Since https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep/issues/200 is fixed in
0.7.1, we can safely suggest ripgrep as the candidate generator as it
has a more precise implementation of gitignore filtering than the silver
searcher.
When `ps` is aliased for something uncommon, like `alias ps=grc ps` which colorizes ps output, the output of `ps` can be unexpected and/or undesired.
This change makes ps to be always executed as command, even if it's aliased.
Handles records like "[20.20.7.168]:9722 ssh-rsa ..."
This is a standard format for servers running on custom port according to http://man.openbsd.org/sshd.8#SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS_FILE_FORMAT
A hostname or address may optionally be enclosed within ‘[’ and ‘]’
brackets then followed by ‘:’ and a non-standard port number.
Close#1018
Run the command as is in cmd.exe with no parsing and escaping.
Explicity set cmd.SysProcAttr so execCommand does not escape the command.
Technically, the command should be escaped with ^ for special characters,
including ". This allows cmd.exe commands to be chained together.
See https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/7343#issuecomment-333350201
This commit also updates quoteEntry to use strings.Replace instead of
strconv.Quote which escapes more than \ and ".
* Don't do shell quoting for weird chars
This would prevent tabs from being escaped as `$'\t'` (definitely not what I would want to see as initial value in the search).
* Do different escape.
Remove code that is no longer relevant after the removal of ncurses
renderer. This commit also fixes background color issue on tcell-based
FullscreenRenderer (Windows).
IMPORTANT:
cmd.exe and powershell are fine in default Windows terminal.
cmd.exe prompt is broken on ConEmu because it natively supports ucs-2 only.
utf-16 support is exclusive to .Net (ie. powershell).
utf-8 supports requires chcp, external program, but does not fix the cmd.exe prompt.
Use powershell on ConEmu to avoid corrupted text on display
Previously a command like `echo a && echo b` would get transformed into
`echo a && echo b | fzf`, which only pipes the output of the second
command. Adding parentheses around the source command avoids this issue,
and works on both Unix and Windows.