Creates arbitrary shell scripts from a configuration file; shortcuts
The scripts are described as a toml
file, see sample-config.toml
for an example. You can specify the interpreter, and any links (just copies of the script) you'd want to create, and the command itself. Running shortcuts create
creates individual shell scripts at ~/.shortcuts
.
A similar functionality could be created with aliases, but those aren't on your $PATH; aren't visible to other scripts or accessible by system utilities like rofi
(the major inspiration for writing this). You should add the shortcut directory to your path, by adding export PATH=$PATH:$HOME/.shortcuts
to your shell profile. If you want to use the scripts generated with system utilities, I'd recommend setting your path in ~/.profile
in a #!/bin/sh
script, and then running source ~/.profile
in your corresponding bash
/zsh
startup files.
This allows me to create/change short/one liner shell scripts in one place, instead of creating/deleting/linking/copying files around in some bin directory manually.
For a more extensive example, see my shortcuts.toml
file
If you edit this in vim, you can put the following line in your configuration, so that shortcuts create
runs whenever you save the file:
autocmd BufWritePost shortcuts.toml !shortcuts create
Requires python 3.6+
python3 -m pip install git+https://github.com/purarue/shortcuts
Should be accessible as shortcuts
or python3 -m shortcuts
Usage: shortcuts create [OPTIONS]
Create the shell scripts!
Options:
--debug / --quiet Log shortcut files being created
--conf PATH specify a configuration file
--shortcuts-dir PATH specify a shortcuts directory
--help Show this message and exit.
You can also set the environment variables SHORTCUTS_CONFIG
and SHORTCUTS_DIR
, instead of passing --conf
and --shortcuts-dir
.