💠Extra Shell Features

The UESH shell provides more features than you can imagine!

In addition to all the base shell features that UESH contains, the following extra features can be used within the shell. Currently, the following features are supported:

Cancellation

You can control whether to allow or not to allow cancellation by using the two functions that do exactly the opposite of each other:

// To allow cancellation
CancellationHandlers.AllowCancel()

// To inhibit cancellation
CancellationHandlers.InhibitCancel()

The CancellationHandlers class can be found in the Nitrocid.Shell.ShellBase.Commands namespace.

If you call InhibitCancel(), it's no longer possible to use CTRL + C to cancel the current command. This is useful if the command is in the middle of an uninterruptible work or is in interaction with a native library.

When you've already inhibited the shell cancellation handler, if you call AllowCancel, then you can use CTRL + C to cancel the current command.

Wrapping

As indicated earlier in the command information page, if you enable the wrapping ability in the command flags (CommandFlags.Wrappable) for your command, you can use the wrap command against your command to be able to see the details of the output of the command without having to scroll (as in Windows).

For example, jsonbeautify has been defined with the wrappable flag so that you can use the wrap command with it.

{ "jsonbeautify",
    new CommandInfo("jsonbeautify", /* Localizable */ "Beautifies the JSON file",
        [
            new CommandArgumentInfo(
            [
                new CommandArgumentPart(true, "jsonfile"),
                new CommandArgumentPart(true, "output"),
            ], [], true)
        ], new JsonBeautifyCommand(), CommandFlags.RedirectionSupported | CommandFlags.Wrappable)
},

If your entire screen has been filled and the output isn't done yet, you can use the following controls to be able to control the position:

KeyAction

Escape

Bails from the wrapped output viewer

Page Up

Scrolls to the previous page

Home

Scrolls to the first page

End

Scrolls to the last page

Any key

Scrolls to the next page

Aliasing

Additionally, the UESH shell provides you with facility to make aliasing long commands easier than before. The alias management class, AliasManager, allows you to manage the shell aliases, like adding aliases, editing them, removing them, and so on.

The built-in aliases that are currently made for you are:

  • ls -> list

Currently, the below functions are available for your mods to use:

  • InitAliases(): Usually not needed. This populates the list of aliases and lets the shell acknowledge them.

  • SaveAliases(): Saves the list of aliases to a configuration file found under the kernel configuration path.

  • AddAlias(): Adds an alias to the list of aliases.

  • RemoveAlias(): Removes an alias from the list of aliases.

  • DoesAliasExist(): Checks to see if a particular alias exists.

  • GetAliasesListFromType(): Gets a list of aliases from a shell type, excluding the built-in ones.

  • GetEntireAliasListFromType(): Gets a list of aliases from a shell type, including the built-in ones.

  • GetAlias(): Gets information about a specific alias.

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