Completion functionality for Dart Command-Line Interfaces built using CommandRunner
.
Developed with 💙 by Very Good Ventures 🦄
❗ In order to start using CLI Completion you must have the Dart SDK installed on your machine.
flutter pub add cli_completion
On your CommandRunner
class, extend CompletionCommandRunner
:
import 'package:cli_completion/cli_completion.dart';
class ExampleCommandRunner extends CompletionCommandRunner<int> {
...
This will make the first command run to install the completion files automatically. To disable that behavior, set enableAutoInstall
to false:
class ExampleCommandRunner extends CompletionCommandRunner<int> {
@override
bool get enableAutoInstall => false;
...
When enableAutoInstall
is set to false, users will have to call install-completion-files
to install these files manually.
$ example_cli install-completion-files
For an overview of how this package works, check out the documentation.
Handling completion requests should be straightforward.
If there are any checks (like analytics, telemetry, or anything that you may have on run
or runCommand
overrides) before running subcommands, make sure you fast track the completion
command to skip all of the unnecessary computations.
Example:
@override
Future<int?> runCommand(ArgResults topLevelResults) async {
if (topLevelResults.command?.name == 'completion') {
super.runCommand(topLevelResults);
return;
}
// ... analytics and other unrelated stuff
If you are not using any zsh framework such as Oh My Zsh, you have to start the completion system manually.
Add the following lines to your ~/.zshrc
file:
# Add this to the start of your zsh starter file (~/.zshrc)
autoload -Uz compinit
compinit