docs/wiki/documentation/usage/index.mdown @ 8ca1c9929313
Change a variable name to match the rest.
| author | Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com> |
|---|---|
| date | Fri, 23 Apr 2010 10:16:09 -0400 |
| parents | 4568cfa05d21 |
| children | (none) |
Usage ===== The `hg prompt` command takes a single string as an argument and outputs it. Here's a simple (and useless) example: :::console $ hg prompt "test" test Keywords in curly braces can be used to output repository information: :::console $ hg prompt "currently on {branch}" currently on default Keywords also have an extended form: :::text {optional text{branch}more optional text} This form will output the text and the expanded keyword **only** if the keyword successfully expands. This can be useful for displaying extra text only if it's applicable: :::console $ hg prompt "currently on {branch} and at {bookmark}" currently on branch default and at $ hg prompt "currently on {branch} {and at {bookmark}}" currently on branch default $ hg bookmark my-book $ hg prompt "currently on {branch} {and at {bookmark}}" currently on branch default and at my-book You can give the `--angle-brackets` option to use angle brackets for keywords instead of curly brackets. This can come in handy when combining a simple prompt string with more complicated shell functionality (like color variables): :::console $ hg prompt "{currently on {branch}}" currently on default $ hg prompt --angle-brackets "<currently on <branch>>" currently on default Take a look at the [keywords][] documentation to see all the keywords `hg-prompt` supports. [keywords]: /documentation/keywords/