From a754011fc58e83f38cadc5bc10492ab961c9c540 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: justsaumit Date: Wed, 2 Mar 2022 11:23:45 +0530 Subject: spring cleaning 0.1 --- .local/src/st/external-pipe_scripts/st-copyout | 16 ++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+) create mode 100755 .local/src/st/external-pipe_scripts/st-copyout (limited to '.local/src/st/external-pipe_scripts/st-copyout') diff --git a/.local/src/st/external-pipe_scripts/st-copyout b/.local/src/st/external-pipe_scripts/st-copyout new file mode 100755 index 0000000..e7be21e --- /dev/null +++ b/.local/src/st/external-pipe_scripts/st-copyout @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ +#!/bin/sh +# Using external pipe with st, give a dmenu prompt of recent commands, +# allowing the user to copy the output of one. +# xclip required for this script. +# By Jaywalker and Luke +## figure how to not print ps1 without having to clear terminal +## have only one command in active window and then piping into awk +## to skip the first line +tmpfile=$(mktemp /tmp/st-cmd-output.XXXXXX) +trap 'rm "$tmpfile"' 0 1 15 +sed -n "w $tmpfile" +sed -i 's/\x0//g' "$tmpfile" +ps1="$(grep "\S" "$tmpfile" | tail -n 1 | sed 's/^\s*//' | cut -d' ' -f1)" +chosen="$(grep -F "$ps1" "$tmpfile" | sed '$ d' | tac | dmenu -p "Copy which command's output?" -i -l 10 | sed 's/[^^]/[&]/g; s/\^/\\^/g')" +eps1="$(echo "$ps1" | sed 's/[^^]/[&]/g; s/\^/\\^/g')" +awk "/^$chosen$/{p=1;print;next} p&&/$eps1/{p=0};p" "$tmpfile" | awk 'NR!=1' |xclip -selection clipboard -- cgit v1.2.3