/usr/share/zsh/functions/Misc/sticky-note is in zsh-common 5.1.1-1ubuntu2.3.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o755.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 | #!/bin/zsh -fi
# A zsh sticky-note ("post-it") application. Load this file as a function:
# autoload -Uz sticky-note
#
# It may then be bound as a widget:
# zle -N sticky-note
# And/or run as a command:
# sticky-note
# sticky-note -b
# sticky-note -l ...
# The -b option is like "zed -b": it installs keymaps/bindings only.
# Use the -l option to list previous sticky notes. Most options of the
# "fc -l" command are supported, for selecting which notes to display.
# If "sticky-note -l" is run from inside a widget, the cursor is moved
# to the top left of the terminal before display and returned to its
# original position after display. The -l option is implicitly added
# when sticky-note is called from zle-line-init, to avoid inadvertently
# trapping the user inside the note editor.
#
# Otherwise, invoke the line editor with the previous notes available
# as an editor history. Two quick taps on the return/enter key finish
# the note, or you can use ^X^W as usual (ZZ in vicmd mode).
# The application is configured by three zstyles, all using the context
# ":sticky-note". The first two styles are "notefile" and "maxnotes"
# to name the file in which notes are stored and the maximum number of
# notes to retain:
# zstyle :sticky-note notefile ~/.zsticky
# zstyle :sticky-note maxnotes 1000
# The "theme" style may be set to control the appearance of the notes.
# The style is an associative array; the current set of values (defaults
# in parens) are:
# bg => name or ANSI escape for background color (yellow)
# fg => name or ANSI escape for foreground color (black)
# color => ANSI escape for color scheme ($theme[bg]$theme[fg])
# reset => ANSI escape to restore "normal" colors
# Values given as names are looked up in the $bg and $fg arrays from the
# "colors" function. If a "color" field is set, the "bg" and "fg" fields
# are not used. Example:
# zstyle :sticky-note theme \
# bg red \
# fg $fg_bold[yellow]
# For backwards compatibility with an earlier version, the notefile may
# also be named by the STICKYFILE variable (defaults to $HOME/.zsticky).
# The number of notes stored may be given by STICKYSIZE (1000).
# I encourage all you creative people to contribute enhancements ...
emulate -LR zsh
setopt nobanghist extendedhistory histignoredups
local STICKYFILE=${STICKYFILE:-$HOME/.zsticky}
local STICKYSIZE=${STICKYSIZE:-1000}
local sticky stickyfile stickysize
zstyle -s :sticky-note notefile stickyfile || stickyfile=$STICKYFILE
zstyle -s :sticky-note maxnotes stickysize || stickysize=$STICKYSIZE
# Set up keybindings (adapted from "zed")
if ! bindkey -M sticky >& /dev/null
then
bindkey -N sticky main
bindkey -M sticky ^X^W accept-line
bindkey -M sticky ^M^M accept-line # Two quick RETs ends note
bindkey -M sticky ^M self-insert-unmeta
fi
if ! bindkey -M sticky-vicmd >& /dev/null
then
bindkey -N sticky-vicmd vicmd
bindkey -M sticky-vicmd ZZ accept-line
fi
[[ "$1" == -b ]] && return 0
# Look up color theme
local -A theme
(($+bg && $+fg)) || { autoload -Uz colors; colors }
zstyle -m :sticky-note theme '*' || {
zstyle :sticky-note theme bg yellow fg black
}
zstyle -a :sticky-note theme theme
(( ${+bg[$theme[bg]]} )) && theme[bg]=$bg[$theme[bg]]
(( ${+fg[$theme[fg]]} )) && theme[fg]=$fg[$theme[fg]]
(( ${+theme[color]} )) || theme[color]=$theme[bg]$theme[fg]
(( ${+theme[reset]} )) || theme[reset]=$reset_color
# If invoked as a widget, behave a bit like run-help
if zle
then
zmodload -i zsh/parameter
if [[ $* == -*l* || $functrace == *zle-line-init:* ]]
then
fc -ap $stickyfile $stickysize $stickysize
echoti sc
echoti home
print -nr "$theme[color]"
fc -l "${@:--1}" | while read -r sticky; do print -- "$sticky"; done
print -nr "$theme[reset]"
echoti rc
elif [[ $CONTEXT = (cont|select|vared) ]]
then
zle -M "No stickies during ${${(z)PREBUFFER}[1]:-$CONTEXT}, sorry"
zle .beep
zle -R
else
zle .push-line
BUFFER=sticky-note
zle .accept-line
fi
return 0
fi
# Invoked as a command, behave like zed, but write a history file
fc -ap $stickyfile $stickysize $stickysize
# With a -l option, list the existing sticky notes
if [[ "$*" == -*l* ]]
then
print -nr "$theme[color]"
# Use read/print loop to interpolate "\n" in history lines
fc -f "$@" | while read -r sticky; do print -- "$sticky"; done
print -nr "$theme[reset]"
return 0
fi
# Edit a new sticky note and add it to the stickyfile
while vared -h -p "%{$theme[color]%}" -M sticky -m sticky-vicmd sticky
do
{
[[ -n "$sticky" ]] && print -s -- "$sticky"
} always {
(( TRY_BLOCK_ERROR = 0 ))
} && break
echo -n -e '\a'
done
return 0
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