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Scripting the mouse click
======================================================

|kitty| has support for :term:`terminal hyperlinks <hyperlinks>`. These are
generated by many terminal programs, such as ``ls``, ``gcc``, ``systemd``,
:ref:`tool_mdcat`, etc. You can customize exactly what happens when clicking on
these hyperlinks in |kitty|.

You can tell kitty to take arbitrarily many, complex actions when a link is
clicked. Let us illustrate with some examples, first. Create the file
:file:`~/.config/kitty/open-actions.conf` with the following:

.. code:: conf

    # Open any image in the full kitty window by clicking on it
    protocol file
    mime image/*
    action launch --type=overlay kitty +kitten icat --hold ${FILE_PATH}

Now, run ``ls --hyperlink=auto`` in kitty and click on the filename of an
image, holding down :kbd:`ctrl+shift`. It will be opened over the current
window. Press any key to close it.

.. note::

    The :program:`ls` comes with macOS does not support hyperlink, you need to
    install `GNU Coreutils <https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/>`__. If you
    install it via `Homebrew <https://formulae.brew.sh/formula/coreutils>`__, it
    will be :program:`gls`.

Each entry in :file:`open-actions.conf` consists of one or more
:ref:`matching_criteria`, such as ``protocol`` and ``mime`` and one or more
``action`` entries. In the example above kitty uses the :doc:`launch <launch>`
action which can be used to run external programs. Entries are separated by
blank lines.

Actions are very powerful, anything that you can map to a key combination in
:file:`kitty.conf` can be used as an action. You can specify more than one
action per entry if you like, for example:


.. code:: conf

    # Tail a log file (*.log) in a new OS Window and reduce its font size
    protocol file
    ext log
    action launch --title ${FILE} --type=os-window tail -f ${FILE_PATH}
    action change_font_size current -2


In the action specification you can expand environment variables, as shown in
the examples above. In addition to regular environment variables, there are
some special variables, documented below:

``URL``
    The full URL being opened

``FILE_PATH``
    The path portion of the URL (unquoted)

``FILE``
    The file portion of the path of the URL (unquoted)

``FRAGMENT``
    The fragment (unquoted), if any of the URL or the empty string.

``URL_PATH``
    The path, query and fragment portions of the URL, without any
    unquoting.


.. note::
   You can use the :opt:`action_alias` option just as in :file:`kitty.conf` to
   define aliases for frequently used actions.


.. _matching_criteria:

Matching criteria
------------------

An entry in :file:`open-actions.conf` must have one or more matching criteria.
URLs that match all criteria for an entry will trigger that entry's actions.
Processing stops at the first matching entry, so put more specific matching
criteria at the start of the list. Entries in the file are separated by blank
lines. The various available criteria are:

``protocol``
    A comma separated list of protocols, for example: ``http, https``. If
    absent, there is no constraint on protocol.

``url``
    A regular expression that must match against the entire (unquoted) URL

``fragment_matches``
    A regular expression that must match against the fragment (part after #) in
    the URL

``mime``
    A comma separated list of MIME types, for example: ``text/*, image/*,
    application/pdf``. You can add MIME types to kitty by creating a file named
    :file:`mime.types` in the :ref:`kitty configuration directory <confloc>`.
    Useful if your system MIME database does not have definitions you need. This
    file is in the standard format of one definition per line, like:
    ``text/plain rst md``. Note that the MIME type for directories is
    ``inode/directory``.

``ext``
    A comma separated list of file extensions, for example: ``jpeg, tar.gz``

``file``
    A shell glob pattern that must match the filename, for example:
    ``image-??.png``


.. _launch_actions:

Scripting the opening of files with kitty on macOS
-------------------------------------------------------

On macOS you can use :guilabel:`Open With` in Finder or drag and drop files and
URLs onto the kitty dock icon to open them with kitty. The default actions are:

* Open text files in your editor and images using the icat kitten.
* Run shell scripts in a shell
* Open SSH urls using the ssh command

These actions can also be executed from the command line by running::

    kitty +open file_or_url another_url ...

    # macOS only
    open -a kitty.app file_or_url another_url ...

Since macOS lacks an official interface to set default URL scheme handlers,
kitty has a command you can use for it. The first argument for is the URL
scheme, and the second optional argument is the bundle id of the app, which
defaults to kitty, if not specified. For example:

.. code-block:: sh

    # Set kitty as the handler for ssh:// URLs
    kitty +runpy 'from kitty.fast_data_types import cocoa_set_url_handler; import sys; cocoa_set_url_handler(*sys.argv[1:]); print("OK")' ssh
    # Set someapp as the handler for xyz:// URLs
    kitty +runpy 'from kitty.fast_data_types import cocoa_set_url_handler; import sys; cocoa_set_url_handler(*sys.argv[1:]); print("OK")' xyz someapp.bundle.identifier

You can customize these actions by creating a :file:`launch-actions.conf` file
in the :ref:`kitty config directory <confloc>`, just like the
:file:`open-actions.conf` file above. For example:

.. literalinclude:: ../kitty/open_actions.py
   :language: conf
   :start-at: # Open script files
   :end-before: '''.splitlines()))

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