If I start typing a command like apt-g
after hitting tab, the shell completes the command to apt-get
, but for the second part of the command like install
, if I enter some characters like insta
, hitting tab, doesn't complete it to install
.
Another example: after I enter sudo
hitting tab doesn't complete anything. for example: sudo apt-ge
[tab] and nothing.
I installed Ubuntu using mini iso (40MB network installer), so maybe there is a config that I missed!
I've added this code to my .bashrc
but still it does not works:
if ! shopt -oq posix; then
if [ -f /usr/share/bash-completion/bash_completion ]; then
. /usr/share/bash-completion/bash_completion
elif [ -f /etc/bash_completion ]; then
. /etc/bash_completion
fi
fi
I have also checked the permission of .bashrc
and it's -rw-r--r--
.
I also source the .bashrc
after changes using source .bashrc
to apply the changes to the new environment but still no effects.
I use xfce4-terminal
so I thought it might be the terminal and not the bash.
But editing:
~/.config/xfce4/xfconf/xfce-perchannel-xml/xfce4-keyboard-shortcuts.xml
And changing:
<property name="<Super>Tab" type="string" value="switch_window_key"/>
to:
<property name="<Super>Tab" type="string" value="empty"/>
Doesn't makes any difference too.
bash-completion
is a set of bash scripts which enables customized completion for specific commands.This is not just for files and directories, but also e.g. for the commands. So you type partial of commands and by hitting Tab we get a auto completion of commands.
Installation
Step 1: Install bash-completion
And some times it works if we re-installed it by the follwing command:
Step 2: Enable bash-completion in your
.bashrc
fileOpen your
gedit ~/.bashrc
and if these content doesn't exist there, add them at the end of it and save it.Important: After changing the file you need to source your
~/.bashrc
withsource ~/.bashrc
or reopen your Terminal. It should be fixed now.If your case is terminal tab not working under Xfce, the solution is as follows:
I've found the solution here.
You may also be in a shell that doesn't support auto complete (ex: Bourne Shell | SH). If you want BASH auto complete you need to switch shells, say to BASH (Bourne Again SHell) instead with the command
Source: Ubuntu Wiki - Changing Shells
In my case, I was trying to execute a script
./myScript.sh
, and typing./my[tab]
would not auto-complete.I had to add execute permissions to the file and auto-completion worked.