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Feature request: output/send \033]7; file:///the/current/dir\033\\ on di
From: |
IFo Hancroft |
Subject: |
Feature request: output/send \033]7; file:///the/current/dir\033\\ on directory change |
Date: |
Mon, 25 Nov 2019 14:08:04 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.2.2 |
Hi Everyone!
I have the following feature request:
Output/send \033]7;file:///the/current/dir\033\\ on directory change.
This can then be used by terminals for example for the feature to be
able to open a new tab/terminal in the same directory.
Currently, the way to do it is to use the PROMPT_COMMAND variable to
output but I believe this should be left for the user to use and
terminals that want to have such feature have to currently ship their
own shell script that assigns the variable but also preserves what was
set there by distros (usually an ANSI escape sequence to update the
terminal title) and there is no place that distros agree on for reading
scripts from for non-login shells and it is often put in the wrong
place..... It's a shit show.
I don't think its the terminal's job to tell itself when the directory
changes, also it is the shell that knows when it does change.
By having it in the shell it will be a clean and streamlined solution
that all terminals that want, can use the feature and the whole shitshow
that's currently going can be avoided.
TL;DR:
It makes sense for the shell to output it on directory change.
Everyone can take advantage of that.
It will be clean solution.
Best Regards,
IFo Hancroft
- Feature request: output/send \033]7; file:///the/current/dir\033\\ on directory change,
IFo Hancroft <=