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## OPTIONS
Options must be passed to 'autojump' and not the 'j' wrapper function.
-a, --add DIR manually add path to database
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--purge deletes database entries that no longer exist on system
-s, --stat show database entries and their key weights
--version show version information and exit
## INTERNAL OPTIONS
-b, --bash enclose directory with quotes to prevent errors
--complete used for tab completion
## ADDITIONAL CONFIGURATION
- Enable ZSH Tab Completion
ZSH tab completion requires the `compinit` module to be loaded. Please add
the following line to your ~/.zshrc:
autoload -U compinit; compinit
- Always Ignore Case
Default behavior is to prioritize exact matches over all else. For example,
`j foo` will prefer /foobar over /FooBar even if the latter has a higher
weight. To change this behavior and ignore case, add the following
environmental variable in your ~/.bashrc:
export AUTOJUMP_IGNORE_CASE=1
- Prevent Database Entries' Decay
Default behavior is to decay unused database entries slowly over time.
Eventually when database limits are hit and maintenance is run, autojump
will purge older less used entries. To prevent decay, add the following
variable in your ~/.bashrc:
export AUTOJUMP_KEEP_ALL_ENTRIES=1
- Prefer Symbolic Links
Default behavior is to evaluate symbolic links into full paths as to reduce
duplicate entries in the database. However, some users prefer a shorter
working directory path in their shell prompt. To switch behavior to prefer
symbolic links, add the following environmental variable in your ~/.bashrc:
export AUTOJUMP_KEEP_SYMLINKS=1
## ADVANCED USAGE
- Using Multiple Arguments
Let's assume the following database:
30 /home/user/mail/inbox 10 /home/user/work/inbox
`j in` would jump into /home/user/mail/inbox as the higher weighted entry.
However you can pass multiple arguments to autojump to prefer a different
entry. In the above example, `j w in` would then jump you into
/home/user/work/inbox.
- ZSH Tab Completion
Tab completion requires two tabs before autojump will display the completion
menu. However if `setopt nolistambiguous` is enabled, then only one tab is
required.
- Change Directory Weight
To manually change a directory's key weight, you can edit the file
_$XDG_DATA_HOME/autojump/autojump.txt_. Each entry has two columns. The
first is the key weight and the second is the path:
29.3383211216 /home/user/downloads
All negative key weights are purged automatically.
## KNOWN ISSUES
- For bash users, autojump keeps track of directories as a pre-command hook by
modifying $PROMPT_COMMAND. If you overwrite $PROMPT_COMMAND in ~/.bashrc you
can cause problems. Don't do this:
export PROMPT_COMMAND="history -a"
Do this:
export PROMPT_COMMAND="${PROMPT_COMMAND}; history -a"
- The jump function `j` does not support directories that begin with `-`. If you
want to jump a directory called `--music`, try using `j music` instead of `j
--music`.
- jumpapplet (bug #59)
Does not work in Gnome 3 shell or LDXE.
## FILES
If installed locally, autojump is self-contained in _~/.autojump/_.
The database is stored in _$XDG_DATA_HOME/autojump/autojump.txt_.
## REPORTING BUGS
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For any usage related issues or feature requests please visit:
_https://github.com/joelthelion/autojump/issues_
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## MAILING LIST
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For release announcements and development related discussion please visit:
_https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/autojump_
## THANKS
Special thanks goes out to: Pierre Gueth, Simon Marache-Francisco, Daniel
Jackoway, and many others.
## AUTHORS
autojump was originally written by Joël Schaerer, and currently maintained by
William Ting.
## COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version
3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. This is free software: you are
free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent
permitted by law.