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go doc Improved, with Zsh Completion

This is a drop in replacement for go doc with a number of key improvements:

  • Golang aware Zsh completion for symbols and packages.
  • Flags can go anywhere, not just before the normal arguments.
  • Show the imports for referenced external packages.
  • Show the file and line locations of symbols.
  • Open the file for a symbol.
  • Pager support.
  • Color output with syntax highlighting.

demo

Key Features

  • Advanced Zsh completion of go doc arguments, with package and symbol descriptions. This also improves on existing completion for all other go subcommands. Note: Bash is not supported, and is not a current goal.
  • Colorized output with syntax highlighting for modern terminal emulators with -fmt=term or GODOC_FORMAT=term. A few other output modes can also be used including markdown and html. See the -fmt flag.
  • More flexible argument parsing.
    • Flags can be placed anywhere, including after and between non-flag arguments.
    • Three arguments are interpretted as go doc <pkg> <type>.<method|field>.
  • Imports for external symbols which are referenced in the displayed documentation are shown at the top. Stdlib imports are omitted by default but can be included with -stdlib. Imports can be omitted with the -no-imports flag. This is very useful when dealing with overloaded package names.
  • The path to the file and line of a requested symbol is shown as a comment below the rendered symbol. This can be omitted with -no-location.
  • If the -open flag is set, instead of showing the docs, the file containing a requested symbol is opened using EDITOR.

Key Completion Features

  • Complete packages and symbols for go doc, and packages for other go subcommands.
  • Use of completion tags provide fine grained control over completion suggestions. ^Xn cycles through the next tag.
  • Package suggestions include relative and absolute path completion limited to directories containing go files.
  • Package suggestions are module aware and reflect what go doc will accept as arguments.
  • Intuitive package suggestion matching allows for easily finding packages without knowing their full or exact import path.
  • Package suggestions interpret the special path segment ... to match 0 or more package path segments. This is useful when you only know the start of a few parts of the import path.
  • Packages with an internal segment are not suggested unless what the user has typed specifically matches it.
  • Package and symbol suggestions are displayed with short comments.
  • Symbol suggestions are displayed and grouped as their go definition appears in go doc.
  • Symbol suggestions follow go doc case insensitive matching.
  • Symbol suggestions respect go doc flags for unexported (-u) and exact case symbol matching (-c).
  • Ability to parse and complete the full single argument go doc syntax: go doc path/to/pkg.<sym>.<method|field>

Install

  1. Clone the repo. Currently I don't have the vanity import path set up, so you need to clone it manually.
  2. cd path/to/go-doc && make install
  3. Reload your shell.

This will run go install and then go-doc -install-completion which will prompt you about the three files it can install.

Type ?[enter] for more info about each file. They are summarized below as well.

Type p[enter] to just print the file to stdout for you to review or redirect.

Note that ZSH_CUSTOM must be exported for the zsh completion plugin to install successfully. Usually this is at the top of your .zshrc if you're using Oh My Zsh but just may not be exported.

Go Drop In Replacement

If you want to use go-doc as a drop in replacement for go doc then you need to install the go shim script to a directory in your PATH occuring before the directory where the official go binary is.

By default it installs it to $HOME/bin. It's up to you to put this at the front of your PATH.

export PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH"

The go shim script will run the official go binary normally with whatever arguments it is passed except when the first argument is doc, in which case it calls go-doc with the remaining arguments.

If you ever want to call the official go doc instead, you can add a dash as the first argument before doc: go - doc ...

Zsh Completion

Oh My Zsh

If you use Oh My Zsh, then the Zsh completion is installed to a custom plugin called go in $ZSH_CUSTOM/plugins/go/. Two files are installed: the go.plugin.zsh plugin file and the _golang completion script.

Then you must add go to your list of enabled plugins.

plugins=(
  # ... your other plugins ...
  go
)

The only other requirement is that go-doc is in your PATH, which if you have your GOPATH and GOBIN set up correctly, it will be after go install.

Manual

If you don't use Oh My Zsh then I assume you can figure out the best way to put zsh/plugins/go/_golang somewhere in your FPATH and know how to enable Zsh completion generally.

Recommended Zstyles

To get the most out of the completion I recommend the following zstyle options. You can just run these in your terminal directly to try them out for the current session. Put them in your .zshrc or wherever they can get loaded when you open a new shell.

# group the different type of matches under their descriptions
zstyle ':completion:*' group-name ''

zstyle ':completion:*:*:-command-:*:*' group-order alias builtins functions commands

zstyle ':completion:*' matcher-list '' 'm:{a-zA-Z}={A-Za-z}' 'r:|[._-/]=* r:|=*' 'l:|=* r:|=*'

zstyle ':completion:*' accept-exact false

# format descriptions, messages, and warnings
zstyle ':completion:*:*:*:*:descriptions' format '%F{green}-- %d --%f'
zstyle ':completion:*:messages' format ' %F{purple} -- %d --%f'
zstyle ':completion:*:warnings' format ' %F{red}-- no matches found --%f'

LICENSES

Golang (BSD)

Much of this code was forked from the official go source which is under the BSD license. The license preamble is retained in all files containing original or modified source from Go. LICENSE.golang is the LICENSE file distributed with Go.

Zsh (MIT)

The Zsh completion script was adapted from the Zsh Users zsh-completions repo. This repo is under the Zsh license, which is MIT, but the itself script appears to be under the Go license. In any case LICENSE.zsh contains the Zsh license.

External Vendored Go Dependencies

All non-Google external dependencies are MIT. Other Google dependencies are BSD-3. See licenses.csv for a full CSV report as generated by go-licenses.

My code (MIT)

Everything else that I wrote not directly modified from official Go source can be assumed to be under the MIT license.