non-hidden files in the current directory if you don't have any selection.
Another very compact possibility which renames the selected items only with vidir
is:
cmd bulk-rename $printf '%s\n' "$fx" | vidir -
Or, if you want more features, such as support for cyclic renames (A -> B, B -> A,...), for creating missing folders, git mv
, and with safeguards against deleting / overwriting files, and without annoying numbers before filenames - consider using dmulholl/vimv.
(same name as another vimv, but this one is more feature rich and written in rust, don't forget to read its --help
).
cmd bulk-rename ${{
vimv -- $(basename -a -- $fx)
lf -remote "send $id :load; unselect"
}}
Another option is qmv:
cmd bulk-rename ${{
clear
qmv -d -- $fx
lf -remote "send $id unselect"
}}
Yet another option is File::Name::Editor written in the raku language.
cmd bulk-rename ${{
clear
file-name-editor --confirm $(basename -a -- $fx)
lf -remote "send $id unselect"
}}
cmd open-with-gui &"$@" $fx # opens asynchronously, intended for GUI applications
cmd open-with-tui $"$@" $fx # opens synchronously, intended for TUI applications
cmd open-with-cli %"$@" $fx # opens synchronously and prints to the bottom statline, intended for CLI applications
map O push :open-with-gui<space>
map o push :open-with-tui<space>
map <c-o> push :open-with-cli<space>
cmd run-escaped %{{
IFS=" "
cmd="$1"
shift
"$cmd" "$*"
}}
map \\ push :run-escaped<space>
Press .
to repeat the last command typed on the command line:
map . :read; cmd-history-prev; cmd-enter
When using the command line, it is possible to use cmd-complete
to automatically complete the typed command (if unambiguous) just before running it. This allows for shorthands. For example, use :del
as a shorthand for :delete
, and :setf foo
as a shorthand for :setfilter foo
.
cmap <enter> &{{
if [ "$lf_mode" = command ]; then
lf -remote "send $id complete-cmd"
else
lf -remote "send $id cmd-enter"
fi
}}
cmd complete-cmd :{{
# position cursor at the end of the first word
cmd-home
cmd-word
# perform tab completion before running the command
cmd-complete
cmd-enter
}}
More elaborate examples can be found here.
The following commands each use xclip to copy file paths/names into your clipboard. These commands strip the trailing line break.
cmd yank-file $printf '%s' "$f" | xclip -i -selection clipboard
cmd yank-paths $printf '%s' "$fx" | xclip -i -selection clipboard
cmd yank-dirname &printf '%s' "$PWD" | xclip -i -selection clipboard
cmd yank-basename &basename -a -- $fx | head -c-1 | xclip -i -selection clipboard
cmd yank-basename-without-extension &basename -a -- $fx | sed -E 's/\.[^.]+$//' | head -c-1 | xclip -i -selection clipboard
Here's an alternative implementation of yank-basename-without-extension
which treats any character after the first "." as part of the extension.
cmd yank-basename-without-extension &basename -a -- $fx | cut -d. -f1 | head -c-1 | xclip -i -selection clipboard
Tip
Substitute xclip
for your clipboard manager of choice (e.g. xsel -ib
, wl-copy
or even pbcoby
for Mac OSX).
lf
provides a function lfcd
to cd into lf
current directory on quit.
This implies you must execute either lf
or lfcd
and cannot change your mind about whether to cd to the current directory on quit after running one or the other.
Following allows to quit lf
normally using q
hotkey or cd to current directory on quit using Q
hotkey.
Create script lf.bash
in your ~/.config/lf
directory with following contents:
lf() {
export LF_CD_FILE="/var/tmp/.lfcd-$$"
command lf "$@"
if [ -s "$LF_CD_FILE" ]; then
local DIR="$(realpath -- "$(cat -- "$LF_CD_FILE")")"
if [ "$DIR" != "$PWD" ]; then
printf 'cd to %s\n' "$DIR"
cd "$DIR"
fi
rm "$LF_CD_FILE"
fi
unset LF_CD_FILE
}
Source this file in your .bashrc
:
source ~/.config/lf/lf.bash
Then add following to your lfrc
config file:
cmd quit-and-cd &{{
pwd > "$LF_CD_FILE"
lf -remote "send $id quit"
}}
map Q quit-and-cd
Then you just run lf
normally and quit with q
or Q
.
Place this in your lfrc
:
cmd on-cd &{{
printf '%s\n' "$PWD" >> ~/.local/share/lf/dir_history
}}
on-cd
And this in your shell's *rc
file:
lastdir="$(tail -n1 ~/.local/share/lf/dir_history)"
[ -d "$lastdir" ] && cd "$lastdir"
Warning
This will always enter the last directory provided by lf, so changing the directory with anything other than lf (e.g. cd
) will not affect your shell's CWD.
This is useful if you e.g. want to use rofi to search for specific instance of lf.
Operating System Commands (OSC) offer an escape sequence for changing the title of the terminal. The following changes the title to current directory:
printf '\033]0;%s\007' "$PWD"
However, it's not a standard, so it doesn't work in some terminals. It is confirmed to be working in alacritty, st, kitty and rxvt-unicode. KDE's konsole uses slightly a different escape sequence:
printf '\033]30;%s\007' "$PWD"
We can use this in lf via special on-cd
command, which runs when directory is changed.
# '&' commands run silently in background (which is what we want here),
# but are not connected to stdout.
# To make sure our escape sequence still reaches stdout we pipe it to /dev/tty
cmd on-cd &printf '\033]0;%s\007' "$PWD" > /dev/tty
# also run at startup
on-cd
If you want to show ~
instead of /home/username
, change the printf line to
printf '\033]0;%s\007' "${PWD/#$HOME/\~}" > /dev/tty
Or to strictly match POSIX standard (compatible with more shells):
printf '\033]0;%s\007' "$(pwd | sed "s|^$HOME|~|")" > /dev/tty
It might also be useful to show a program name.
printf '\033]0;lf - %s\007' "${PWD/#$HOME/\~}" > /dev/tty
demo of the first version
(it actually changes instantly, I just pull updates only once per second)
lf
can be configured to send an OSC 7 terminal sequence whenever it changes directories, which advises the terminal on what the current directory is supposed to be:
# set pane_path when changing directory
cmd on-cd &printf '\033]7;file://%s\033\\' "$PWD" > /dev/tty
# unset pane_path when quitting
cmd on-quit &printf '\033]7;\033\\' > /dev/tty
# trigger on-cd upon startup
on-cd
This is useful when trying to open a new pane/tab from the current directory shown in lf
. In addition this also works with tmux
, which uses the OSC 7 terminal sequence to set the variable pane_path
. Below is a configuration which opens panes at the location of pane_path
, falling back to pane_current_path
if not set:
# use pane_path, falling back to pane_current_path
bind v split-window -h -c '#{?pane_path,#{pane_path},#{pane_current_path}}'
bind s split-window -v -c '#{?pane_path,#{pane_path},#{pane_current_path}}'
You might be missing the possibility to put the lf
job into the background with the default ctrl
and z
keys.
map <c-z> $kill -STOP "$PPID"
In lf
the i
key is the default mapping for previewing files. It is convenient to make i
also quit the less
pager. Hence you can use the same key to open a file and to close it.
$ echo "i quit" >> ~/.config/lesskey
This will create a lesskey config file for less
.
Warning
Make sure your PAGER
is set to less
.
cmd pager ${{
if [ -f "$f" ]; then
$PAGER "$f"
elif [ -d "$f" ]; then
tree "$f" | $PAGER
fi
}}
This will run the $PAGER
when the cursor is on the file or run tree
in $PAGER
if it's a directory.
Add the following to your lfrc
to show a warning on startup if lf
is running as a nested instance:
&[ "$LF_LEVEL" -eq 1 ] || lf -remote "send $id echoerr \"Warning: You're in a nested lf instance!\""
zsh
does not split words by default as described here, which makes it difficult to work with $fs
and $fx
variables, but a compatibility option named shwordsplit
(-y
or --sh-word-split
) is provided for this purpose.
You can set this option for all commands as such:
set shell zsh
set shellopts '-euy'
set ifs "\n"
set filesep "\n" # default already
The returned URL will be appended to the clipboard (Linux). Use pbcopy
instead for OSX.
cmd share $curl -F"file=@$fx" https://0x0.st | xclip -selection c
Let's say you generally prefer your sorting to be
# latest modified first
set sortby time
set reverse
but for some selected directories (e.g. for movies / tv series) you would prefer natural sort.
Hack for r30 and lower
lf doesn't remember options changed at runtime, but luckily we do have on-cd
and user_{key}
options.
Here is how the said example could be implemented using it:
cmd on-cd &{{
case "$PWD" in
/mnt/movies*)
lf -remote "send $id set user_prev_sortby $lf_sortby"
lf -remote "send $id set sortby natural"
lf -remote "send $id set noreverse"
lf -remote "send $id echomsg changed sort to natural"
;;
*)
# restore sorting on directory exit
if [ -n "$lf_user_prev_sortby" ]; then
lf -remote "send $id set sortby $lf_user_prev_sortby"
lf -remote "send $id set reverse"
lf -remote "send $id echomsg restored sort to $lf_user_prev_sortby"
lf -remote "send $id set user_prev_sortby ''"
fi
;;
esac
}}
# run on startup too
on-cd
But this is much better served by the setlocal
option introduced in r31
e.g. to recreate the example above you would need to just add the following lines to your lfrc:
setlocal /mnt/movies/ sortby natural
setlocal /mnt/movies/ noreverse
Note
The /
at the end of the path makes the option recursive, see lf -doc
for more information.
First, set an environment variable called LF_BOOKMARK_PATH
to an empty folder which will contain your bookmarks, then add the following to your lfrc
.
cmd bookmark-jump ${{
res="$(cat -- "$LF_BOOKMARK_PATH/$(ls -- "$LF_BOOKMARK_PATH" | fzf)" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g')"
lf -remote "send $id cd \"$res\""
}}
cmd bookmark-create ${{
read -r ans
printf '%s\n' "$PWD" > "$LF_BOOKMARK_PATH/$ans"
}}