98

I've been meaning to find a solution for this for YEARS.

I am sooo much more productive in vim when manipulating files than bash for this reason.

If I have

file_12390983421
file_12391983421
file_12340983421
file_12390986421

In bash and type file_1->tab , it obviously lists:

file_12390983421 file_12391983421 file_12340983421 file_12390986421

And this is horrible and painful to work with.

The same sequence in vim will loop through the files one at a time.

Please someone tell me how to do this in bash, or if there is another shell that can do this, I'll switch tomorrow.

8

5 Answers 5

98

By default TAB is bound to the complete readline command. Your desired behavior would be menu-complete instead. You can change your readlines settings by editing ~/.inputrc. To rebind TAB, add this line:

TAB: menu-complete

For more details see the READLINE section in man bash.

8
  • 1
    This works perfectly. One thing, is there a way to get this to go backwards? In vim I use shift+tab, and if I accidentally go to far, I just go back, or if I want to start at the end of the list. Something I do all day long in vim... but doesn't seem to work with menu-complete.
    – pixelearth
    Aug 25, 2011 at 4:41
  • 9
    menu-complete will auto replace you input, but will not display a candidate list. Is there a way to do both?
    – Leon
    Aug 25, 2011 at 7:22
  • 19
    @pixelearth: There is also menu-complete-backward, and at least on my terminal Shift-Tab seems to send the \e[Z escape sequence. This gives you this .inputrc entry: "\e[Z": menu-complete-backward
    – sth
    Aug 25, 2011 at 10:58
  • 2
    It'd be really cool if you could cycle through the possibilities AND see the list of possibilities, like in vim. It's a pain to cycle through every possible file name in a directory just to find out what's in there when completing a command. Jan 8, 2015 at 7:54
  • 6
    Not sure if that is still relevant, but I had the same problem as James M. Lay and solved it by putting Tab:complete "\e[Z":menu-complete in my .inputrc. That way, Tab has the original behavior and Shift + Tab lets you cycle through suggestions. Edit: There's supposed to be a line break after Tab:complete. I can't properly style that here in the comments.
    – karpfen
    Dec 21, 2016 at 10:18
70

For bash >= 4 you might like these settings. You can try them directly on the command-line, and put them in your ~/.bash_profile if you like them.

# If there are multiple matches for completion, Tab should cycle through them
bind 'TAB:menu-complete'
# And Shift-Tab should cycle backwards
bind '"\e[Z": menu-complete-backward'

# Display a list of the matching files
bind "set show-all-if-ambiguous on"

# Perform partial (common) completion on the first Tab press, only start
# cycling full results on the second Tab press (from bash version 5)
bind "set menu-complete-display-prefix on"

This setup is similar to Vim's set wildmode=longest:full:list,full

I pulled these settings from this question on the Unix & Linux site.


By the way, since you are here, here are some other great bindings:

# Cycle through history based on characters already typed on the line
bind '"\e[A":history-search-backward'
bind '"\e[B":history-search-forward'

# Keep Ctrl-Left and Ctrl-Right working when the above are used
bind '"\e[1;5C":forward-word'
bind '"\e[1;5D":backward-word'

This means if you type ssh<Up> it will cycle through previous lines where you ran ssh

If you don't like what you got, you can clear the line with Ctrl-K Ctrl-U

I pulled these settings from this question on AskUbuntu.

7
  • 2
    If you are using Mac OS X then check your bash --version. My Mac has only bash version 3, which unfortunately means the last two binds will have no effect. Oct 27, 2018 at 5:36
  • 2
    I have an answer for getting the latest bash (currently 5.0.2) on macOS at stackoverflow.com/a/55011144/117471 Mar 5, 2019 at 20:37
  • 2
    This config needs to be in .bashrc (some other answer mentions .inputrc).
    – Étienne
    Jul 10, 2019 at 12:27
  • Note that turning on show-all-if-ambiguous will not allow menu-complete if it's ambiguous (which might or might not be useful), unless it's bound to some other keys. // also, to figure out the key code sent press <control+v> before the key.
    – user202729
    Dec 27, 2020 at 14:14
  • 1
    @xr280xr An assumption on my part that .inputrc is where they are "supposed" to go (and may reduce parsing by bash). But on investigation, I see that bindings put into .inputrc will be used not only by bash, but by all programs which use readline! Feb 17, 2022 at 2:36
17

On top of

# cycle forward
Control-k: menu-complete
# cycle backward
Control-j: menu-complete-backward

you may also consider adding

# display one column with matches
set completion-display-width 1

This way you would preserve the current Tab functionality and make bash display the possibilities in one column. So instead of

file_12340983421 file_12390983421 file_12390986421 file_12391983421

you would get

file_12340983421
file_12390983421
file_12390986421
file_12391983421

P.S. You can get up to date readline library from this The GNU Readline Library website.

7

Thanks to @sth I found what works best for me:

To keep normal bash tab completion, and then use ctl-f to cycle through when needed using menu-complete

put this in your .inputrc file:

"\C-f": menu-complete
1

In my experience, the solution provided in sth's answer has never completely worked for me. TL;DR: Add set -o vi to your ~/.bashrc.

When using menu-complete in conjunction with vi keybindings, I have to make sure that my ~/.bashrc has:

set -o vi

It's never been enough for my ~/.inputrc just to have:

TAB: menu-complete

set editing-mode vi
set keymap vi

My guess is that somehow set editing-mode and set keymap are clobbering the TAB: ... setting, but I haven't looked into the documentation thoroughly to figure out why this is the case.

3
  • I am getting TAB command not found. I tried setting editing mode and keymap to vi but still nothing, no bash commands are found in my inputrc on macOS Nov 22, 2016 at 10:58
  • 1
    @MladenPetrovic - the first set... part goes in ~/.bashrc, the second TAB:... part goes in ~/.inputrc. You'd get TAB command not found if you put that part in ~/.bashrc. Jul 6, 2017 at 18:08
  • You probably don't need set keymap vi anyways : stackoverflow.com/questions/10002356/what-does-set-keymap-vi-do
    – cassepipe
    Sep 30, 2022 at 12:46

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