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Improve the configuration documentation in `configs/conf.yml` (#656).
83 lines
3.5 KiB
YAML
83 lines
3.5 KiB
YAML
---
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# The editor to use with 'cheat -e <sheet>'. Defaults to $EDITOR or $VISUAL.
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editor: EDITOR_PATH
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# Should 'cheat' always colorize output?
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colorize: false
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# Which 'chroma' colorscheme should be applied to the output?
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# Options are available here:
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# https://github.com/alecthomas/chroma/tree/master/styles
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style: monokai
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# Which 'chroma' "formatter" should be applied?
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# One of: "terminal", "terminal256", "terminal16m"
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formatter: terminal256
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# Through which pager should output be piped?
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# 'less -FRX' is recommended on Unix systems
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# 'more' is recommended on Windows
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pager: PAGER_PATH
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# Cheatpaths are paths at which cheatsheets are available on your local
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# filesystem.
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#
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# It is useful to sort cheatsheets into different cheatpaths for organizational
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# purposes. For example, you might want one cheatpath for community
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# cheatsheets, one for personal cheatsheets, one for cheatsheets pertaining to
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# your day job, one for code snippets, etc.
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#
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# Cheatpaths are scoped, such that more "local" cheatpaths take priority over
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# more "global" cheatpaths. (The most global cheatpath is listed first in this
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# file; the most local is listed last.) For example, if there is a 'tar'
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# cheatsheet on both global and local paths, you'll be presented with the local
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# one by default. ('cheat -p' can be used to view cheatsheets from alternative
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# cheatpaths.)
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#
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# Cheatpaths can also be tagged as "read only". This instructs cheat not to
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# automatically create cheatsheets on a read-only cheatpath. Instead, when you
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# would like to edit a read-only cheatsheet using 'cheat -e', cheat will
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# perform a copy-on-write of that cheatsheet from a read-only cheatpath to a
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# writeable cheatpath.
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#
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# This is very useful when you would like to maintain, for example, a
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# "pristine" repository of community cheatsheets on one cheatpath, and an
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# editable personal reponsity of cheatsheets on another cheatpath.
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#
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# Cheatpaths can be also configured to automatically apply tags to cheatsheets
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# on certain paths, which can be useful for querying purposes.
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# Example: 'cheat -t work jenkins'.
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#
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# Community cheatsheets must be installed separately, though you may have
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# downloaded them automatically when installing 'cheat'. If not, you may
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# download them here:
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#
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# https://github.com/cheat/cheatsheets
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cheatpaths:
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# Cheatpath properties mean the following:
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# 'name': the name of the cheatpath (view with 'cheat -d', filter with 'cheat -p')
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# 'path': the filesystem path of the cheatsheet directory (view with 'cheat -d')
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# 'tags': tags that should be automatically applied to sheets on this path
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# 'readonly': shall user-created ('cheat -e') cheatsheets be saved here?
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- name: community
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path: COMMUNITY_PATH
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tags: [ community ]
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readonly: true
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# If you have personalized cheatsheets, list them last. They will take
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# precedence over the more global cheatsheets.
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- name: personal
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path: PERSONAL_PATH
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tags: [ personal ]
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readonly: false
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# While it requires no configuration here, it's also worth noting that
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# cheat will automatically append directories named '.cheat' within the
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# current working directory to the 'cheatpath'. This can be very useful if
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# you'd like to closely associate cheatsheets with, for example, a directory
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# containing source code.
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#
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# Such "directory-scoped" cheatsheets will be treated as the most "local"
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# cheatsheets, and will override less "local" cheatsheets. Similarly,
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# directory-scoped cheatsheets will always be editable ('readonly: false').
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