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- [Installation](#installation)
- [zsh plugin](#zsh-plugin)
- [Manually](#manually)
- [Shell alias](#shell-alias)
- [vim](#vim)
- [Alternative setup](#alternative-setup)
- [Custom emoji aliases](#custom-emoji-aliases)
- [Development/testing](#developmenttesting)
- [Building package for publishing](#building-package-for-publishing)
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# emoji-fzf
Small utility for manipulating emojis via
[fzf's](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf) `--preview` hook!
<img src="https://cdn.rawgit.com/noahp/emoji-fzf/assets/demo.svg">
## Installation
1. Install `fzf` if you don't have it already to use its preview browser:
https://github.com/junegunn/fzf#installation
2. Install the latest release of `emoji-fzf` from pypi:
```bash
pip install emoji-fzf
```
See `emoji-fzf --help` for supported commands.
_This project allows you to install the tool in an isolated environment:
https://github.com/pipxproject/pipx_
### zsh plugin
There's an excellent zsh plugin available, see here (thanks @pschmitt !):
https://github.com/pschmitt/emoji-fzf.zsh
### Manually
#### Shell alias
You could add a shell alias like the following to your shell init script:
```bash
# if you aren't installing to a virtual env, you may need to add this to path
# (if it wasn't already) to access the tool from a pip installation
export PATH=$PATH:~/.local/bin
# add me to your ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc or whatnot
alias emoj="emoji-fzf preview | fzf -m --preview "emoji-fzf get --name {1}" | cut -d " " -f 1 | emoji-fzf get"
# to copy to xclip system keyboard (on mac use pbcopy) after selecting
emoj | xclip -selection c
```
#### vim
You can also add the following to a `~/.vimrc` file (apologies for the kludgy
vimscript, I'm not great at it), to enable `C-e` to open the emoji picker and
insert the selected emoji:
```vimscript
" Use emoji-fzf and fzf to fuzzy-search for emoji, and insert the result
function! InsertEmoji(emoji)
let @a = system('cut -d " " -f 1 | emoji-fzf get', a:emoji)
normal! "agP
endfunction
command! -bang Emoj
\ call fzf#run({
\ 'source': 'emoji-fzf preview',
\ 'options': '--preview ''emoji-fzf get --name {1}''',
\ 'sink': function('InsertEmoji')
\ })
" Ctrl-e in normal and insert mode will open the emoji picker.
" Unfortunately doesn't bring you back to insert mode 😕
map <C-e> :Emoj<CR>
imap <C-e> <C-o><C-e>
```
## Alternative setup
If you prefer not to use fzf's preview feature and have the emojis appear
before their aliases you can use the following alias instead:
```bash
alias emoj="emoji-fzf preview --prepend | fzf | awk '{ print \$1 }'"
```
## Custom emoji aliases
emoji-fzf uses a pre-defined set of aliases for every emoji. If you want to
define your own, ie add custom aliases for some emojis you can do this via the
`--custom-aliases` flag.
Please note that these aliases will be appended to the list of pre-defined
aliases and not replace them.
1. First you need to create a JSON file with the following structure:
```json
[
{
"👍": [
"my-custom-alias",
"good-boy"
]
},
{
"💯": [
"epic-victory-royale"
]
}
]
```
2. Now you can call `emoji-fzf` like so:
```bash
emoji-fzf --custom-aliases /path/to/your-custom-aliases.json preview
```
## Development/testing
This uses a Dockerfile to keep the test build environment relatively clean and
locked. The full test infrastructure is:
- Docker container, based on Ubuntu 20.04
- tox to run the tests + build checks
- pre-commit to run isort, black, etc.
- check-wheel-contents for built wheel sanity
To run the test suite in docker just as CI does:
```bash
./test.sh
```
### Building package for publishing
This just uses old timey setuptools:
```bash
python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
```
Use `twine` to upload to pypi.