KatePart's editor component has an internal command line, allowing you to perform various actions from a minimal GUI. The command line is a text entry at the bottom of the editor area; to show it select → or use the shortcut (default is F7). The editor provides a set of commands as documented below, and additional commands can be provided by plugins.
To execute a command, type the command then press the return key. The command line will indicate whether it succeeded and possibly display a message. If you entered the command line by pressing F7 it will automatically hide after a few seconds. To clear the message and enter a new command, press F7 again.
The command line has a built-in help system; issue the command
help to get started. To see a list of all available commands
issue help list; to view help for a specific command, do
help command
.
The command line has a built in history, so you can reuse commands already typed. To navigate the history, use the Up and Down keys. When showing historical commands, the argument part of the command will be selected, allowing you to easily overwrite the arguments.
Argument types
- BOOLEAN
This is used with commands that turns things on or off. Legal values are
on
,off
,true
,false
,1
or0
.- INTEGER
An integer number.
- STRING
A string, surrounded by single quotes (') or double quotes (") when it contains spaces.
These commands are provided by the editor component, and allow you to configure the active document and view only. This is handy if you want to use a setting different from the default settings, for example for indentation.
set-tab-width {INTEGER width}
Sets the tab width to the number
width
.set-indent-width {INTEGER width}
Sets the indentation width to the number
width
. Used only if you are indenting with spaces.set-word-wrap-column {INTEGER width}
Sets the line width for hard wrapping to
width
. This is used if you are having your text wrapped automatically.set-icon-border {BOOLEAN enable}
Sets the visibility of the icon border.
set-folding-markers {BOOLEAN enable}
Sets the visibility of the folding markers pane.
set-line-numbers {BOOLEAN enable}
Sets the visibility of the line numbers pane.
set-replace-tabs {BOOLEAN enable}
If enabled, tabs are replaced with spaces as you type.
set-remove-trailing-space {BOOLEAN enable}
If enabled, trailing whitespace is removed whenever the cursor leaves a line.
set-show-tabs {BOOLEAN enable}
If enabled, TAB characters and trailing whitespace will be visualized by a small dot.
set-show-indent {BOOLEAN enable}
If enabled, indentation will be visualized by a vertical dotted line.
set-indent-spaces {BOOLEAN enable}
If enabled, the editor will indent with
indent-width
spaces for each indentation level, rather than with one TAB character.set-mixed-indent {BOOLEAN enable}
If enabled, KatePart will use a mix of TAB and spaces for indentation. Each indentation level will be
indent-width
wide, and more indentation levels will be optimized to use as many TAB characters as possible.When executed, this command will additionally set space indentation enabled, and if the indent width is unspecified it will be set to half of the
tab-width
for the document at the time of execution.set-word-wrap {BOOLEAN enable}
Enables dynamic word wrap according to
enable
.set-replace-tabs-save {BOOLEAN enable }
When enabled, tabs will be replaced with whitespace whenever the document is saved.
set-remove-trailing-space-save {BOOLEAN enable}
When enabled, trailing space will be removed from each line whenever the document is saved.
set-indent-mode {STRING name}
Sets the autoindentation mode to
name
. Ifname
is not known, the mode is set to 'none'. Valid modes are 'none', 'normal', 'cstyle', 'haskell', 'lilypond', 'lisp', 'python', 'ruby' and 'xml'.set-auto-ident {BOOLEAN script}
Enable or disable autoindentation.
set-highlight {STRING highlight}
Sets the syntax highlighting system for the document. The argument must be a valid highlight name, as seen in the → menu. This command provides an autocompletion list for its argument.
reload-scripts
Reload all JavaScript scripts used by Kate, including indenters and command line scripts.
set-mode {STRING mode}
Choose the filetype scheme for the current document.
nn[oremap] {STRING original} {STRING mapped}
Map the key sequence
original
tomapped
.
These commands modify the current document.
indent
Indents the selected lines or the current line.
unindent
Unindents the selected lines or current line.
cleanindent
Cleans up the indentation of the selected lines or current line according to the indentation settings in the document.
comment
Inserts comment markers to make the selection or selected lines or current line a comment according to the text format as defined by the syntax highlight definition for the document.
uncomment
Removes comment markers from the selection or selected lines or current line according to the text format as defined by the syntax highlight definition for the document.
kill-line
Deletes the current line.
replace { STRING pattern} {STRING replacement}
Replaces text matching
pattern
withreplacement
. If you want to include whitespace in thepattern
, you must quote both thepattern
andreplacement
with single or double quotes. If the arguments are unquoted, the first word is used aspattern
and the rest forreplacement
. Ifreplacement
is empty, each occurrence ofpattern
is removed.You can set flags to configure the search by adding a colon, followed by one or more letters each representing a configuration, giving the form
replace:options pattern replacement
. Available options are:b
Search backwards.
c
Search from cursor position.
e
Search in the selection only.
r
Do regular expression search. If set, you may use
\N
where N is a number to represent captures in the replacement string.s
Do case sensitive search.
p
Prompt for permission to replace the next occurrence.
w
Match whole words only.
date {STRING format}
Inserts a date/time string as defined by the specified
format
, or the format “yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss” if none is specified. The following translations are done when interpretingformat
:d
The day as number without a leading zero (1-31). dd
The day as number with a leading zero (01-31). ddd
The abbreviated localized day name (e.g. 'Mon'..'Sun'). dddd
The long localized day name (e.g. 'Monday'..'Sunday'). M
The month as number without a leading zero (1-12). MM
The month as number with a leading zero (01-12). MMMM
The long localized month name (e.g. 'January'..'December'). MMM
The abbreviated localized month name (e.g. 'Jan'..'Dec'). yy
The year as two digit number (00-99). yyyy
The year as four digit number (1752-8000). h
The hour without a leading zero (0..23 or 1..12 if AM/PM display). hh
The hour with a leading zero (00..23 or 01..12 if AM/PM display). m
The minute without a leading zero (0..59). mm
The minute with a leading zero (00..59). s
The second without a leading zero (0..59). ss
The second with a leading zero (00..59). z
The milliseconds without leading zeroes (0..999). zzz
The milliseconds with leading zeroes (000..999). AP
Use AM/PM display. AP will be replaced by either "AM" or "PM". ap
Use am/pm display. ap will be replaced by either "am" or "pm". char {STRING identifier}
This command allows you to insert literal characters by their numerical identifier, in decimal, octal or hexadecimal form. To use it launch the Editing Command dialog and type
char: [number]
in the entry box, then hit .- s///[ig] %s///[ig]
This command does a sed-like search/replace operation on the current line, or on the whole file (%s///).
In short, the text is searched for text matching the search pattern, the regular expression between the first and the second slash, and when a match is found, the matching part of the text is replaced with the expression between the second and last slash. Parentheses in the search pattern create back references, that is the command remembers which part of the string matched in the parentheses; these strings can be reused in the replace pattern, referred to as
\1
for the first set of parentheses,\2
for the second and so on.To search for a literal
(
or)
, you need to escape it using a backslash character:\(\)
If you put an
i
at the end of the expression, the matching will be case insensitive. If you put ag
at the end, all occurrences of the pattern will be replaced, otherwise only the first occurrence is replaced.Example 5.2. Replacing text in the current line
Your friendly compiler just stopped, telling you that the class
myClass
mentioned in line 3902 in your source file is not defined."Buckle!" you think, it is of course
MyClass
. You go to line 3902, and instead of trying to find the word in the text, you launch the Editing Command Dialog, enters/myclass/MyClass/i
, hit the button, save the file and compile – successfully without the error.Example 5.3. Replacing text in the whole file
Imagine that you have a file, in which you mention a “Miss Jensen” several times, when someone comes in and tells you that she just got married to “Mr Jones”. You want, of course, to replace each and every occurrence of “Miss Jensen” with “Ms Jones”.
Enter the command line and issue the command
%s/Miss Jensen/Ms Jones/
and hit return, you are done.Example 5.4. A More Advanced Example
This example makes use of back references as well as a character class (if you do not know what that is, please refer to the related documentation mentioned below).
Suppose you have the following line:
void MyClass::DoStringOps( String &foo, String &bar, String *p, int &a, int &b )
Now you realize that this is not nice code, and decide that you want to use the
const
keyword for all “address of” arguments, those characterized by the & operator in front of the argument name. You would also like to simplify the white space, so that there is only 1 whitespace character between each word.Launch the Editing Command Dialog, and enter:
s/\s+(\w+)\s+(&)/ const \1 \2/g
and hit the button. Theg
at the end of the expression makes the regular expression recompile for each match to save the backreferences.Output:
void MyClass::DoStringOps( const String &foo, const String &bar, String *p, const int &a, const int &b )
Mission completed! Now, what happened? Well, we looked for some white space (
\s+
) followed by one or more alphabetic characters (\w+
) followed by some more whitespace (\s+
) followed by an ampersand, and in the process saved the alphabetic chunk and the ampersand for reuse in the replace operation. Then we replaced the matching part of our line with one whitespace followed by “const” followed by one whitespace followed by our saved alphabetical chunk (\1
) followed by one whitespace followed by our saved ampersand (\2
)Now in some cases the alphabetical chunk was “String”, in some “int”, so using the character class
\w
and the+
quantifier proved a valuable asset.sort
Sorts the selected text or entire document.
natsort
Sort the selected lines or entire document naturally.
Example 5.5. sort vs. natsort
sort(a10, a1, a2)
results ina1, a10, a2
natsort(a10, a1, a2)
results ina1, a2, a10
moveLinesDown
Move selected lines down.
moveLinesUp
Move selected lines up.
uniq
Remove duplicated lines from the selected text or the whole document.
rtrim
Remove trailing space from the selected text or the whole document.
ltrim
Remove leading space from the selected text or the whole document.
join [STRING separator]
Join selected lines or whole document. Optionally takes a parameter defining a separator, for example:
join ', '
rmblank
Remove all blank spaces from the selected text or the whole document.
alignon
This command aligns lines in the selected block or whole document on the column given by a regular expression given as an argument.
If you give an empty pattern it will align on the first non-blank character by default.
If the pattern has a capture it will indent on the captured match.
Examples:
alignon -
will insert spaces before the first '-' of each lines to align them all on the same column.alignon :\\s+(.)
will insert spaces before the first non-blank character that occurs after a colon to align them all on the same column.unwrap
Unwrap the selected text or the whole document.
each {STRING script}
Given a JavaScript function as an argument, call that for the list of selected lines and replace them with the return value of that callback.
Example 5.6. Join selected lines
each 'function(lines){return lines.join(", ")}'
Or, more briefly:
each 'lines.join(", ")'
filter {STRING script}
Given a JavaScript function as an argument, call that for the list of selected lines and remove those where the callback returns false.
Example 5.7. Remove blank lines
filter 'function(1){return 1.length > 0;}'
Or, more briefly:
filter 'line.length > 0'
map {STRING script}
Given a JavaScript function as an argument, call that for the list of selected lines and replace the line with the value of the callback.
Example 5.8. Remove blank lines
map 'function(line){return line.replace(/^s+/,"");}'
Or, more briefly:
map 'line.replace(/^s+/,"")'
duplicateLinesUp
Duplicate the selected lines above the current selection.
duplicateLinesDown
Duplicate the selected lines below the current selection.
goto {INT line}
This command navigates to the specified line.
grep {STRING pattern}
Search the document for the regular expression
pattern
. For more information, see Appendix A, Regular Expressions.find {STRING pattern}
This command navigates to the first occurrence of
pattern
according to the configuration. Following occurrences can be found using → (the default shortcut is F3).The find command can be configured by appending a colon followed by one or more options, the form is
find:options pattern
. The following options are supported:b
Search backwards.
c
Search from cursor position.
e
Search in the selection only.
r
Do regular expression search. If set, you may use
\N
where N is a number to represent captures in the replacement string.s
Do case sensitive search.
w
Match whole words only.
ifind {STRING pattern}
This command provides “as-you-type” searching. You can configure the behavior of the search by appending a colon followed by one or more options, like this:
ifind:options pattern
. Allowed options are:b
Search backwards.
r
Do regular expression search.
s
Do case sensitive search.
c
Search from cursor position.
w
Save the current document.
wa
Save all currently open documents.
q
Close the current document.
qa
Close all open documents.
wq
Save and close the current document.
wqa
Save and close all currently open documents.
x
Save and close the current document only if it has changed.
x
Save and close all currently open documents only if they have changed.
bp
Go to the previous document in the documents list.
bn
Go to the next document in the documents list.
new
Open a new document in horizontal split view.
vnew
Open a new document in vertical split view.
e
Reload the current document if it has changed on disk.
enew
Edit a new document.
print
Open the Print dialog to print the current document.