# This is a sample commands.py. You can add your own commands here. # # Please refer to commands_full.py for all the default commands and a complete # documentation. Do NOT add them all here, or you may end up with defunct # commands when upgrading ranger. # You always need to import ranger.api.commands here to get the Command class: from ranger.api.commands import * # A simple command for demonstration purposes follows. # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # You can import any python module as needed. from ranger.core.loader import CommandLoader import os # Any class that is a subclass of "Command" will be integrated into ranger as a # command. Try typing ":my_edit" in ranger! class my_edit(Command): # The so-called doc-string of the class will be visible in the built-in # help that is accessible by typing "?c" inside ranger. """:my_edit A sample command for demonstration purposes that opens a file in an editor. """ # The execute method is called when you run this command in ranger. def execute(self): # self.arg(1) is the first (space-separated) argument to the function. # This way you can write ":my_edit somefilename". if self.arg(1): # self.rest(1) contains self.arg(1) and everything that follows target_filename = self.rest(1) else: # self.fm is a ranger.core.filemanager.FileManager object and gives # you access to internals of ranger. # self.fm.thisfile is a ranger.container.file.File object and is a # reference to the currently selected file. target_filename = self.fm.thisfile.path # This is a generic function to print text in ranger. self.fm.notify("Let's edit the file " + target_filename + "!") # Using bad=True in fm.notify allows you to print error messages: if not os.path.exists(target_filename): self.fm.notify("The given file does not exist!", bad=True) return # This executes a function from ranger.core.acitons, a module with a # variety of subroutines that can help you construct commands. # Check out the source, or run "pydoc ranger.core.actions" for a list. self.fm.edit_file(target_filename) # The tab method is called when you press tab, and should return a list of # suggestions that the user will tab through. # tabnum is 1 for and -1 for by default def tab(self, tabnum): # This is a generic tab-completion function that iterates through the # content of the current directory. return self._tab_directory_content() class extracthere(Command): def execute(self): """ Extract copied files to current directory """ copied_files = tuple(self.fm.copy_buffer) if not copied_files: return def refresh(_): cwd = self.fm.get_directory(original_path) cwd.load_content() one_file = copied_files[0] cwd = self.fm.thisdir original_path = cwd.path au_flags = ['-X', cwd.path] au_flags += self.line.split()[1:] au_flags += ['-e'] self.fm.copy_buffer.clear() self.fm.cut_buffer = False if len(copied_files) == 1: descr = "extracting: " + os.path.basename(one_file.path) else: descr = "extracting files from: " + os.path.basename(one_file.dirname) obj = CommandLoader(args=['atool'] + au_flags \ + [f.path for f in copied_files], descr=descr) obj.signal_bind('after', refresh) self.fm.loader.add(obj) class nvir(Command): def execute(self): cf = self.fm.thisfile n= ['nvr','--servername','/tmp/nvimsocket','--remote'] n.extend([f.realpath for f in self.fm.thistab.get_selection()]) self.fm.execute_command(n)