dotfiles/config/ranger/rifle.conf

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2019-07-04 22:33:48 +02:00
# vim: ft=cfg
#
# This is the configuration file of "rifle", ranger's file executor/opener.
# Each line consists of conditions and a command. For each line the conditions
# are checked and if they are met, the respective command is run.
#
# Syntax:
# <condition1> , <condition2> , ... = command
#
# The command can contain these environment variables:
# $1-$9 | The n-th selected file
# $@ | All selected files
#
# If you use the special command "ask", rifle will ask you what program to run.
#
# Prefixing a condition with "!" will negate its result.
# These conditions are currently supported:
# match <regexp> | The regexp matches $1
# ext <regexp> | The regexp matches the extension of $1
# mime <regexp> | The regexp matches the mime type of $1
# name <regexp> | The regexp matches the basename of $1
# path <regexp> | The regexp matches the absolute path of $1
# has <program> | The program is installed (i.e. located in $PATH)
# env <variable> | The environment variable "variable" is non-empty
# file | $1 is a file
# directory | $1 is a directory
# number <n> | change the number of this command to n
# terminal | stdin, stderr and stdout are connected to a terminal
# X | $DISPLAY is not empty (i.e. Xorg runs)
#
# There are also pseudo-conditions which have a "side effect":
# flag <flags> | Change how the program is run. See below.
# label <label> | Assign a label or name to the command so it can
# | be started with :open_with <label> in ranger
# | or `rifle -p <label>` in the standalone executable.
# else | Always true.
#
# Flags are single characters which slightly transform the command:
# f | Fork the program, make it run in the background.
# | New command = setsid $command >& /dev/null &
# r | Execute the command with root permissions
# | New command = sudo $command
# t | Run the program in a new terminal. If $TERMCMD is not defined,
# | rifle will attempt to extract it from $TERM.
# | New command = $TERMCMD -e $command
# Note: The "New command" serves only as an illustration, the exact
# implementation may differ.
# Note: When using rifle in ranger, there is an additional flag "c" for
# only running the current file even if you have marked multiple files.
#-------------------------------------------
# Websites
#-------------------------------------------
ext x?html?, has chromium-browser, X, flag f = chromium-browser -- "$@"
ext x?html?, has chromium, X, flag f = chromium -- "$@"
#--------------------------------------------
# Video/Audio with a GUI
#-------------------------------------------
mime ^video, has mpv, X, flag f = mpv -- "$@"
mime ^video|audio, has vlc, X, flag f = vlc -- "$@"
#-------------------------------------------
# Documents
#-------------------------------------------
ext pdf, has evince, X, flag f = evince -- "$@"
ext pdf, has mupdf, X, flag f = mupdf "$@"
ext pptx?|od[dfgpst]|docx?|sxc|xlsx?|xlt|xlw|gnm|gnumeric, has libreoffice, X, flag f = libreoffice "$@"
#-------------------------------------------
# Image Viewing:
#-------------------------------------------
mime ^image, has eog, X, flag f = eog -- "$@"
mime ^image/svg, has inkscape, X, flag f = inkscape -- "$@"
mime ^image, has gimp, X, flag f = gimp -- "$@"
#-------------------------------------------
# Text files
#-------------------------------------------
ext xml|json|csv|tex|py|pl|rb|js|sh|php|md|ovpn = nano -- "$@"
# The very last action, so that it's never triggered accidentally, is to execute a program:
mime application/x-executable = "$1"