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ZSHBUILTINS(1)		    General Commands Manual		ZSHBUILTINS(1)

NAME
       zshbuiltins - zsh built-in commands

SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS
       Some shell builtin commands take	options	as described in	individual en-
       tries;  these  are  often  referred  to in the list below as `flags' to
       avoid confusion with shell options, which may also have	an  effect  on
       the  behaviour of builtin commands.  In this introductory section, `op-
       tion' always has	the meaning of an option to a command that  should  be
       familiar	to most	command	line users.

       Typically,  options  are	 single	letters	preceded by a hyphen (-).  Op-
       tions that take an argument accept it either immediately	following  the
       option  letter  or after	white space, for example `print	-C3 {1..9}' or
       `print -C 3 {1..9}' are equivalent.  Arguments to options are  not  the
       same  as	arguments to the command; the documentation indicates which is
       which.  Options that do not take	an argument may	be combined in a  sin-
       gle  word,  for example `print -rca -- *' and `print -r -c -a --	*' are
       equivalent.

       Some shell builtin commands also	take options that begin	with  `+'  in-
       stead of	`-'.  The list below makes clear which commands	these are.

       Options	(together with their individual	arguments, if any) must	appear
       in a group before any non-option	arguments; once	the  first  non-option
       argument	has been found,	option processing is terminated.

       All  builtin  commands other than `echo'	and precommand modifiers, even
       those that have no options, can be given	the argument `--' to terminate
       option processing.  This	indicates that the following words are non-op-
       tion arguments, but is otherwise	ignored.   This	 is  useful  in	 cases
       where arguments to the command may begin	with `-'.  For historical rea-
       sons,  most builtin commands (including `echo') also recognize a	single
       `-' in a	separate word for this purpose;	note that this is  less	 stan-
       dard and	use of `--' is recommended.

       - simple	command
	      See the section `Precommand Modifiers' in	zshmisc(1).

       . file [	arg ...	]
	      Read  commands  from  file and execute them in the current shell
	      environment.

	      If file does not contain a slash,	or if PATH_DIRS	 is  set,  the
	      shell  looks  in	the  components	of $path to find the directory
	      containing file.	Files in the current directory	are  not  read
	      unless  `.'  appears  somewhere  in  $path.   If	a  file	 named
	      `file.zwc' is found, is newer than file,	and  is	 the  compiled
	      form  (created with the zcompile builtin)	of file, then commands
	      are read from that file instead of file.

	      If any arguments arg are given, they become the positional para-
	      meters; the old positional parameters are	restored when the file
	      is done executing.  However, if no arguments are given, the  po-
	      sitional	parameters remain those	of the calling context,	and no
	      restoring	is done.

	      If file was not found the	return status  is  127;	 if  file  was
	      found  but  contained  a	syntax error the return	status is 126;
	      else the return status is	the exit status	of  the	 last  command
	      executed.

       : [ arg ... ]
	      This  command  does nothing, although normal argument expansions
	      is performed which may have effects on shell parameters.	A zero
	      exit status is returned.

       alias [ {+|-}gmrsL ] [ name[=value] ... ]
	      For each name with a corresponding value,	define an  alias  with
	      that  value.   A trailing	space in value causes the next word to
	      be checked for alias expansion.  If the -g flag is present,  de-
	      fine a global alias; global aliases are expanded even if they do
	      not occur	in command position:

		     % perldoc --help 2>&1 | grep 'built-in functions'
			 -f   Search Perl built-in functions
		     % alias -g	HG='--help 2>&1	| grep'
		     % perldoc HG 'built-in functions'
			 -f   Search Perl built-in functions

	      If the -s	flag is	present, define	a suffix alias:	if the command
	      word on a	command	line is	in the form `text.name', where text is
	      any  non-empty  string,  it  is  replaced	 by  the  text	`value
	      text.name'.  Note	that name is treated as	a literal string,  not
	      a	 pattern.   A  trailing	 space in value	is not special in this
	      case.  For example,

		     alias -s ps='gv --'

	      will cause the command `*.ps' to be expanded to  `gv  --	*.ps'.
	      As  alias	 expansion  is	carried	out earlier than globbing, the
	      `*.ps' will then be expanded.  Suffix aliases constitute a  dif-
	      ferent name space	from other aliases (so in the above example it
	      is still possible	to create an alias for the command ps) and the
	      two sets are never listed	together.

	      For  each	 name  with no value, print the	value of name, if any.
	      With no arguments, print all  currently  defined	aliases	 other
	      than  suffix aliases.  If	the -m flag is given the arguments are
	      taken as patterns	(they should be	quoted to preserve  them  from
	      being  interpreted  as  glob patterns), and the aliases matching
	      these patterns are printed.  When	printing aliases  and  one  of
	      the  -g,	-r  or	-s  flags is present, restrict the printing to
	      global, regular or suffix	aliases, respectively; a regular alias
	      is one which is neither a	global nor a suffix alias.   Using `+'
	      instead of `-', or ending	the option list	 with  a  single  `+',
	      prevents the values of the aliases from being printed.

	      If  the  -L  flag	 is present, then print	each alias in a	manner
	      suitable for putting in a	startup	script.	 The  exit  status  is
	      nonzero  if  a  name (with no value) is given for	which no alias
	      has been defined.

	      For more on aliases, include common problems,  see  the  section
	      ALIASING in zshmisc(1).

       autoload	[ {+|-}RTUXdkmrtWz ] [ -w ] [ name ... ]
	      See  the	section	`Autoloading Functions'	in zshmisc(1) for full
	      details.	The fpath parameter will be searched to	find the func-
	      tion definition when the function	is first referenced.

	      If name consists of an absolute path, the	function is defined to
	      load from	the file given (searching as usual for dump  files  in
	      the  given  location).  The name of the function is the basename
	      (non-directory part) of the file.	 It is normally	 an  error  if
	      the function is not found	in the given location; however,	if the
	      option  -d  is  given,  searching	 for  the function defaults to
	      $fpath.  If a function is	loaded by absolute path, any functions
	      loaded from it that are marked for autoload without an  absolute
	      path  have  the  load  path  of  the parent function temporarily
	      prepended	to $fpath.

	      If the option -r or -R is	given, the function  is	 searched  for
	      immediately and the location is recorded internally for use when
	      the  function is executed; a relative path is expanded using the
	      value of $PWD.  This protects against a change to	 $fpath	 after
	      the call to autoload.  With -r, if the function is not found, it
	      is  silently  left unresolved until execution; with -R, an error
	      message is printed and command  processing  aborted  immediately
	      the  search  fails,  i.e.	at the autoload	command	rather than at
	      function execution..

	      The flag -X may be used only inside a shell function.  It	causes
	      the calling function to be marked	for autoloading	and then imme-
	      diately loaded and executed, with	the  current  array  of	 posi-
	      tional parameters	as arguments.  This replaces the previous def-
	      inition of the function.	If no function definition is found, an
	      error  is	 printed and the function remains undefined and	marked
	      for autoloading.	If an argument is given, it is used as	a  di-
	      rectory  (i.e.  it does not include the name of the function) in
	      which the	function is to be found; this may be combined with the
	      -d option	to allow the function search to	default	to  $fpath  if
	      it is not	in the given location.

	      The  flag	 +X  attempts to load each name	as an autoloaded func-
	      tion, but	does not execute it.  The exit status  is  zero	 (suc-
	      cess)  if	 the function was not previously defined and a defini-
	      tion for it was found.  This does	not replace any	existing defi-
	      nition of	the function.  The exit	status is nonzero (failure) if
	      the function was already	defined	 or  when  no  definition  was
	      found.   In  the	latter case the	function remains undefined and
	      marked for autoloading.  If ksh-style  autoloading  is  enabled,
	      the  function created will contain the contents of the file plus
	      a	call to	the function itself appended to	it, thus giving	normal
	      ksh autoloading behaviour	on the first call to the function.  If
	      the -m flag is also given	each name is treated as	a pattern  and
	      all functions already marked for autoload	that match the pattern
	      are loaded.

	      With  the	 -t  flag, turn	on execution tracing; with -T, turn on
	      execution	tracing	only for the current function, turning it  off
	      on  entry	 to any	called functions that do not also have tracing
	      enabled.

	      With the -U flag,	alias expansion	is suppressed when  the	 func-
	      tion is loaded.

	      With the -w flag,	the names are taken as names of	files compiled
	      with the zcompile	builtin, and all functions defined in them are
	      marked for autoloading.

	      The flags	-z and -k mark the function to be autoloaded using the
	      zsh  or  ksh  style, as if the option KSH_AUTOLOAD were unset or
	      were set,	respectively.  The flags override the setting  of  the
	      option at	the time the function is loaded.

	      Note  that  the  autoload	command	makes no attempt to ensure the
	      shell options set	during the loading or execution	 of  the  file
	      have any particular value.  For this, the	emulate	command	can be
	      used:

		     emulate zsh -c 'autoload -Uz func'

	      arranges that when func is loaded	the shell is in	native zsh em-
	      ulation, and this	emulation is also applied when func is run.

	      Some of the functions of autoload	are also provided by functions
	      -u  or functions -U, but autoload	is a more comprehensive	inter-
	      face.

       bg [ job	... ]
       job ... &
	      Put each specified job in	the background,	or the current job  if
	      none is specified.

       bindkey
	      See the section `Zle Builtins' in	zshzle(1).

       break [ n ]
	      Exit from	an enclosing for, while, until,	select or repeat loop.
	      If  an arithmetic	expression n is	specified, then	break n	levels
	      instead of just one.

       builtin name [ args ... ]
	      Executes the builtin name, with the given	args.

       bye    Same as exit.

       cap    See the section `The zsh/cap Module' in zshmodules(1).

       cd [ -qsLP ] [ arg ]
       cd [ -qsLP ] old	new
       cd [ -qsLP ] {+|-}n
	      Change the current directory.  In	the  first  form,  change  the
	      current directory	to arg,	or to the value	of $HOME if arg	is not
	      specified.  If arg is `-', change	to the previous	directory.

	      Otherwise,  if arg begins	with a slash, attempt to change	to the
	      directory	given by arg.

	      If arg does not begin with a slash,  the	behaviour  depends  on
	      whether the current directory `.'	occurs in the list of directo-
	      ries  contained  in the shell parameter cdpath.  If it does not,
	      first attempt to change to the directory arg under  the  current
	      directory,  and  if that fails but cdpath	is set and contains at
	      least one	element	attempt	to change to the directory  arg	 under
	      each  component  of cdpath in turn until successful.  If `.' oc-
	      curs in cdpath, then cdpath is searched  strictly	 in  order  so
	      that `.' is only tried at	the appropriate	point.

	      The  order  of testing cdpath is modified	if the option POSIX_CD
	      is set, as described in the documentation	for the	option.

	      If no directory is found,	the option CDABLE_VARS is set,	and  a
	      parameter	 named	arg  exists  whose  value begins with a	slash,
	      treat its	value as the directory.	 In that case,	the  parameter
	      is added to the named directory hash table.

	      The  second form of cd substitutes the string new	for the	string
	      old in the name of the current directory,	and tries to change to
	      this new directory.

	      The third	form of	cd extracts an entry from the directory	stack,
	      and changes to that directory.  An argument  of  the  form  `+n'
	      identifies  a  stack entry by counting from the left of the list
	      shown by the dirs	command, starting with zero.  An  argument  of
	      the  form	`-n' counts from the right.  If	the PUSHD_MINUS	option
	      is set, the meanings of `+' and `-' in this context are swapped.
	      If the POSIX_CD option is	set, this form of cd is	not recognised
	      and will be interpreted as the first form.

	      If the -q	(quiet)	option is specified, the hook  function	 chpwd
	      and  the	functions in the array chpwd_functions are not called.
	      This is useful for calls to cd that do not change	 the  environ-
	      ment seen	by an interactive user.

	      If  the -s option	is specified, cd refuses to change the current
	      directory	if the given pathname contains symlinks.   If  the  -P
	      option is	given or the CHASE_LINKS option	is set,	symbolic links
	      are  resolved  to	 their true values.  If	the -L option is given
	      symbolic links are retained in the directory (and	not  resolved)
	      regardless of the	state of the CHASE_LINKS option.

       chdir  Same as cd.

       clone  See the section `The zsh/clone Module' in	zshmodules(1).

       command [ -pvV ]	simple command
	      The  simple command argument is taken as an external command in-
	      stead  of	 a  function  or  builtin  and	is  executed.  If  the
	      POSIX_BUILTINS option is set, builtins will also be executed but
	      certain  special	properties of them are suppressed. The -p flag
	      causes a default path to be searched instead of that  in	$path.
	      With  the	 -v flag, command is similar to	whence and with	-V, it
	      is equivalent to whence -v.

	      See also the section `Precommand Modifiers' in zshmisc(1).

       comparguments
	      See the section `The zsh/computil	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       compcall
	      See the section `The zsh/compctl Module' in zshmodules(1).

       compctl
	      See the section `The zsh/compctl Module' in zshmodules(1).

       compdescribe
	      See the section `The zsh/computil	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       compfiles
	      See the section `The zsh/computil	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       compgroups
	      See the section `The zsh/computil	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       compquote
	      See the section `The zsh/computil	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       comptags
	      See the section `The zsh/computil	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       comptry
	      See the section `The zsh/computil	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       compvalues
	      See the section `The zsh/computil	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       continue	[ n ]
	      Resume the next iteration	of the enclosing  for,	while,	until,
	      select  or  repeat loop. If an arithmetic	expression n is	speci-
	      fied, break out of n-1 loops and resume  at  the	nth  enclosing
	      loop.

       declare
	      Same as typeset.

       dirs [ -c ] [ arg ... ]
       dirs [ -lpv ]
	      With  no	arguments,  print the contents of the directory	stack.
	      Directories are added to this stack with the pushd command,  and
	      removed  with  the cd or popd commands.  If arguments are	speci-
	      fied, load them onto the	directory  stack,  replacing  anything
	      that was there, and push the current directory onto the stack.

	      -c     clear the directory stack.

	      -l     print directory names in full instead of using of using ~
		     expressions  (see Dynamic and Static named	directories in
		     zshexpn(1)).

	      -p     print directory entries one per line.

	      -v     number the	directories in the stack when printing.

       disable [ -afmprs ] name	...
	      Temporarily disable the named hash table elements	 or  patterns.
	      The  default is to disable builtin commands.  This allows	you to
	      use an external command with the same name as a builtin command.
	      The -a option  causes  disable  to  act  on  regular  or	global
	      aliases.	The -s option causes disable to	act on suffix aliases.
	      The  -f option causes disable to act on shell functions.	The -r
	      options causes disable to	act on reserved	words.	Without	 argu-
	      ments  all  disabled  hash table elements	from the corresponding
	      hash table are printed.  With the	 -m  flag  the	arguments  are
	      taken  as	 patterns (which should	be quoted to prevent them from
	      undergoing filename expansion), and all hash table elements from
	      the corresponding	hash table matching these  patterns  are  dis-
	      abled.  Disabled objects can be enabled with the enable command.

	      With  the	 option	 -p, name ... refer to elements	of the shell's
	      pattern syntax as	described in  the  section  `Filename  Genera-
	      tion'.   Certain	elements  can be disabled separately, as given
	      below.

	      Note that	patterns not allowed by	the current settings  for  the
	      options  EXTENDED_GLOB,  KSH_GLOB	and SH_GLOB are	never enabled,
	      regardless of the	setting	here.  For example,  if	 EXTENDED_GLOB
	      is  not active, the pattern ^ is ineffective even	if `disable -p
	      "^"' has not been	issued.	 The list below	indicates  any	option
	      settings	that  restrict	the  use of the	pattern.  It should be
	      noted that setting SH_GLOB has a wider effect than  merely  dis-
	      abling  patterns as certain expressions, in particular those in-
	      volving parentheses, are parsed differently.

	      The following patterns may be disabled;  all  the	 strings  need
	      quoting  on  the	command	line to	prevent	them from being	inter-
	      preted immediately as patterns and the patterns are shown	 below
	      in single	quotes as a reminder.

	      '?'    The  pattern  character  ?	 wherever it occurs, including
		     when preceding a parenthesis with KSH_GLOB.

	      '*'    The pattern character * wherever it occurs, including re-
		     cursive globbing and when preceding  a  parenthesis  with
		     KSH_GLOB.

	      '['    Character classes.

	      '<' (NO_SH_GLOB)
		     Numeric ranges.

	      '|' (NO_SH_GLOB)
		     Alternation  in  grouped  patterns,  case	statements, or
		     KSH_GLOB parenthesised expressions.

	      '(' (NO_SH_GLOB)
		     Grouping using single parentheses.	 Disabling  this  does
		     not  disable  the	use  of	parentheses for	KSH_GLOB where
		     they are introduced by a special character, nor for  glob
		     qualifiers	 (use  `setopt	NO_BARE_GLOB_QUAL'  to disable
		     glob qualifiers that use parentheses only).

	      '~' (EXTENDED_GLOB)
		     Exclusion in the form A~B.

	      '^' (EXTENDED_GLOB)
		     Exclusion in the form A^B.

	      '#' (EXTENDED_GLOB)
		     The pattern character # wherever it occurs, both for rep-
		     etition of	a previous pattern and for indicating globbing
		     flags.

	      '?(' (KSH_GLOB)
		     The grouping form ?(...).	Note this is also disabled  if
		     '?' is disabled.

	      '*(' (KSH_GLOB)
		     The  grouping form	*(...).	 Note this is also disabled if
		     '*' is disabled.

	      '+(' (KSH_GLOB)
		     The grouping form +(...).

	      '!(' (KSH_GLOB)
		     The grouping form !(...).

	      '@(' (KSH_GLOB)
		     The grouping form @(...).

       disown [	job ...	]
       job ... &|
       job ... &!
	      Remove the specified jobs	from the job table; the	shell will  no
	      longer  report their status, and will not	complain if you	try to
	      exit an interactive shell	with them running or stopped.	If  no
	      job is specified,	disown the current job.

	      If  the  jobs are	currently stopped and the AUTO_CONTINUE	option
	      is not set, a warning is printed	containing  information	 about
	      how  to make them	running	after they have	been disowned.	If one
	      of the latter two	forms is used, the jobs	will automatically  be
	      made  running,  independent  of the setting of the AUTO_CONTINUE
	      option.

       echo [ -neE ] [ arg ... ]
	      Write each arg on	the standard output, with a  space  separating
	      each one.	 If the	-n flag	is not present,	print a	newline	at the
	      end.  echo recognizes the	following escape sequences:

	      \a     bell character
	      \b     backspace
	      \c     suppress subsequent characters and	final newline
	      \e     escape
	      \f     form feed
	      \n     linefeed (newline)
	      \r     carriage return
	      \t     horizontal	tab
	      \v     vertical tab
	      \\     backslash
	      \0NNN  character code in octal
	      \xNN   character code in hexadecimal
	      \uNNNN unicode character code in hexadecimal
	      \UNNNNNNNN
		     unicode character code in hexadecimal

	      The  -E  flag,  or  the  BSD_ECHO	option,	can be used to disable
	      these escape sequences.  In the latter case, -e flag can be used
	      to enable	them.

	      Note that	for standards compliance a double dash does not	termi-
	      nate option processing; instead, it is printed  directly.	  How-
	      ever,  a	single	dash  does terminate option processing,	so the
	      first dash, possibly following  options,	is  not	 printed,  but
	      everything  following  it	is printed as an argument.  The	single
	      dash behaviour is	different  from	 other	shells.	  For  a  more
	      portable	way  of	printing text, see printf, and for a more con-
	      trollable	way of printing	text within zsh, see print.

       echotc See the section `The zsh/termcap Module' in zshmodules(1).

       echoti See the section `The zsh/terminfo	Module'	in zshmodules(1).

       emulate [ -lLR ]	[ {zsh|sh|ksh|csh} [ flags ... ] ]
	      Without any argument print current emulation mode.

	      With single argument set up zsh options to emulate the specified
	      shell as much as possible.  csh will never  be  fully  emulated.
	      If  the argument is not one of the shells	listed above, zsh will
	      be used as a default; more precisely, the	tests performed	on the
	      argument are the same as those used to determine	the  emulation
	      at  startup based	on the shell name, see the section COMPATIBIL-
	      ITY in zsh(1) .  In addition to setting shell options, the  com-
	      mand  also restores the pristine state of	pattern	enables, as if
	      all patterns had been enabled using enable -p.

	      If the emulate command occurs inside a function  that  has  been
	      marked  for  execution tracing with functions -t then the	xtrace
	      option will be turned on regardless of emulation mode  or	 other
	      options.	 Note that code	executed inside	the function by	the .,
	      source, or eval commands is not considered  to  be  running  di-
	      rectly from the function,	hence does not provoke this behaviour.

	      If  the  -R  switch  is given, all settable options are reset to
	      their default value corresponding	 to  the  specified  emulation
	      mode,  except for	certain	options	describing the interactive en-
	      vironment; otherwise, only those options likely to cause	porta-
	      bility problems in scripts and functions are altered.  If	the -L
	      switch  is  given, the options LOCAL_OPTIONS, LOCAL_PATTERNS and
	      LOCAL_TRAPS will be set as well, causing the effects of the emu-
	      late command and any setopt, disable -p or enable	-p,  and  trap
	      commands	to be local to the immediately surrounding shell func-
	      tion, if any; normally these options are turned off in all  emu-
	      lation  modes  except  ksh.  The -L switch is mutually exclusive
	      with the use of -c in flags.

	      If there is a single argument and	the -l switch  is  given,  the
	      options  that  would  be set or unset (the latter	indicated with
	      the prefix `no') are listed.  -l can be combined with -L	or  -R
	      and  the list will be modified in	the appropriate	way.  Note the
	      list does	not depend on the current setting of options, i.e.  it
	      includes	all  options  that  may	 in principle change, not just
	      those that would actually	change.

	      The flags	may be any of the invocation-time flags	 described  in
	      the section INVOCATION in	zsh(1),	except that `-o	EMACS' and `-o
	      VI'  may not be used.  Flags such	as `+r'/`+o RESTRICTED'	may be
	      prohibited in some circumstances.

	      If -c arg	appears	in flags, arg is evaluated while the requested
	      emulation	is temporarily in effect.  In this case	the  emulation
	      mode  and	 all options are restored to their previous values be-
	      fore emulate returns.  The -R switch may precede the name	of the
	      shell to emulate;	note this has a	meaning	distinct from  includ-
	      ing -R in	flags.

	      Use  of -c enables `sticky' emulation mode for functions defined
	      within the evaluated expression:	the emulation mode is  associ-
	      ated  thereafter with the	function so that whenever the function
	      is executed the emulation	(respecting the	-R switch, if present)
	      and all options are set (and pattern  disables  cleared)	before
	      entry to the function, and the state is restored after exit.  If
	      the  function  is	called when the	sticky emulation is already in
	      effect, either within an `emulate	shell -c' expression or	within
	      another function with the	same sticky emulation, entry and  exit
	      from the function	do not cause options to	be altered (except due
	      to  standard processing such as the LOCAL_OPTIONS	option).  This
	      also applies to functions	marked for autoload within the	sticky
	      emulation; the appropriate set of	options	will be	applied	at the
	      point the	function is loaded as well as when it is run.

	      For example:

		     emulate sh	-c 'fni() { setopt cshnullglob;	}
		     fno() { fni; }'
		     fno

	      The  two functions fni and fno are defined with sticky sh	emula-
	      tion.  fno is then executed, causing options associated with em-
	      ulations to be set to their values in sh.	 fno then  calls  fni;
	      because  fni  is	also marked for	sticky sh emulation, no	option
	      changes take place on entry to or	exit from it.  Hence  the  op-
	      tion  cshnullglob, turned	off by sh emulation, will be turned on
	      within fni and remain on return to fno.  On exit from  fno,  the
	      emulation	 mode  and  all	 options will be restored to the state
	      they were	in before entry	to the temporary emulation.

	      The documentation	above is typically sufficient for the intended
	      purpose of executing code	designed for other shells in  a	 suit-
	      able environment.	 More detailed rules follow.
	      1.     The  sticky  emulation  environment  provided by `emulate
		     shell -c' is identical to that provided  by  entry	 to  a
		     function  marked for sticky emulation as a	consequence of
		     being defined in such an environment.  Hence,  for	 exam-
		     ple,  the	sticky	emulation is inherited by subfunctions
		     defined within functions with sticky emulation.
	      2.     No	change of options takes	place on entry to or exit from
		     functions that are	not marked for sticky emulation, other
		     than those	that would normally take place,	even if	 those
		     functions are called within sticky	emulation.
	      3.     No	 special handling is provided for functions marked for
		     autoload nor for functions	present	in wordcode created by
		     the zcompile command.
	      4.     The presence or absence of	the -R switch to emulate  cor-
		     responds  to different sticky emulation modes, so for ex-
		     ample `emulate sh -c', `emulate -R	sh  -c'	 and  `emulate
		     csh -c' are treated as three distinct sticky emulations.
	      5.     Difference	 in  shell options supplied in addition	to the
		     basic emulation also mean the sticky emulations are  dif-
		     ferent,  so for example `emulate zsh -c' and `emulate zsh
		     -o	cbases -c' are treated as distinct sticky emulations.

       enable [	-afmprs	] name ...
	      Enable the named hash table elements, presumably	disabled  ear-
	      lier  with  disable.  The	default	is to enable builtin commands.
	      The -a option causes enable to act on regular or global aliases.
	      The -s option causes enable to act on suffix  aliases.   The  -f
	      option  causes  enable to	act on shell functions.	 The -r	option
	      causes enable to act on reserved words.  Without	arguments  all
	      enabled  hash  table  elements from the corresponding hash table
	      are printed.  With the -m	flag the arguments are taken  as  pat-
	      terns  (should  be  quoted) and all hash table elements from the
	      corresponding hash table matching	these  patterns	 are  enabled.
	      Enabled  objects	can  be	disabled with the disable builtin com-
	      mand.

	      enable -p	reenables patterns disabled  with  disable  -p.	  Note
	      that it does not override	globbing options; for example, `enable
	      -p  "~"' does not	cause the pattern character ~ to be active un-
	      less the EXTENDED_GLOB option is also set.  To enable all	possi-
	      ble patterns (so that they may  be  individually	disabled  with
	      disable -p), use `setopt EXTENDED_GLOB KSH_GLOB NO_SH_GLOB'.

       eval [ arg ... ]
	      Read the arguments as input to the shell and execute the result-
	      ing  command(s) in the current shell process.  The return	status
	      is the same as if	the commands had been executed directly	by the
	      shell; if	there are no args or they contain  no  commands	 (i.e.
	      are an empty string or whitespace) the return status is zero.

       exec [ -cl ] [ -a argv0 ] [ command [ arg ... ] ]
	      Replace  the current shell with command rather than forking.  If
	      command is a shell builtin command  or  a	 shell	function,  the
	      shell executes it, and exits when	the command is complete.

	      With  -c clear the environment; with -l prepend -	to the argv[0]
	      string of	the command executed (to simulate a login shell); with
	      -a argv0 set the argv[0] string of the  command  executed.   See
	      the section `Precommand Modifiers' in zshmisc(1).

	      If  the  option  POSIX_BUILTINS  is set, command is never	inter-
	      preted as	a shell	builtin	command	or shell function.  This means
	      further precommand modifiers such	as builtin and noglob are also
	      not interpreted within the shell.	 Hence command is always found
	      by searching the command path.

	      If command is omitted but	any redirections are  specified,  then
	      the redirections will take effect	in the current shell.

       exit [ n	]
	      Exit  the	 shell with the	exit status specified by an arithmetic
	      expression n; if none is specified, use the exit status from the
	      last command executed.  An EOF condition	will  also  cause  the
	      shell to exit, unless the	IGNORE_EOF option is set.

	      See  notes at the	end of the section JOBS	in zshmisc(1) for some
	      possibly unexpected interactions of the exit command with	jobs.

       export [	name[=value] ... ]
	      The specified names are marked for automatic export to the envi-
	      ronment of subsequently executed commands.  Equivalent to	 type-
	      set -gx.	If a parameter specified does not already exist, it is
	      created in the global scope.

       false [ arg ... ]
	      Do nothing and return an exit status of 1.

       fc [ -e ename ] [ -s ] [	-LI ] [	-m match ] [ old=new ... ] [ first [
       last ] ]
       fc -l [ -LI ] [ -nrdfEiD	] [ -t timefmt ] [ -m match ]
	     [ old=new ... ] [ first [ last ] ]
       fc -p [ -a ] [ filename [ histsize [ savehistsize ] ] ]
       fc -P
       fc -ARWI	[ filename ]
	      The fc command controls the interactive history mechanism.  Note
	      that reading and writing of history options is only performed if
	      the  shell  is  interactive.  Usually this is detected automati-
	      cally, but it can	be forced by setting  the  interactive	option
	      when starting the	shell.

	      The  first  two  forms  of this command select a range of	events
	      from first to last from the history list.	 The  arguments	 first
	      and  last	 may be	specified as a number or as a string.  A nega-
	      tive number is used as an	offset to the  current	history	 event
	      number.  A string	specifies the most recent event	beginning with
	      the  given  string.  All substitutions old=new, if any, are then
	      performed	on the text of the events.

	      The range	of events selected by numbers can be narrowed  further
	      by the following flags.
	      -I     restricts to only internal	events (not from $HISTFILE)
	      -L     restricts	to  only  local	events (not from other shells,
		     see SHARE_HISTORY in zshoptions(1)	-- note	that $HISTFILE
		     is	considered local when read at startup)
	      -m     takes the first argument as a pattern  (which  should  be
		     quoted) and only the history events matching this pattern
		     are considered

	      If first is not specified, it will be set	to -1 (the most	recent
	      event), or to -16	if the -l flag is given.  If last is not spec-
	      ified,  it  will	be  set	 to  first, or to -1 if	the -l flag is
	      given.  However, if the current event has	added entries  to  the
	      history with `print -s' or `fc -R', then the default last	for -l
	      includes all new history entries since the current event began.

	      When  the	 -l  flag is given, the	resulting events are listed on
	      standard output.	Otherwise the editor program specified	by  -e
	      ename  is	invoked	on a file containing these history events.  If
	      -e is not	given, the value of the	parameter FCEDIT is  used;  if
	      that  is	not  set the value of the parameter EDITOR is used; if
	      that is not set a	builtin	default, usually  `vi'	is  used.   If
	      ename  is	 `-', no editor	is invoked.  When editing is complete,
	      the edited command is executed.

	      The flag `-s' is equivalent to `-e -'.  The flag -r reverses the
	      order of the events and the flag	-n  suppresses	event  numbers
	      when listing.

	      Also when	listing,
	      -d     prints timestamps for each	event
	      -f     prints  full  time-date stamps in the US `MM/DD/YY	hh:mm'
		     format
	      -E     prints full time-date stamps in the European  `dd.mm.yyyy
		     hh:mm' format
	      -i     prints  full  time-date  stamps  in  ISO8601  `yyyy-mm-dd
		     hh:mm' format
	      -t fmt prints time and date stamps in the	given format;  fmt  is
		     formatted	with the strftime function with	the zsh	exten-
		     sions described for the %D{string}	prompt format  in  the
		     section EXPANSION OF PROMPT SEQUENCES in zshmisc(1).  The
		     resulting formatted string	must be	no more	than 256 char-
		     acters or will not	be printed
	      -D     prints elapsed times; may be combined with	one of the op-
		     tions above

	      `fc  -p'	pushes	the  current  history  list  onto  a stack and
	      switches to a new	history	list.  If the -a option	is also	speci-
	      fied, this history list will be automatically  popped  when  the
	      current  function	 scope is exited, which	is a much better solu-
	      tion than	creating a trap	function to call `fc -P' manually.  If
	      no arguments are specified, the  history	list  is  left	empty,
	      $HISTFILE	 is  unset, and	$HISTSIZE & $SAVEHIST are set to their
	      default values.  If one argument is given, $HISTFILE is  set  to
	      that filename, $HISTSIZE & $SAVEHIST are left unchanged, and the
	      history  file  is	 read  in (if it exists) to initialize the new
	      list.  If	a second argument is specified,	$HISTSIZE &  $SAVEHIST
	      are instead set to the single specified numeric value.  Finally,
	      if a third argument is specified,	$SAVEHIST is set to a separate
	      value  from $HISTSIZE.  You are free to change these environment
	      values for the new history list however you desire in  order  to
	      manipulate the new history list.

	      `fc -P' pops the history list back to an older list saved	by `fc
	      -p'.   The  current  list	is saved to its	$HISTFILE before it is
	      destroyed	(assuming that $HISTFILE and $SAVEHIST are set	appro-
	      priately,	 of  course).  The values of $HISTFILE,	$HISTSIZE, and
	      $SAVEHIST	are restored to	the values they	had when `fc  -p'  was
	      called.	Note  that  this  restoration can conflict with	making
	      these variables "local", so your best bet	is to avoid local dec-
	      larations	for these variables in functions  that	use  `fc  -p'.
	      The  one	other  guaranteed-safe	combination is declaring these
	      variables	to be local at the top of your function	and using  the
	      automatic	 option	 (-a)  with `fc	-p'.  Finally, note that it is
	      legal to manually	pop a push marked for automatic	popping	if you
	      need to do so before the function	exits.

	      `fc -R' reads the	history	from the given file,  `fc  -W'	writes
	      the  history out to the given file, and `fc -A' appends the his-
	      tory out to the given file.  If no filename  is  specified,  the
	      $HISTFILE	 is  assumed.	If  the	-I option is added to -R, only
	      those events that	are not	already	contained within the  internal
	      history  list are	added.	If the -I option is added to -A	or -W,
	      only those events	 that  are  new	 since	last  incremental  ap-
	      pend/write  to  the  history  file are appended/written.	In any
	      case, the	created	file will have no more than $SAVEHIST entries.

       fg [ job	... ]
       job ...
	      Bring each specified job in turn to the foreground.  If  no  job
	      is specified, resume the current job.

       float [ {+|-}Hghlprtux ]	[ {+|-}EFLRZ [ n ] ] [ name[=value] ...	]
	      Equivalent  to  typeset  -E,  except  that options irrelevant to
	      floating point numbers are not permitted.

       functions [ {+|-}UkmtTuWz ] [ -x	num ] [	name ... ]
       functions -c oldfn newfn
       functions -M [-s] mathfn	[ min [	max [ shellfn ]	] ]
       functions -M [ -m pattern ... ]
       functions +M [ -m ] mathfn ...
	      Equivalent to typeset -f,	with the exception of the -c,  -x,  -M
	      and  -W  options.	  For  functions  -u and functions -U, see au-
	      toload, which provides additional	options.  For functions	-t and
	      functions	-T, see	typeset	-f.

	      The -x option indicates that any functions output	will have each
	      leading tab for indentation, added by the	shell to show  syntac-
	      tic  structure, expanded to the given number num of spaces.  num
	      can also be 0 to suppress	all indentation.

	      The -W option turns on the option	WARN_NESTED_VAR	for the	 named
	      function	or  functions  only.   The option is turned off	at the
	      start of nested functions	(apart from anonoymous functions)  un-
	      less the called function also has	the -W attribute.

	      The  -c  option causes oldfn to be copied	to newfn.  The copy is
	      efficiently handled internally by	reference counting.  If	 oldfn
	      was marked for autoload it is first loaded and if	this fails the
	      copy fails.  Either function may subsequently be redefined with-
	      out  affecting  the other.  A typical idiom is that oldfn	is the
	      name of a	library	shell function which is	then redefined to call
	      newfn, thereby installing	a modified version of the function.

	      The -M and +M flags

	      Use of the -M option may not be combined with any	of the options
	      handled by typeset -f.

	      functions	-M mathfn defines mathfn as the	name of	a mathematical
	      function recognised in all forms	of  arithmetical  expressions;
	      see  the	section	`Arithmetic Evaluation'	in zshmisc(1).	By de-
	      fault mathfn may take any	number of  comma-separated  arguments.
	      If  min  is given, it must have exactly min args;	if min and max
	      are both given, it must have at least min	and at most max	 args.
	      max may be -1 to indicate	that there is no upper limit.

	      By  default  the	function is implemented	by a shell function of
	      the same name; if	shellfn	is specified it	gives the name of  the
	      corresponding  shell function while mathfn remains the name used
	      in arithmetical expressions.  The	name of	the function in	$0  is
	      mathfn  (not shellfn as would usually be the case), provided the
	      option FUNCTION_ARGZERO is in effect.  The positional parameters
	      in the shell function correspond to the arguments	of the	mathe-
	      matical function call.

	      The  result of the last arithmetical expression evaluated	inside
	      the shell	function gives the result of  the  mathematical	 func-
	      tion.   This  is	not limited to arithmetic substitutions	of the
	      form $((...)), but also includes arithmetical expressions	evalu-
	      ated in any other	way, including by the let builtin, by  ((...))
	      statements,  and	even  by  the return builtin and by array sub-
	      scripts.	Therefore, care	must be	taken not to  use  syntactical
	      constructs  that	perform	arithmetic evaluation after evaluating
	      what is to be the	result of the function.	 For example:

		     # WRONG
		     zmath_cube() {
		       (( $1 * $1 * $1 ))
		       return 0
		     }
		     functions -M cube 1 1 zmath_cube
		     print $(( cube(3) ))

	      This will	print `0' because of the return.

	      Commenting the return out	would lead to a	different problem: the
	      ((...)) statement	would become the last statement	in  the	 func-
	      tion,  so	 the  return  status  ($?)  of	the  function would be
	      non-zero (indicating failure) whenever the arithmetic result  of
	      the function would happen	to be zero (numerically):

		     # WRONG
		     zmath_cube() {
		       (( $1 * $1 * $1 ))
		     }
		     functions -M cube 1 1 zmath_cube
		     print $(( cube(0) ))

	      Instead, the true	builtin	can be used:

		     # RIGHT
		     zmath_cube() {
		       (( $1 * $1 * $1 ))
		       true
		     }
		     functions -M cube 1 1 zmath_cube
		     print $(( cube(3) ))

	      If  the additional option	-s is given to functions -M, the argu-
	      ment to the function is a	single string:	anything  between  the
	      opening  and matching closing parenthesis	is passed to the func-
	      tion as a	single argument, even if it includes commas  or	 white
	      space.   The minimum and maximum argument	specifiers must	there-
	      fore be 1	if given.  An empty  argument  list  is	 passed	 as  a
	      zero-length string.  Thus, the following string function takes a
	      single argument, including the commas, and prints	11:

		     stringfn()	{ (( $#1 )); true }
		     functions -Ms stringfn
		     print $(( stringfn(foo,bar,rod) ))

	      functions	-M with	no arguments lists all such user-defined func-
	      tions in the same	form as	a definition.  With the	additional op-
	      tion  -m	and  a	list  of arguments, all	functions whose	mathfn
	      matches one of the pattern arguments are listed.

	      function +M removes the list of mathematical functions; with the
	      additional option	-m the arguments are treated as	 patterns  and
	      all  functions  whose  mathfn  matches  the pattern are removed.
	      Note that	the shell function implementing	the behaviour  is  not
	      removed (regardless of whether its name coincides	with mathfn).

       getcap See the section `The zsh/cap Module' in zshmodules(1).

       getln [ -AclneE ] name ...
	      Read the top value from the buffer stack and put it in the shell
	      parameter	name.  Equivalent to read -zr.

       getopts optstring name [	arg ...	]
	      Checks the args for legal	options.  If the args are omitted, use
	      the  positional parameters.  A valid option argument begins with
	      a	`+' or a `-'.  An argument not beginning with a	`+' or a  `-',
	      or  the argument `--', ends the options.	Note that a single `-'
	      is not considered	a valid	option argument.   optstring  contains
	      the letters that getopts recognizes.  If a letter	is followed by
	      a	 `:',  that  option  requires an argument.  The	options	can be
	      separated	from the argument by blanks.

	      Each time	it is invoked, getopts places  the  option  letter  it
	      finds in the shell parameter name, prepended with	a `+' when arg
	      begins  with  a  `+'.   The  index  of the next arg is stored in
	      OPTIND.  The option argument, if any, is stored in OPTARG.

	      The first	option to be examined may be changed by	explicitly as-
	      signing to OPTIND.  OPTIND has an	initial	value  of  1,  and  is
	      normally	set  to	 1 upon	entry to a shell function and restored
	      upon exit.  (The POSIX_BUILTINS option disables this,  and  also
	      changes  the way the value is calculated to match	other shells.)
	      OPTARG is	not reset and retains its value	from the  most	recent
	      call  to	getopts.   If either of	OPTIND or OPTARG is explicitly
	      unset, it	remains	unset, and the index or	option argument	is not
	      stored.  The option itself is still stored in name in this case.

	      A	leading	`:' in optstring causes	getopts	to store the letter of
	      any invalid option in OPTARG, and	to set name to `?' for an  un-
	      known  option  and  to  `:' when a required argument is missing.
	      Otherwise, getopts sets name to `?' and prints an	error  message
	      when  an	option	is  invalid.   The exit	status is nonzero when
	      there are	no more	options.

       hash [ -Ldfmrv ]	[ name[=value] ] ...
	      hash can be used to directly modify the contents of the  command
	      hash  table,  and	 the named directory hash table.  Normally one
	      would modify these tables	by modifying one's PATH	(for the  com-
	      mand  hash  table)  or  by creating appropriate shell parameters
	      (for the named directory hash table).  The choice	of hash	 table
	      to  work	on  is determined by the -d option; without the	option
	      the command hash table is	used, and with the  option  the	 named
	      directory	hash table is used.

	      A	command	name starting with a / is never	hashed,	whether	by ex-
	      plicit  use of the hash command or otherwise.  Such a command is
	      always found by direct look up in	the file system.

	      Given no arguments, and neither the -r or	-f  options,  the  se-
	      lected hash table	will be	listed in full.

	      The  -r option causes the	selected hash table to be emptied.  It
	      will be subsequently rebuilt in the normal fashion.  The -f  op-
	      tion  causes the selected	hash table to be fully rebuilt immedi-
	      ately.  For the command hash table this hashes all the  absolute
	      directories  in the PATH,	and for	the named directory hash table
	      this adds	all users' home	directories.  These two	options	cannot
	      be used with any arguments.

	      The -m option causes the	arguments  to  be  taken  as  patterns
	      (which  should  be  quoted)  and	the elements of	the hash table
	      matching those patterns are printed.  This is the	 only  way  to
	      display a	limited	selection of hash table	elements.

	      For  each	name with a corresponding value, put `name' in the se-
	      lected hash table, associating it	with the pathname `value'.  In
	      the command hash table, this means that whenever `name' is  used
	      as  a  command  argument,	the shell will try to execute the file
	      given by `value'.	 In the	named directory	hash table, this means
	      that `value' may be referred to as `~name'.

	      For each name with no corresponding value, attempt to  add  name
	      to the hash table, checking what the appropriate value is	in the
	      normal  manner  for  that	 hash  table.  If an appropriate value
	      can't be found, then the hash table will be unchanged.

	      The -v option causes hash	table entries to be listed as they are
	      added by explicit	specification.	If has no effect if used  with
	      -f.

	      If the -L	flag is	present, then each hash	table entry is printed
	      in the form of a call to hash.

       history
	      Same as fc -l.

       integer [ {+|-}Hghlprtux	] [ {+|-}LRZi [	n ] ] [	name[=value] ... ]
	      Equivalent  to typeset -i, except	that options irrelevant	to in-
	      tegers are not permitted.

       jobs [ -dlprs ] [ job ... ]
       jobs -Z string
	      Lists information	about each given job, or all jobs  if  job  is
	      omitted.	 The  -l flag lists process IDs, and the -p flag lists
	      process groups.  If the -r flag is specified only	 running  jobs
	      will be listed and if the	-s flag	is given only stopped jobs are
	      shown.   If  the	-d flag	is given, the directory	from which the
	      job was started (which may not be	the current directory  of  the
	      job) will	also be	shown.

	      The  -Z  option  replaces	 the  shell's argument and environment
	      space with the given string,  truncated  if  necessary  to  fit.
	      This will	normally be visible in ps (ps(1)) listings.  This fea-
	      ture is typically	used by	daemons, to indicate their state.

	      Full  job	control	is only	available in the top-level interactive
	      shell, not in commands run in the	left hand side of pipelines or
	      within the (...) construct.  However,  a	snapshot  of  the  job
	      state at that point is taken, so it is still possible to use the
	      jobs  builtin, or	any parameter providing	job information.  This
	      gives information	about the state	of jobs	at the point the  sub-
	      shell  was  created.  If background processes are	created	within
	      the subshell, then instead information about those processes  is
	      provided.

	      For example,

		     sleep 10 &	   # Job in background
		     (		   # Shell forks
		     jobs	   # Shows information about "sleep 10 &"
		     sleep 5 &	   # Process in	background (no job control)
		     jobs	   # Shows information about "sleep 5 &"
		     )

       kill [ -s signal_name | -n signal_number	| -sig ] job ...
       kill -l [ sig ... ]
	      Sends  either  SIGTERM or	the specified signal to	the given jobs
	      or processes.  Signals are given by number or by names, with  or
	      without  the  `SIG'  prefix.   If	 the  signal being sent	is not
	      `KILL' or	`CONT',	then the job will be sent a `CONT'  signal  if
	      it  is stopped.  The argument job	can be the process ID of a job
	      not in the job list.  In the second form,	kill -l, if sig	is not
	      specified	the signal names are listed.  Otherwise, for each  sig
	      that  is a name, the corresponding signal	number is listed.  For
	      each sig that is a signal	number or a  number  representing  the
	      exit  status  of	a process which	was terminated or stopped by a
	      signal the name of the signal is printed.

	      On some systems, alternative signal names	are allowed for	a  few
	      signals.	Typical	examples are SIGCHLD and SIGCLD	or SIGPOLL and
	      SIGIO, assuming they correspond to the same signal number.  kill
	      -l  will	only list the preferred	form, however kill -l alt will
	      show if the alternative form corresponds	to  a  signal  number.
	      For example, under Linux kill -l IO and kill -l POLL both	output
	      29, hence	kill -IO and kill -POLL	have the same effect.

	      Many  systems  will  allow  process IDs to be negative to	kill a
	      process group or zero to kill the	current	process	group.

       let arg ...
	      Evaluate each arg	as an arithmetic expression.  See the  section
	      `Arithmetic  Evaluation'	in  zshmisc(1)	for  a	description of
	      arithmetic expressions.  The exit	status is 0 if	the  value  of
	      the last expression is nonzero, 1	if it is zero, and 2 if	an er-
	      ror occurred.

       limit [ -hs ] [ resource	[ limit	] ] ...
	      Set  or  display	resource limits.  Unless the -s	flag is	given,
	      the limit	applies	only the children of  the  shell.   If	-s  is
	      given  without  other arguments, the resource limits of the cur-
	      rent shell is set	to the previously set resource limits  of  the
	      children.

	      If limit is not specified, print the current limit placed	on re-
	      source,  otherwise set the limit to the specified	value.	If the
	      -h flag is given,	use hard limits	instead	of soft	limits.	 If no
	      resource is given, print all limits.

	      When looping over	multiple resources, the	shell will abort imme-
	      diately if it detects a badly formed argument.  However,	if  it
	      fails to set a limit for some other reason it will continue try-
	      ing to set the remaining limits.

	      resource can be one of:

	      addressspace
		     Maximum amount of address space used.
	      aiomemorylocked
		     Maximum  amount  of  memory  locked in RAM	for AIO	opera-
		     tions.
	      aiooperations
		     Maximum number of AIO operations.
	      cachedthreads
		     Maximum number of cached threads.
	      coredumpsize
		     Maximum size of a core dump.
	      cputime
		     Maximum CPU seconds per process.
	      datasize
		     Maximum data size (including stack) for each process.
	      descriptors
		     Maximum value for a file descriptor.
	      filesize
		     Largest single file allowed.
	      kqueues
		     Maximum number of kqueues allocated.
	      maxproc
		     Maximum number of processes.
	      maxpthreads
		     Maximum number of threads per process.
	      memorylocked
		     Maximum amount of memory locked in	RAM.
	      memoryuse
		     Maximum resident set size.
	      msgqueue
		     Maximum number of bytes in	POSIX message queues.
	      posixlocks
		     Maximum number of POSIX locks per user.
	      pseudoterminals
		     Maximum number of pseudo-terminals.
	      resident
		     Maximum resident set size.
	      sigpending
		     Maximum number of pending signals.
	      sockbufsize
		     Maximum size of all socket	buffers.
	      stacksize
		     Maximum stack size	for each process.
	      swapsize
		     Maximum amount of swap used.
	      vmemorysize
		     Maximum amount of virtual memory.

	      Which of these resource limits are available depends on the sys-
	      tem.  resource can be abbreviated	to any unambiguous prefix.  It
	      can also be an integer, which corresponds	to the integer defined
	      for the resource by the operating	system.

	      If argument corresponds to a number which	is out of the range of
	      the resources configured into the	shell, the shell will  try  to
	      read or write the	limit anyway, and will report an error if this
	      fails.   As  the shell does not store such resources internally,
	      an attempt to set	the limit will fail unless the	-s  option  is
	      present.

	      limit is a number, with an optional scaling factor, as follows:

	      nh     hours
	      nk     kilobytes (default)
	      nm     megabytes or minutes
	      ng     gigabytes
	      [mm:]ss
		     minutes and seconds

	      The  limit  command  is  not  made available by default when the
	      shell starts in a	mode emulating another shell.  It can be  made
	      available	with the command `zmodload -F zsh/rlimits b:limit'.

       local [ {+|-}AHUahlprtux	] [ {+|-}EFLRZi	[ n ] ]	[ name[=value] ... ]
	      Same as typeset, except that the options -g, and -f are not per-
	      mitted.	In  this  case the -x option does not force the	use of
	      -g, i.e. exported	variables will be local	to functions.

       logout [	n ]
	      Same as exit, except that	it only	works in a login shell.

       noglob simple command
	      See the section `Precommand Modifiers' in	zshmisc(1).

       popd [ -q ] [ {+|-}n ]
	      Remove an	entry from the directory stack,	and perform  a	cd  to
	      the  new top directory.  With no argument, the current top entry
	      is removed.  An argument of the form `+n'	identifies a stack en-
	      try by counting from the left of the list	shown by the dirs com-
	      mand, starting with zero.	 An argument of	 the  form  -n	counts
	      from  the	right.	If the PUSHD_MINUS option is set, the meanings
	      of `+' and `-' in	this context are swapped.

	      If the -q	(quiet)	option is specified, the hook  function	 chpwd
	      and  the functions in the	array $chpwd_functions are not called,
	      and the new directory stack is not printed.  This	is useful  for
	      calls  to	popd that do not change	the environment	seen by	an in-
	      teractive	user.

       print [ -abcDilmnNoOpPrsSz ] [ -u n ] [ -f format ] [ -C	cols ]
	     [ -v name ] [ -xX tabstop ] [ -R [	-en ]] [ arg ... ]
	      With the `-f' option the arguments are printed as	 described  by
	      printf.	With  no flags or with the flag	`-', the arguments are
	      printed on the standard output as	described by  echo,  with  the
	      following	 differences:  the  escape  sequence `\M-x' (or	`\Mx')
	      metafies the character x (sets  the  highest  bit),  `\C-x'  (or
	      `\Cx')  produces a control character (`\C-@' and `\C-?' give the
	      characters NULL and delete), a character code in octal is	repre-
	      sented by	`\NNN' (instead	of `\0NNN'), and `\E' is a synonym for
	      `\e'.  Finally, if not in	an escape sequence,  `\'  escapes  the
	      following	character and is not printed.

	      -a     Print arguments with the column incrementing first.  Only
		     useful with the -c	and -C options.

	      -b     Recognize	all the	escape sequences defined for the bind-
		     key command, see the section `Zle Builtins' in zshzle(1).

	      -c     Print the arguments in columns.  Unless -a	is also	given,
		     arguments are printed with	the row	incrementing first.

	      -C cols
		     Print the arguments in cols columns.  Unless -a  is  also
		     given,  arguments	are  printed with the row incrementing
		     first.

	      -D     Treat the arguments as paths,  replacing  directory  pre-
		     fixes  with  ~  expressions  corresponding	 to  directory
		     names, as appropriate.

	      -i     If	given together with -o or  -O,	sorting	 is  performed
		     case-independently.

	      -l     Print  the	 arguments  separated  by  newlines instead of
		     spaces.  Note: if the list	of arguments is	 empty,	 print
		     -l	 will  still  output one empty line. To	print a	possi-
		     bly-empty list of arguments one per line, use print  -C1,
		     as	in `print -rC1 -- "$list[@]"'.

	      -m     Take  the first argument as a pattern (should be quoted),
		     and remove	it from	the argument list together with	subse-
		     quent arguments that do not match this pattern.

	      -n     Do	not add	a newline to the output.

	      -N     Print the arguments separated and	terminated  by	nulls.
		     Again,  print  -rNC1  -- "$list[@]" is a canonical	way to
		     print an arbitrary	list as	null-delimited records.

	      -o     Print the arguments sorted	in ascending order.

	      -O     Print the arguments sorted	in descending order.

	      -p     Print the arguments to the	input of the coprocess.

	      -P     Perform prompt expansion (see  EXPANSION  OF  PROMPT  SE-
		     QUENCES in	zshmisc(1)).  In combination with `-f',	prompt
		     escape  sequences are parsed only within interpolated ar-
		     guments, not within the format string.

	      -r     Ignore the	escape conventions of echo.

	      -R     Emulate the BSD echo command, which does not process  es-
		     cape  sequences unless the	-e flag	is given.  The -n flag
		     suppresses	the trailing newline.	Only  the  -e  and  -n
		     flags  are	 recognized  after -R; all other arguments and
		     options are printed.

	      -s     Place the results in the history list instead of  on  the
		     standard  output.	 Each argument to the print command is
		     treated as	a single word in the  history,	regardless  of
		     its content.

	      -S     Place  the	 results in the	history	list instead of	on the
		     standard output.  In this case only a single argument  is
		     allowed; it will be split into words as if	it were	a full
		     shell command line.  The effect is	similar	to reading the
		     line  from	 a history file	with the HIST_LEX_WORDS	option
		     active.

	      -u n   Print the arguments to file descriptor n.

	      -v name
		     Store the printed arguments as the	value of the parameter
		     name.

	      -x tab-stop
		     Expand leading tabs on each line of output	in the printed
		     string assuming a tab  stop  every	 tab-stop  characters.
		     This  is  appropriate for formatting code that may	be in-
		     dented with tabs.	Note that leading tabs of any argument
		     to	print, not just	the first, are expanded, even if print
		     is	using spaces to	separate arguments (the	 column	 count
		     is	 maintained  across  arguments but may be incorrect on
		     output owing to previous unexpanded tabs).

		     The start of the output of	each print command is  assumed
		     to	be aligned with	a tab stop.  Widths of multibyte char-
		     acters  are handled if the	option MULTIBYTE is in effect.
		     This option is ignored if other formatting	options	are in
		     effect, namely column alignment or	printf	style,	or  if
		     output  is	to a special location such as shell history or
		     the command line editor.

	      -X tab-stop
		     This is similar to	 -x,  except  that  all	 tabs  in  the
		     printed string are	expanded.  This	is appropriate if tabs
		     in	 the  arguments	are being used to produce a table for-
		     mat.

	      -z     Push the arguments	onto the editing buffer	 stack,	 sepa-
		     rated by spaces.

	      If  any  of `-m',	`-o' or	`-O' are used in combination with `-f'
	      and there	are no arguments (after	the  removal  process  in  the
	      case of `-m') then nothing is printed.

       printf [	-v name	] format [ arg ... ]
	      Print  the arguments according to	the format specification. For-
	      matting rules are	the same as used in C.	The  same  escape  se-
	      quences  as for echo are recognised in the format. All C conver-
	      sion specifications ending in one	of csdiouxXeEfgGn are handled.
	      In addition to this, `%b'	can be used instead of `%s'  to	 cause
	      escape  sequences	 in the	argument to be recognised and `%q' can
	      be used to quote the argument in such a way that allows it to be
	      reused as	shell input. With the numeric  format  specifiers,  if
	      the  corresponding  argument  starts with	a quote	character, the
	      numeric value of the following character is used as  the	number
	      to  print;  otherwise the	argument is evaluated as an arithmetic
	      expression. See the  section  `Arithmetic	 Evaluation'  in  zsh-
	      misc(1)  for a description of arithmetic expressions. With `%n',
	      the corresponding	argument is taken as an	 identifier  which  is
	      created as an integer parameter.

	      Normally,	conversion specifications are applied to each argument
	      in  order	but they can explicitly	specify	the nth	argument is to
	      be used by replacing `%' by `%n$'	and `*'	by `*n$'.  It is  rec-
	      ommended	that  you do not mix references	of this	explicit style
	      with the normal style and	the handling of	such mixed styles  may
	      be subject to future change.

	      If  arguments  remain unused after formatting, the format	string
	      is reused	until all arguments have been consumed.	With the print
	      builtin, this can	be suppressed by using the -r option. If  more
	      arguments	 are  required by the format than have been specified,
	      the behaviour is as if zero or an	empty string had  been	speci-
	      fied as the argument.

	      The -v option causes the output to be stored as the value	of the
	      parameter	 name, instead of printed. If name is an array and the
	      format string is reused when consuming arguments then one	 array
	      element will be used for each use	of the format string.

       pushd [ -qsLP ] [ arg ]
       pushd [ -qsLP ] old new
       pushd [ -qsLP ] {+|-}n
	      Change the current directory, and	push the old current directory
	      onto the directory stack.	 In the	first form, change the current
	      directory	to arg.	 If arg	is not specified, change to the	second
	      directory	 on the	stack (that is,	exchange the top two entries),
	      or change	to $HOME if the	PUSHD_TO_HOME  option  is  set	or  if
	      there  is	only one entry on the stack.  Otherwise, arg is	inter-
	      preted as	it would be by cd.  The	meaning	of old and new in  the
	      second form is also the same as for cd.

	      The third	form of	pushd changes directory	by rotating the	direc-
	      tory  list.  An argument of the form `+n'	identifies a stack en-
	      try by counting from the left of the list	shown by the dirs com-
	      mand, starting with zero.	 An argument of	the form  `-n'	counts
	      from  the	right.	If the PUSHD_MINUS option is set, the meanings
	      of `+' and `-' in	this context are swapped.

	      If the -q	(quiet)	option is specified, the hook  function	 chpwd
	      and  the functions in the	array $chpwd_functions are not called,
	      and the new directory stack is not printed.  This	is useful  for
	      calls to pushd that do not change	the environment	seen by	an in-
	      teractive	user.

	      If  the  option  -q  is  not  specified  and  the	 shell	option
	      PUSHD_SILENT is not set, the directory stack will	be printed af-
	      ter a pushd is performed.

	      The options -s, -L and -P	have the same meanings as for  the  cd
	      builtin.

       pushln [	arg ...	]
	      Equivalent to print -nz.

       pwd [ -rLP ]
	      Print  the  absolute  pathname of	the current working directory.
	      If the -r	or the -P flag is specified, or	the CHASE_LINKS	option
	      is set and the -L	flag is	not given, the printed path  will  not
	      contain symbolic links.

       r      Same as fc -e -.

       read [ -rszpqAclneE ] [ -t [ num	] ] [ -k [ num ] ] [ -d	delim ]
	    [ -u n ] [ [name][?prompt] ] [ name	...  ]
	      Read  one	 line and break	it into	fields using the characters in
	      $IFS as separators, except as noted below.  The first  field  is
	      assigned to the first name, the second field to the second name,
	      etc.,  with  leftover fields assigned to the last	name.  If name
	      is omitted then REPLY is used for	scalars	and reply for arrays.

	      -r     Raw mode: a `\' at	the end	of a  line  does  not  signify
		     line continuation and backslashes in the line don't quote
		     the following character and are not removed.

	      -s     Don't echo	back characters	if reading from	the terminal.

	      -q     Read only one character from the terminal and set name to
		     `y'  if  this  character was `y' or `Y' and to `n'	other-
		     wise.  With this flag set the return status is zero  only
		     if	the character was `y' or `Y'.  This option may be used
		     with  a  timeout  (see -t); if the	read times out,	or en-
		     counters end of file, status 2  is	 returned.   Input  is
		     read from the terminal unless one of -u or	-p is present.
		     This option may also be used within zle widgets.

	      -k [ num ]
		     Read  only	 one (or num) characters.  All are assigned to
		     the first name, without word splitting.  This flag	is ig-
		     nored when	-q is present.	Input is read from the	termi-
		     nal  unless  one of -u or -p is present.  This option may
		     also be used within zle widgets.

		     Note that despite the mnemonic  `key'  this  option  does
		     read full characters, which may consist of	multiple bytes
		     if	the option MULTIBYTE is	set.

	      -z     Read one entry from the editor buffer stack and assign it
		     to	 the  first  name,  without  word  splitting.  Text is
		     pushed onto the stack with	`print -z' or  with  push-line
		     from  the	line editor (see zshzle(1)).  This flag	is ig-
		     nored when	the -k or -q flags are present.

	      -e
	      -E     The input read is printed (echoed)	to the	standard  out-
		     put.  If the -e flag is used, no input is assigned	to the
		     parameters.

	      -A     The  first	 name is taken as the name of an array and all
		     words are assigned	to it.

	      -c
	      -l     These flags are allowed only if called inside a  function
		     used  for	completion (specified with the -K flag to com-
		     pctl).  If	the -c flag is given, the words	of the current
		     command are read. If the -l flag is given,	the whole line
		     is	assigned as a scalar.  If both flags are  present,  -l
		     is	used and -c is ignored.

	      -n     Together with -c, the number of the word the cursor is on
		     is	 read.	With -l, the index of the character the	cursor
		     is	on is read.  Note that the command name	is word	number
		     1,	not word 0, and	that when the cursor is	at the end  of
		     the  line,	 its character index is	the length of the line
		     plus one.

	      -u n   Input is read from	file descriptor	n.

	      -p     Input is read from	the coprocess.

	      -d delim
		     Input is terminated by the	first character	of  delim  in-
		     stead of by newline.

	      -t [ num ]
		     Test if input is available	before attempting to read.  If
		     num  is  present,	it must	begin with a digit and will be
		     evaluated to give a number	of seconds,  which  may	 be  a
		     floating point number; in this case the read times	out if
		     input  is	not available within this time.	 If num	is not
		     present, it is taken to be	zero, so that read returns im-
		     mediately if no input  is	available.   If	 no  input  is
		     available,	return status 1	and do not set any variables.

		     This option is not	available when reading from the	editor
		     buffer  with  -z, when called from	within completion with
		     -c	or -l, with -q which clears  the  input	 queue	before
		     reading,  or  within zle where other mechanisms should be
		     used to test for input.

		     Note that read does not attempt to	alter the  input  pro-
		     cessing  mode.   The  default mode	is canonical input, in
		     which an entire line is read at a time, so	usually	 `read
		     -t'  will not read	anything until an entire line has been
		     typed.  However, when reading from	the terminal  with  -k
		     input  is processed one key at a time; in this case, only
		     availability of the first character is  tested,  so  that
		     e.g. `read	-t -k 2' can still block on the	second charac-
		     ter.   Use	 two  instances	of `read -t -k'	if this	is not
		     what is wanted.

	      If the first argument contains a `?', the	remainder of this word
	      is used as a prompt on standard error when the shell is interac-
	      tive.

	      The value	(exit status) of read is 1 when	an end-of-file is  en-
	      countered,  or  when  -c or -l is	present	and the	command	is not
	      called from a compctl function, or as described for -q.	Other-
	      wise the value is	0.

	      The  behavior  of	some combinations of the -k, -p, -q, -u	and -z
	      flags is undefined.  Presently -q	cancels	 all  the  others,  -p
	      cancels  -u, -k cancels -z, and otherwise	-z cancels both	-p and
	      -u.

	      The -c or	-l flags cancel	any and	all of -kpquz.

       readonly
	      Same as typeset -r.  With	the POSIX_BUILTINS option set, same as
	      typeset -gr.

       rehash Same as hash -r.

       return [	n ]
	      Causes a shell function or `.' script to return to the  invoking
	      script with the return status specified by an arithmetic expres-
	      sion n.  For example, the	following prints `42':

		     ()	{ integer foo=40; return "foo +	2" }
		     echo $?

	      If  n  is	omitted, the return status is that of the last command
	      executed.

	      If return	was executed from a trap in a  TRAPNAL	function,  the
	      effect  is  different for	zero and non-zero return status.  With
	      zero status (or after an implicit	 return	 at  the  end  of  the
	      trap),  the shell	will return to whatever	it was previously pro-
	      cessing; with a non-zero status, the shell will behave as	inter-
	      rupted except that the return status of the  trap	 is  retained.
	      Note  that the numeric value of the signal which caused the trap
	      is passed	as  the	 first	argument,  so  the  statement  `return
	      "128+$1"'	 will  return the same status as if the	signal had not
	      been trapped.

       sched  See the section `The zsh/sched Module' in	zshmodules(1).

       set [ {+|-}options | {+|-}o [ option_name ] ] ... [ {+|-}A [ name ] ]
	   [ arg ... ]
	      Set the options for the shell and/or set the positional  parame-
	      ters,  or	 declare and set an array.  If the -s option is	given,
	      it causes	the specified arguments	to be sorted before  assigning
	      them to the positional parameters	(or to the array name if -A is
	      used).   With  +s	 sort  arguments in descending order.  For the
	      meaning of the other flags, see  zshoptions(1).	Flags  may  be
	      specified	by name	using the -o option. If	no option name is sup-
	      plied  with  -o, the current option states are printed:  see the
	      description of setopt below for more information on the  format.
	      With  +o they are	printed	in a form that can be used as input to
	      the shell.

	      If the -A	flag is	specified, name	is set to an array  containing
	      the  given args; if no name is specified,	all arrays are printed
	      together with their values.

	      If +A is used and	name is	an array, the given arguments will re-
	      place the	initial	elements of that array;	if no name  is	speci-
	      fied, all	arrays are printed without their values.

	      The  behaviour  of arguments after -A name or +A name depends on
	      whether the option KSH_ARRAYS is set.  If	it is not set, all ar-
	      guments following	name are treated as values for the array,  re-
	      gardless	of  their  form.   If the option is set, normal	option
	      processing continues at that point; only regular	arguments  are
	      treated as values	for the	array.	This means that

		     set -A array -x --	foo

	      sets array to `-x	-- foo'	if KSH_ARRAYS is not set, but sets the
	      array to foo and turns on	the option `-x'	if it is set.

	      If  the  -A  flag	is not present,	but there are arguments	beyond
	      the options, the positional parameters are set.  If  the	option
	      list  (if	 any)  is terminated by	`--', and there	are no further
	      arguments, the positional	parameters will	be unset.

	      If no arguments and no `--' are given, then the names and	values
	      of all parameters	are printed on the standard  output.   If  the
	      only argument is `+', the	names of all parameters	are printed.

	      For historical reasons, `set -' is treated as `set +xv' and `set
	      -	 args'	as  `set +xv --	args' when in any other	emulation mode
	      than zsh's native	mode.

       setcap See the section `The zsh/cap Module' in zshmodules(1).

       setopt [	{+|-}options | {+|-}o option_name ] [ -m ] [ name ... ]
	      Set the options for the shell.   All  options  specified	either
	      with flags or by name are	set.

	      If no arguments are supplied, the	names of all options currently
	      set  are printed.	 The form is chosen so as to minimize the dif-
	      ferences from the	default	options	for the	current	emulation (the
	      default emulation	being native  zsh,  shown  as  <Z>  in	zshop-
	      tions(1)).  Options that are on by default for the emulation are
	      shown  with  the prefix no only if they are off, while other op-
	      tions are	shown without the prefix no and	only if	they  are  on.
	      In  addition  to	options	 changed from the default state	by the
	      user, any	options	activated automatically	by the shell (for  ex-
	      ample,  SHIN_STDIN  or  INTERACTIVE)  will be shown in the list.
	      The format is further modified by	the  option  KSH_OPTION_PRINT,
	      however  the  rationale for choosing options with	or without the
	      no prefix	remains	the same in this case.

	      If the -m	flag is	given the  arguments  are  taken  as  patterns
	      (which  should  be  quoted  to protect them from filename	expan-
	      sion), and all options with names	matching  these	 patterns  are
	      set.

	      Note  that  a bad	option name does not cause execution of	subse-
	      quent shell code to be aborted; this is behaviour	 is  different
	      from  that  of  `set  -o'.  This is because set is regarded as a
	      special builtin by the POSIX standard, but setopt	is not.

       shift [ -p ] [ n	] [ name ... ]
	      The positional parameters	${n+1} ...  are	 renamed  to  $1  ...,
	      where  n is an arithmetic	expression that	defaults to 1.	If any
	      names are	given then the arrays with these names are shifted in-
	      stead of the positional parameters.

	      If the option -p is given	arguments are instead removed (popped)
	      from the end rather than the start of the	array.

       source file [ arg ... ]
	      Same as  `.',  except  that  the	current	 directory  is	always
	      searched	and  is	 always	 searched first, before	directories in
	      $path.

       stat   See the section `The zsh/stat Module' in zshmodules(1).

       suspend [ -f ]
	      Suspend the execution of the shell (send it a SIGTSTP) until  it
	      receives	a  SIGCONT.   Unless the -f option is given, this will
	      refuse to	suspend	a login	shell.

       test [ arg ... ]
       [ [ arg ... ] ]
	      Like the system version of test.	Added for  compatibility;  use
	      conditional  expressions	instead	 (see the section `Conditional
	      Expressions').  The main differences between the conditional ex-
	      pression syntax and the test and [ builtins are:	these commands
	      are not handled syntactically, so	for example an empty  variable
	      expansion	 may  cause  an	 argument to be	omitted; syntax	errors
	      cause status 2 to	be returned instead  of	 a  shell  error;  and
	      arithmetic operators expect integer arguments rather than	arith-
	      metic expressions.

	      The command attempts to implement	POSIX and its extensions where
	      these are	specified.  Unfortunately there	are intrinsic ambigui-
	      ties  in	the  syntax; in	particular there is no distinction be-
	      tween test operators and strings that resemble them.  The	 stan-
	      dard  attempts  to  resolve these	for small numbers of arguments
	      (up to four); for	five or	more arguments compatibility cannot be
	      relied on.  Users	are urged wherever possible to	use  the  `[['
	      test syntax which	does not have these ambiguities.

       times  Print  the  accumulated  user and	system times for the shell and
	      for processes run	from the shell.

       trap [ arg ] [ sig ... ]
	      arg is a series of commands (usually quoted to protect  it  from
	      immediate	 evaluation by the shell) to be	read and executed when
	      the shell	receives any of	the signals specified by one  or  more
	      sig  args.  Each sig can be given	as a number, or	as the name of
	      a	signal either with or without the string SIG in	front (e.g. 1,
	      HUP, and SIGHUP are all the same signal).

	      If arg is	`-', then the specified	signals	are reset to their de-
	      faults, or, if no	sig args are present, all traps	are reset.

	      If arg is	an empty string, then the specified  signals  are  ig-
	      nored by the shell (and by the commands it invokes).

	      If  arg  is  omitted but one or more sig args are	provided (i.e.
	      the first	argument is a valid signal number or name), the	effect
	      is the same as if	arg had	been specified as `-'.

	      The trap command with no arguments prints	a list of commands as-
	      sociated with each signal.

	      If sig is	ZERR then arg will be executed after each command with
	      a	nonzero	exit status.  ERR is an	alias for ZERR on systems that
	      have no SIGERR signal (this is the usual case).

	      If sig is	DEBUG then arg will be executed	before each command if
	      the option DEBUG_BEFORE_CMD is set (as it	is by  default),  else
	      after each command.  Here, a `command' is	what is	described as a
	      `sublist'	 in the	shell grammar, see the section SIMPLE COMMANDS
	      &	PIPELINES in zshmisc(1).  If DEBUG_BEFORE_CMD is  set  various
	      additional  features  are	 available.   First, it	is possible to
	      skip the next command by setting the option  ERR_EXIT;  see  the
	      description  of the ERR_EXIT option in zshoptions(1).  Also, the
	      shell parameter ZSH_DEBUG_CMD is set to the string corresponding
	      to the command to	be executed following  the  trap.   Note  that
	      this  string  is	reconstructed from the internal	format and may
	      not be formatted the same	way as the original text.  The parame-
	      ter is unset after the trap is executed.

	      If sig is	0 or EXIT and the trap statement  is  executed	inside
	      the  body	 of a function,	then the command arg is	executed after
	      the function completes.  The value of $? at the start of	execu-
	      tion is the exit status of the shell or the return status	of the
	      function exiting.	 If sig	is 0 or	EXIT and the trap statement is
	      not executed inside the body of a	function, then the command arg
	      is  executed when	the shell terminates; the trap runs before any
	      zshexit hook functions.

	      ZERR, DEBUG, and EXIT traps are not executed inside other	traps.
	      ZERR and DEBUG traps are	kept  within  subshells,  while	 other
	      traps are	reset.

	      Note  that traps defined with the	trap builtin are slightly dif-
	      ferent from those	defined	as `TRAPNAL () { ... }', as the	latter
	      have their own function environment (line	numbers,  local	 vari-
	      ables, etc.) while the former use	the environment	of the command
	      in which they were called.  For example,

		     trap 'print $LINENO' DEBUG

	      will  print  the	line number of a command executed after	it has
	      run, while

		     TRAPDEBUG() { print $LINENO; }

	      will always print	the number zero.

	      Alternative signal names are allowed  as	described  under  kill
	      above.   Defining	a trap under either name causes	any trap under
	      an alternative name to be	removed.  However, it  is  recommended
	      that  for	consistency users stick	exclusively to one name	or an-
	      other.

       true [ arg ... ]
	      Do nothing and return an exit status of 0.

       ttyctl [	-fu ]
	      The -f option freezes the	tty (i.e. terminal or terminal	emula-
	      tor),  and  -u unfreezes it.  When the tty is frozen, no changes
	      made to the tty settings by external programs will be honored by
	      the shell, except	for changes in the size	 of  the  screen;  the
	      shell will simply	reset the settings to their previous values as
	      soon as each command exits or is suspended.  Thus, stty and sim-
	      ilar  programs  have no effect when the tty is frozen.  Freezing
	      the tty does not cause the current state to be  remembered:  in-
	      stead, it	causes future changes to the state to be blocked.

	      Without  options	it  reports  whether the terminal is frozen or
	      not.

	      Note that, regardless of whether the tty is frozen or  not,  the
	      shell  needs to change the settings when the line	editor starts,
	      so unfreezing the	tty does not guarantee settings	 made  on  the
	      command  line  are  preserved.   Strings of commands run between
	      editing the command line will see	a consistent tty  state.   See
	      also the shell variable STTY for a means of initialising the tty
	      before  running external commands	and/or freezing	the tty	around
	      a	single command.

       type [ -wfpamsS ] name ...
	      Equivalent to whence -v.

       typeset [ {+|-}AHUaghlmrtux ] [ {+|-}EFLRZip [ n	] ]
	       [ + ] [ name[=value] ...	]
       typeset -T [ {+|-}Uglrux	] [ {+|-}LRZp [	n ] ]
	       [ + | SCALAR[=value] array[=(value ...)]	[ sep ]	]
       typeset -f [ {+|-}TUkmtuz ] [ + ] [ name	... ]
	      Set or display attributes	and values for shell parameters.

	      Except as	noted below for	control	flags that change  the	behav-
	      ior,  a parameter	is created for each name that does not already
	      refer to one.  When inside a function, a new parameter  is  cre-
	      ated  for	every name (even those that already exist), and	is un-
	      set again	when the function completes.  See  `Local  Parameters'
	      in  zshparam(1).	 The same rules	apply to special shell parame-
	      ters, which retain their special attributes when made local.

	      For each name=value assignment, the parameter  name  is  set  to
	      value.   If the assignment is omitted and	name does not refer to
	      an existing parameter, a new parameter is	 intialized  to	 empty
	      string,  zero, or	empty array (as	appropriate), unless the shell
	      option TYPESET_TO_UNSET is set.  When that option	 is  set,  the
	      parameter	 attributes are	recorded but the parameter remains un-
	      set.

	      If the shell option TYPESET_SILENT is not	set, for each  remain-
	      ing  name	 that  refers  to a parameter that is already set, the
	      name and value of	the parameter are printed in the  form	of  an
	      assignment.  Nothing is printed for newly-created	parameters, or
	      when  any	 attribute flags listed	below are given	along with the
	      name.  Using `+' instead of  minus  to  introduce	 an  attribute
	      turns it off.

	      If  no  name  is present,	the names and values of	all parameters
	      are printed.  In this case the attribute flags restrict the dis-
	      play to only those parameters that have  the  specified  attrib-
	      utes,  and  using	`+' rather than	`-' to introduce the flag sup-
	      presses printing of the values of	parameters when	 there	is  no
	      parameter	name.

	      All  forms  of  the command handle scalar	assignment.  Array as-
	      signment is possible if any of the reserved words	 declare,  ex-
	      port, float, integer, local, readonly or typeset is matched when
	      the line is parsed (N.B. not when	it is executed).  In this case
	      the  arguments  are  parsed as assignments, except that the `+='
	      syntax and the GLOB_ASSIGN option	are not	supported, and	scalar
	      values  after  =	are  not split further into words, even	if ex-
	      panded (regardless of the	setting	 of  the  KSH_TYPESET  option;
	      this option is obsolete).

	      Examples	of  the	 differences between command and reserved word
	      parsing:

		     # Reserved	word parsing
		     typeset svar=$(echo one word) avar=(several words)

	      The above	creates	a scalar parameter svar	and an array parameter
	      avar as if the assignments had been

		     svar="one word"
		     avar=(several words)

	      On the other hand:

		     # Normal builtin interface
		     builtin typeset svar=$(echo two words)

	      The builtin keyword causes the above to use the standard builtin
	      interface	to typeset in which argument parsing is	 performed  in
	      the  same	 way  as  for  other commands.	This example creates a
	      scalar svar containing the value two and another scalar  parame-
	      ter  words with no value.	 An array value	in this	case would ei-
	      ther cause an error or be	treated	as  an	obscure	 set  of  glob
	      qualifiers.

	      Arbitrary	arguments are allowed if they take the form of assign-
	      ments  after command line	expansion; however, these only perform
	      scalar assignment:

		     var='svar=val'
		     typeset $var

	      The above	sets the scalar	 parameter  svar  to  the  value  val.
	      Parentheses  around  the	value within var would not cause array
	      assignment as they will be treated as ordinary  characters  when
	      $var is substituted.  Any	non-trivial expansion in the name part
	      of  the  assignment  causes  the	argument to be treated in this
	      fashion:

		     typeset {var1,var2,var3}=name

	      The above	syntax is valid, and has the expected effect  of  set-
	      ting  the	 three	parameters  to the same	value, but the command
	      line is parsed as	a set of three normal command  line  arguments
	      to  typeset after	expansion.  Hence it is	not possible to	assign
	      to multiple arrays by this means.

	      Note that	each interface to any of the commands may be  disabled
	      separately.   For	example, `disable -r typeset' disables the re-
	      served word interface to typeset,	exposing  the  builtin	inter-
	      face,  while  `disable typeset' disables the builtin.  Note that
	      disabling	the reserved word  interface  for  typeset  may	 cause
	      problems	with the output	of `typeset -p', which assumes the re-
	      served word interface is available in order to restore array and
	      associative array	values.

	      Unlike parameter assignment statements, typeset's	exit status on
	      an assignment that involves a command substitution does not  re-
	      flect  the  exit status of the command substitution.  Therefore,
	      to test for an error in a	command	substitution, separate the de-
	      claration	of the parameter from its initialization:

		     # WRONG
		     typeset var1=$(exit 1) || echo "Trouble with var1"

		     # RIGHT
		     typeset var1 && var1=$(exit 1) || echo "Trouble with var1"

	      To initialize a parameter	param to a command output and mark  it
	      readonly,	use typeset -r param or	readonly param after the para-
	      meter assignment statement.

	      If  no  attribute	 flags are given, and either no	name arguments
	      are present or the flag +m is used,  then	 each  parameter  name
	      printed  is preceded by a	list of	the attributes of that parame-
	      ter (array, association, exported, float,	integer, readonly,  or
	      undefined	 for  autoloaded parameters not	yet loaded).  If +m is
	      used with	attribute flags, and all those	flags  are  introduced
	      with  +, the matching parameter names are	printed	but their val-
	      ues are not.

	      The following control flags change the behavior of typeset:

	      +	     If	`+' appears by itself in a separate word as  the  last
		     option,  then the names of	all parameters (functions with
		     -f) are printed, but the  values  (function  bodies)  are
		     not.   No	name  arguments	may appear, and	it is an error
		     for any other options to follow `+'.  The effect  of  `+'
		     is	 as if all attribute flags which precede it were given
		     with a `+'	prefix.	 For example, `typeset -U +' is	equiv-
		     alent to `typeset +U' and displays	the names of  all  ar-
		     rays having the uniqueness	attribute, whereas `typeset -f
		     -U	 +'  displays the names	of all autoloadable functions.
		     If	+ is the only option, then  type  information  (array,
		     readonly,	etc.)  is  also	printed	for each parameter, in
		     the same manner as	`typeset +m "*"'.

	      -g     The -g (global) means that	any resulting  parameter  will
		     not  be  restricted  to local scope.  Note	that this does
		     not necessarily mean that the parameter will  be  global,
		     as	the flag will apply to any existing parameter (even if
		     unset)  from  an  enclosing function.  This flag does not
		     affect the	parameter after	creation, hence	it has no  ef-
		     fect  when	listing	existing parameters, nor does the flag
		     +g	have any effect	except in combination with -m (see be-
		     low).

	      -m     If	the -m flag is given the name arguments	are  taken  as
		     patterns  (use quoting to prevent these from being	inter-
		     preted as file patterns).	With no	attribute  flags,  all
		     parameters	 (or functions with the	-f flag) with matching
		     names are printed (the shell option TYPESET_SILENT	is not
		     used in this case).

		     If	the +g flag is combined	with -m, a new local parameter
		     is	created	for every matching parameter that is  not  al-
		     ready local.  Otherwise -m	applies	all other flags	or as-
		     signments to the existing parameters.

		     Except  when  assignments are made	with name=value, using
		     +m	forces the matching parameters and their attributes to
		     be	printed, even inside a function.  Note that -m is  ig-
		     nored  if no patterns are given, so `typeset -m' displays
		     attributes	but `typeset -a	+m' does not.

	      -p [ n ]
		     If	the -p option is  given,  parameters  and  values  are
		     printed  in the form of a typeset command with an assign-
		     ment, regardless of other flags and options.   Note  that
		     the  -H flag on parameters	is respected; no value will be
		     shown for these parameters.

		     -p	may be followed	by an optional integer argument.  Cur-
		     rently only the value 1 is	supported.  In this  case  ar-
		     rays and associative arrays are printed with newlines be-
		     tween indented elements for readability.

	      -T [ scalar[=value] array[=(value	...)] [	sep ] ]
		     This  flag	has a different	meaning	when used with -f; see
		     below.  Otherwise the -T option requires  zero,  two,  or
		     three  arguments  to  be present.	With no	arguments, the
		     list of parameters	created	 in  this  fashion  is	shown.
		     With  two	or three arguments, the	first two are the name
		     of	a scalar and of	an array  parameter  (in  that	order)
		     that  will	 be  tied  together in the manner of $PATH and
		     $path.  The optional third	argument is a single-character
		     separator which will be used to join the elements of  the
		     array  to form the	scalar;	if absent, a colon is used, as
		     with $PATH.  Only the first character of the separator is
		     significant;  any	remaining  characters	are   ignored.
		     Multibyte characters are not yet supported.

		     Only  one	of  the	scalar and array parameters may	be as-
		     signed an initial value (the restrictions	on  assignment
		     forms described above also	apply).

		     Both  the scalar and the array may	be manipulated as nor-
		     mal.  If one is unset, the	other  will  automatically  be
		     unset  too.   There  is  no  way of untying the variables
		     without unsetting them, nor of converting the type	of one
		     of	them with another typeset command; +T does  not	 work,
		     assigning an array	to scalar is an	error, and assigning a
		     scalar to array sets it to	be a single-element array.

		     Note  that	 both  `typeset	 -xT ...'  and `export -T ...'
		     work, but only the	scalar	will  be  marked  for  export.
		     Setting the value using the scalar	version	causes a split
		     on	all separators (which cannot be	quoted).  It is	possi-
		     ble to apply -T to	two previously tied variables but with
		     a	different separator character, in which	case the vari-
		     ables remain  joined  as  before  but  the	 separator  is
		     changed.

		     When an existing scalar is	tied to	a new array, the value
		     of	 the  scalar  is preserved but no attribute other than
		     export will be preserved.

	      Attribute	flags that transform the final value (-L, -R, -Z,  -l,
	      -u) are only applied to the expanded value at the	point of a pa-
	      rameter  expansion  expression  using `$'.  They are not applied
	      when a parameter is retrieved internally by the  shell  for  any
	      purpose.

	      The following attribute flags may	be specified:

	      -A     The names refer to	associative array parameters; see `Ar-
		     ray Parameters' in	zshparam(1).

	      -L [ n ]
		     Left  justify  and	 remove	 leading blanks	from the value
		     when the parameter	is expanded.  If n is nonzero, it  de-
		     fines the width of	the field.  If n is zero, the width is
		     determined	by the width of	the value of the first assign-
		     ment.   In	 the case of numeric parameters, the length of
		     the complete value	assigned to the	parameter is  used  to
		     determine the width, not the value	that would be output.

		     The width is the count of characters, which may be	multi-
		     byte  characters  if  the	MULTIBYTE option is in effect.
		     Note that the screen width	of the character is not	 taken
		     into account; if this is required,	use padding with para-
		     meter  expansion flags ${(ml...)...} as described in `Pa-
		     rameter Expansion Flags' in zshexpn(1).

		     When the parameter	is expanded, it	is filled on the right
		     with blanks or truncated if necessary to fit  the	field.
		     Note  truncation  can lead	to unexpected results with nu-
		     meric parameters.	Leading	zeros are removed  if  the  -Z
		     flag is also set.

	      -R [ n ]
		     Similar  to  -L, except that right	justification is used;
		     when the parameter	is expanded, the field is left	filled
		     with  blanks  or truncated	from the end.  May not be com-
		     bined with	the -Z flag.

	      -U     For arrays	(but not for associative  arrays),  keep  only
		     the  first	occurrence of each duplicated value.  This may
		     also be set for tied parameters (see -T)  or  colon-sepa-
		     rated special parameters like PATH	or FIGNORE, etc.  Note
		     the  flag takes effect on assignment, and the type	of the
		     variable being assigned to	is  determinative;  for	 vari-
		     ables  with  shared values	it is therefore	recommended to
		     set the flag for all interfaces, e.g.  `typeset  -U  PATH
		     path'.

		     This  flag	has a different	meaning	when used with -f; see
		     below.

	      -Z [ n ]
		     Specially handled if set along with the -L	flag.	Other-
		     wise,  similar  to	-R, except that	leading	zeros are used
		     for padding instead of  blanks  if	 the  first  non-blank
		     character	is  a digit.  Numeric parameters are specially
		     handled: they are always eligible for  padding  with  ze-
		     roes, and the zeroes are inserted at an appropriate place
		     in	the output.

	      -a     The  names	refer to array parameters.  An array parameter
		     may be created this way, but it may be assigned to	in the
		     typeset statement only if the reserved word form of type-
		     set is enabled (as	it is by default).   When  displaying,
		     both normal and associative arrays	are shown.

	      -f     The  names	refer to functions rather than parameters.  No
		     assignments can be	made, and the only other  valid	 flags
		     are -t, -T, -k, -u, -U and	-z.  The flag -t turns on exe-
		     cution  tracing  for  this	function; the flag -T does the
		     same, but turns off tracing for any named (not anonymous)
		     function called from the present one, unless  that	 func-
		     tion  also	 has  the  -t or -T flag.  The -u and -U flags
		     cause the function	to be marked for autoloading; -U  also
		     causes alias expansion to be suppressed when the function
		     is	loaded.	 See the description of	the `autoload' builtin
		     for details.

		     Note  that	 the builtin functions provides	the same basic
		     capabilities as typeset -f	but gives access to a few  ex-
		     tra  options;  autoload  gives further additional options
		     for the case typeset -fu and typeset -fU.

	      -h     Hide: only	useful for special  parameters	(those	marked
		     `<S>' in the table	in zshparam(1)), and for local parame-
		     ters  with	 the  same name	as a special parameter,	though
		     harmless for others.  A special parameter with  this  at-
		     tribute  will not retain its special effect when made lo-
		     cal.  Thus	after `typeset -h PATH', a function containing
		     `typeset PATH' will create	an  ordinary  local  parameter
		     without  the usual	behaviour of PATH.  Alternatively, the
		     local parameter may itself	be given this attribute; hence
		     inside a function `typeset	-h PATH' creates  an  ordinary
		     local parameter and the special PATH parameter is not al-
		     tered  in any way.	 It is also possible to	create a local
		     parameter using `typeset +h  special',  where  the	 local
		     copy  of  special	will retain its	special	properties re-
		     gardless of having	the -h attribute.  Global special  pa-
		     rameters  loaded  from  shell modules (currently those in
		     zsh/mapfile and zsh/parameter)  are  automatically	 given
		     the -h attribute to avoid name clashes.

	      -H     Hide  value:  specifies that typeset will not display the
		     value of the parameter when listing parameters; the  dis-
		     play for such parameters is always	as if the `+' flag had
		     been  given.   Use	 of the	parameter is in	other respects
		     normal, and the option does not apply if the parameter is
		     specified by name,	or by  pattern	with  the  -m  option.
		     This is on	by default for the parameters in the zsh/para-
		     meter  and	 zsh/mapfile modules.  Note, however, that un-
		     like the -h flag this is also useful for non-special  pa-
		     rameters.

	      -i [ n ]
		     Use  an internal integer representation.  If n is nonzero
		     it	defines	the output arithmetic base,  otherwise	it  is
		     determined	 by  the first assignment.  Bases from 2 to 36
		     inclusive are allowed.

	      -E [ n ]
		     Use an internal double-precision floating point represen-
		     tation.  On output	the variable will be converted to sci-
		     entific notation.	If n is	nonzero	it defines the	number
		     of	significant figures to display;	the default is ten.

	      -F [ n ]
		     Use an internal double-precision floating point represen-
		     tation.   On  output  the	variable  will be converted to
		     fixed-point decimal notation.  If n is nonzero it defines
		     the number	of digits to display after the decimal	point;
		     the default is ten.

	      -l     Convert  the  result to lower case	whenever the parameter
		     is	expanded.  The value is	not converted when assigned.

	      -r     The given names are marked	readonly.  Note	that  if  name
		     is	 a  special  parameter,	 the readonly attribute	can be
		     turned on,	but cannot then	be turned off.

		     If	the POSIX_BUILTINS option is  set,  the	 readonly  at-
		     tribute  is  more	restrictive:  unset  variables	can be
		     marked readonly and cannot	then be	set; furthermore,  the
		     readonly attribute	cannot be removed from any variable.

		     It	 is  still  possible to	change other attributes	of the
		     variable though, some of which like -U or -Z would	affect
		     the value.	More generally,	the readonly attribute	should
		     not be relied on as a security mechanism.

		     Note  that	 in  zsh  (like	in pdksh but unlike most other
		     shells) it	is still possible to create a  local  variable
		     of	 the same name as this is considered a different vari-
		     able (though this variable, too, can be marked readonly).
		     Special variables that have  been	made  readonly	retain
		     their value and readonly attribute	when made local.

	      -t     Tags  the named parameters.  Tags have no special meaning
		     to	the shell.  This flag has  a  different	 meaning  when
		     used with -f; see above.

	      -u     Convert  the  result to upper case	whenever the parameter
		     is	expanded.  The value is	not converted  when  assigned.
		     This  flag	has a different	meaning	when used with -f; see
		     above.

	      -x     Mark for automatic	export to the  environment  of	subse-
		     quently  executed	commands.  If the option GLOBAL_EXPORT
		     is	set, this implies the option -g, unless	+g is also ex-
		     plicitly given; in	other words the	parameter is not  made
		     local to the enclosing function.  This is for compatibil-
		     ity with previous versions	of zsh.

       ulimit [	-HSa ] [ { -bcdfiklmnpqrsTtvwx | -N resource } [ limit ] ... ]
	      Set  or  display	resource limits	of the shell and the processes
	      started by the shell.  The value of limit	can be a number	in the
	      unit specified below or one of the values	`unlimited', which re-
	      moves the	limit on the resource, or `hard', which	uses the  cur-
	      rent value of the	hard limit on the resource.

	      By  default, only	soft limits are	manipulated. If	the -H flag is
	      given use	hard limits instead of soft limits.  If	the -S flag is
	      given together with the -H flag set both hard and	soft limits.

	      If no options are	used, the file size limit (-f) is assumed.

	      If limit is omitted the current value of the specified resources
	      are printed.  When more than one resource	value is printed,  the
	      limit name and unit is printed before each value.

	      When looping over	multiple resources, the	shell will abort imme-
	      diately  if  it detects a	badly formed argument.	However, if it
	      fails to set a limit for some other reason it will continue try-
	      ing to set the remaining limits.

	      Not all the following resources are supported  on	 all  systems.
	      Running ulimit -a	will show which	are supported.

	      -a     Lists all of the current resource limits.
	      -b     Socket buffer size	in bytes (N.B. not kilobytes)
	      -c     512-byte blocks on	the size of core dumps.
	      -d     Kilobytes on the size of the data segment.
	      -f     512-byte blocks on	the size of files written.
	      -i     The number	of pending signals.
	      -k     The number	of kqueues allocated.
	      -l     Kilobytes on the size of locked-in	memory.
	      -m     Kilobytes on the size of physical memory.
	      -n     open file descriptors.
	      -p     The number	of pseudo-terminals.
	      -q     Bytes in POSIX message queues.
	      -r     Maximum  real  time priority.  On some systems where this
		     is	not available, such as NetBSD, this has	the  same  ef-
		     fect as -T	for compatibility with sh.
	      -s     Kilobytes on the size of the stack.
	      -T     The number	of simultaneous	threads	available to the user.
	      -t     CPU seconds to be used.
	      -u     The number	of processes available to the user.
	      -v     Kilobytes on the size of virtual memory.  On some systems
		     this refers to the	limit called `address space'.
	      -w     Kilobytes on the size of swapped out memory.
	      -x     The number	of locks on files.

	      A	 resource may also be specified	by integer in the form `-N re-
	      source', where resource corresponds to the integer  defined  for
	      the  resource  by	the operating system.  This may	be used	to set
	      the limits for resources known to	the shell which	do not	corre-
	      spond to option letters.	Such limits will be shown by number in
	      the output of `ulimit -a'.

	      The  number may alternatively be out of the range	of limits com-
	      piled into the shell.  The shell will try	to read	or  write  the
	      limit anyway, and	will report an error if	this fails.

       umask [ -S ] [ mask ]
	      The umask	is set to mask.	 mask can be either an octal number or
	      a	symbolic value as described in the chmod(1) man	page.  If mask
	      is  omitted, the current value is	printed.  The -S option	causes
	      the mask to be printed as	a symbolic value.  Otherwise, the mask
	      is printed as an octal number.  Note that	in the	symbolic  form
	      the  permissions	you  specify are those which are to be allowed
	      (not denied) to the users	specified.

       unalias [ -ams ]	name ...
	      Removes aliases.	This command works the same as unhash -a,  ex-
	      cept  that  the -a option	removes	all regular or global aliases,
	      or with -s all suffix aliases: in	this case  no  name  arguments
	      may  appear.   The options -m (remove by pattern)	and -s without
	      -a (remove listed	suffix aliases)	behave as for unhash -a.  Note
	      that the meaning of -a is	different between unalias and unhash.

       unfunction
	      Same as unhash -f.

       unhash [	-adfms ] name ...
	      Remove the element named name from an internal hash table.   The
	      default  is remove elements from the command hash	table.	The -a
	      option causes unhash to remove regular or	global	aliases;  note
	      when  removing a global aliases that the argument	must be	quoted
	      to prevent it from being expanded	before	being  passed  to  the
	      command.	 The -s	option causes unhash to	remove suffix aliases.
	      The -f option causes unhash to remove shell functions.   The  -d
	      options  causes  unhash  to remove named directories.  If	the -m
	      flag is given the	arguments are taken  as	 patterns  (should  be
	      quoted)  and  all	 elements of the corresponding hash table with
	      matching names will be removed.

       unlimit [ -hs ] resource	...
	      The resource limit for each resource is set to the  hard	limit.
	      If  the  -h  flag	 is given and the shell	has appropriate	privi-
	      leges, the hard resource limit for  each	resource  is  removed.
	      The  resources  of  the shell process are	only changed if	the -s
	      flag is given.

	      The unlimit command is not made available	by  default  when  the
	      shell  starts in a mode emulating	another	shell.	It can be made
	      available	with the command `zmodload -F zsh/rlimits b:unlimit'.

       unset [ -fmv ] name ...
	      Each named parameter is unset.  Local  parameters	 remain	 local
	      even  if unset; they appear unset	within scope, but the previous
	      value will still reappear	when the scope ends.

	      Individual elements of associative array parameters may be unset
	      by using subscript syntax	on name, which should  be  quoted  (or
	      the  entire  command  prefixed  with noglob) to protect the sub-
	      script from filename generation.

	      If the -m	flag is	specified the arguments	are taken as  patterns
	      (should  be  quoted)  and	all parameters with matching names are
	      unset.  Note that	this cannot be used when unsetting associative
	      array elements, as the subscript will be treated as part of  the
	      pattern.

	      The  -v  flag  specifies that name refers	to parameters. This is
	      the default behaviour.

	      unset -f is equivalent to	unfunction.

       unsetopt	[ {+|-}options | {+|-}o	option_name ] [	name ... ]
	      Unset the	options	for the	shell.	All options  specified	either
	      with  flags or by	name are unset.	 If no arguments are supplied,
	      the names	of all options currently unset are printed.  If	the -m
	      flag is given the	arguments are taken as patterns	(which	should
	      be  quoted  to preserve them from	being interpreted as glob pat-
	      terns), and all options with names matching these	 patterns  are
	      unset.

       vared  See the section `Zle Builtins' in	zshzle(1).

       wait [ job ... ]
	      Wait  for	 the specified jobs or processes.  If job is not given
	      then all currently active	child processes	are waited for.	  Each
	      job can be either	a job specification or the process ID of a job
	      in  the job table.  The exit status from this command is that of
	      the job waited for.  If job represents an	unknown	job or process
	      ID, a warning is printed (unless the  POSIX_BUILTINS  option  is
	      set) and the exit	status is 127.

	      It  is  possible	to  wait  for  recent  processes (specified by
	      process ID, not by job) that were	running	in the background even
	      if the process has exited.  Typically the	 process  ID  will  be
	      recorded	by  capturing the value	of the variable	$! immediately
	      after the	process	has been started.  There is  a	limit  on  the
	      number  of process IDs remembered	by the shell; this is given by
	      the value	of the system configuration parameter CHILD_MAX.  When
	      this limit is reached, older process IDs	are  discarded,	 least
	      recently started processes first.

	      Note  there  is  no  protection against the process ID wrapping,
	      i.e. if the wait is not executed soon enough there is  a	chance
	      the  process  waited  for	 is the	wrong one.  A conflict implies
	      both process IDs have been generated  by	the  shell,  as	 other
	      processes	are not	recorded, and that the user is potentially in-
	      terested in both,	so this	problem	is intrinsic to	process	IDs.

       whence [	-vcwfpamsS ] [ -x num ]	name ...
	      For each name, indicate how it would be interpreted if used as a
	      command name.

	      If  name	is  not	 an alias, built-in command, external command,
	      shell function, hashed command, or a  reserved  word,  the  exit
	      status  shall be non-zero, and --	if -v, -c, or -w was passed --
	      a	message	will be	written	to standard output.  (This is  differ-
	      ent  from	 other	shells that write that message to standard er-
	      ror.)

	      whence is	most useful when name is only the last path  component
	      of  a  command, i.e. does	not include a `/'; in particular, pat-
	      tern matching only succeeds if just the non-directory  component
	      of the command is	passed.

	      -v     Produce a more verbose report.

	      -c     Print  the	 results  in  a	 csh-like  format.  This takes
		     precedence	over -v.

	      -w     For each name, print `name: word' where word  is  one  of
		     alias,  builtin,  command,	 function, hashed, reserved or
		     none, according  as  name	corresponds  to	 an  alias,  a
		     built-in  command,	an external command, a shell function,
		     a command defined with the	hash builtin, a	reserved word,
		     or	is not recognised.  This takes precedence over -v  and
		     -c.

	      -f     Causes  the contents of a shell function to be displayed,
		     which would otherwise not happen unless the -c flag  were
		     used.

	      -p     Do	 a  path  search  for name even	if it is an alias, re-
		     served word, shell	function or builtin.

	      -a     Do	a search for all occurrences of	 name  throughout  the
		     command  path.   Normally	only  the  first occurrence is
		     printed.

	      -m     The arguments are taken as	patterns  (pattern  characters
		     should  be	 quoted), and the information is displayed for
		     each command matching one of these	patterns.

	      -s     If	a pathname contains symlinks, print  the  symlink-free
		     pathname as well.

	      -S     As	 -s, but if the	pathname had to	be resolved by follow-
		     ing  multiple  symlinks,  the  intermediate   steps   are
		     printed, too.  The	symlink	resolved at each step might be
		     anywhere in the path.

	      -x num Expand  tabs when outputting shell	functions using	the -c
		     option.  This has the same	effect as the -x option	to the
		     functions builtin.

       where [ -wpmsS ]	[ -x num ] name	...
	      Equivalent to whence -ca.

       which [ -wpamsS ] [ -x num ] name ...
	      Equivalent to whence -c.

       zcompile	[ -U ] [ -z | -k ] [ -R	| -M ] file [ name ... ]
       zcompile	-ca [ -m ] [ -R	| -M ] file [ name ... ]
       zcompile	-t file	[ name ... ]
	      This builtin  command  can  be  used  to	compile	 functions  or
	      scripts,	storing	 the  compiled	form in	a file,	and to examine
	      files containing the compiled  form.   This  allows  faster  au-
	      toloading	of functions and sourcing of scripts by	avoiding pars-
	      ing of the text when the files are read.

	      The first	form (without the -c, -a or -t options)	creates	a com-
	      piled file.  If only the file argument is	given, the output file
	      has the name `file.zwc' and will be placed in the	same directory
	      as  the  file.  The shell	will load the compiled file instead of
	      the normal function file when the	function  is  autoloaded;  see
	      the section `Autoloading Functions' in zshmisc(1)	for a descrip-
	      tion  of	how  autoloaded	functions are searched.	 The extension
	      .zwc stands for `zsh word	code'.

	      If there is at least one name argument, all the named files  are
	      compiled	into  the output file given as the first argument.  If
	      file does	not end	in .zwc, this extension	is  automatically  ap-
	      pended.  Files containing	multiple compiled functions are	called
	      `digest'	files,	and are	intended to be used as elements	of the
	      FPATH/fpath special array.

	      The second form, with the	-c or -a options, writes the  compiled
	      definitions  for all the named functions into file.  For -c, the
	      names must be functions currently	 defined  in  the  shell,  not
	      those  marked  for  autoloading.	 Undefined  functions that are
	      marked for autoloading may be written by using the -a option, in
	      which case the fpath is searched and the contents	of the defini-
	      tion files for those functions,  if  found,  are	compiled  into
	      file.   If both -c and -a	are given, names of both defined func-
	      tions and	functions marked for autoloading may be	given.	In ei-
	      ther case, the functions in files	written	with the -c or -a  op-
	      tion  will  be autoloaded	as if the KSH_AUTOLOAD option were un-
	      set.

	      The reason for handling loaded and not-yet-loaded	functions with
	      different	options	is that	some definition	files for  autoloading
	      define  multiple functions, including the	function with the same
	      name as the file,	and, at	the end, call that function.  In  such
	      cases  the  output  of  `zcompile	-c' does not include the addi-
	      tional functions defined in the file, and	any other  initializa-
	      tion code	in the file is lost.  Using `zcompile -a' captures all
	      this extra information.

	      If  the  -m option is combined with -c or	-a, the	names are used
	      as patterns and all functions whose names	 match	one  of	 these
	      patterns	will  be written. If no	name is	given, the definitions
	      of all functions currently defined or marked as autoloaded  will
	      be written.

	      Note the second form cannot be used for compiling	functions that
	      include  redirections  as	 part  of  the	definition rather than
	      within the body of the function; for example

		     fn1() { { ... } >~/logfile	}

	      can be compiled but

		     fn1() { ... } >~/logfile

	      cannot.  It is possible to use the first	form  of  zcompile  to
	      compile  autoloadable  functions	that include the full function
	      definition instead of just the body of the function.

	      The third	form, with the -t option, examines  an	existing  com-
	      piled  file.  Without further arguments, the names of the	origi-
	      nal files	compiled into it are listed.  The first	line of	output
	      shows the	version	of the shell which compiled the	file  and  how
	      the file will be used (i.e. by reading it	directly or by mapping
	      it  into memory).	 With arguments, nothing is output and the re-
	      turn status is set to zero if definitions	 for  all  names  were
	      found  in	 the compiled file, and	non-zero if the	definition for
	      at least one name	was not	found.

	      Other options:

	      -U     Aliases are not expanded when compiling the named files.

	      -R     When the compiled file is read, its contents  are	copied
		     into  the	shell's	memory,	rather than memory-mapped (see
		     -M).  This	happens	automatically on systems that  do  not
		     support memory mapping.

		     When compiling scripts instead of autoloadable functions,
		     it	 is  often desirable to	use this option; otherwise the
		     whole file, including the code to define functions	 which
		     have  already  been  defined,  will remain	mapped,	conse-
		     quently wasting memory.

	      -M     The compiled file is mapped into the shell's memory  when
		     read.  This is done in such a way that multiple instances
		     of	the shell running on the same  host  will  share  this
		     mapped file.  If neither -R nor -M	is given, the zcompile
		     builtin  decides what to do based on the size of the com-
		     piled file.

	      -k
	      -z     These options are used when the  compiled	file  contains
		     functions which are to be autoloaded. If -z is given, the
		     function will be autoloaded as if the KSH_AUTOLOAD	option
		     is	 not  set,  even if it is set at the time the compiled
		     file is read, while if the	-k is given, the function will
		     be	loaded as if KSH_AUTOLOAD is set.  These options  also
		     take  precedence  over  any -k or -z options specified to
		     the autoload builtin. If  neither	of  these  options  is
		     given,  the  function will	be loaded as determined	by the
		     setting of	the KSH_AUTOLOAD option	at the time  the  com-
		     piled file	is read.

		     These  options may	also appear as many times as necessary
		     between the listed	names to specify the loading style  of
		     all following functions, up to the	next -k	or -z.

		     The created file always contains two versions of the com-
		     piled  format,  one  for  big-endian machines and one for
		     small-endian machines.  The upshot	of this	 is  that  the
		     compiled file is machine independent and if it is read or
		     mapped,  only  one	half of	the file is actually used (and
		     mapped).

       zformat
	      See the section `The zsh/zutil Module' in	zshmodules(1).

       zftp   See the section `The zsh/zftp Module' in zshmodules(1).

       zle    See the section `Zle Builtins' in	zshzle(1).

       zmodload	[ -dL ]	[ -s ] [ ... ]
       zmodload	-F [ -alLme -P param ] module [	[+-]feature ...	]
       zmodload	-e [ -A	] [ ...	]
       zmodload	[ -a [ -bcpf [ -I ] ] ]	[ -iL ]	...
       zmodload	-u [ -abcdpf [ -I ] ] [	-iL ] ...
       zmodload	-A [ -L	] [ modalias[=module] ... ]
       zmodload	-R modalias ...
	      Performs operations relating to zsh's loadable modules.  Loading
	      of modules while the shell is running (`dynamical	 loading')  is
	      not  available on	all operating systems, or on all installations
	      on a particular operating	system,	although the zmodload  command
	      itself is	always available and can be used to manipulate modules
	      built  into  versions  of	the shell executable without dynamical
	      loading.

	      Without arguments	the names of all currently loaded binary  mod-
	      ules  are	 printed.  The -L option causes	this list to be	in the
	      form of a	series of zmodload  commands.	Forms  with  arguments
	      are:

	      zmodload [ -is ] name ...
	      zmodload -u [ -i ] name ...
		     In	 the  simplest	case,  zmodload	loads a	binary module.
		     The module	must be	in a file with a  name	consisting  of
		     the specified name	followed by a standard suffix, usually
		     `.so' (`.sl' on HPUX).  If	the module to be loaded	is al-
		     ready  loaded  the	duplicate module is ignored.  If zmod-
		     load detects an inconsistency, such as an invalid	module
		     name  or circular dependency list,	the current code block
		     is	aborted.  If it	is available, the module is loaded  if
		     necessary,	 while if it is	not available, non-zero	status
		     is	silently returned.  The	option -i is accepted for com-
		     patibility	but has	no effect.

		     The named module is searched for in the same way  a  com-
		     mand  is,	using $module_path instead of $path.  However,
		     the path search is	performed even when  the  module  name
		     contains  a  `/', which it	usually	does.  There is	no way
		     to	prevent	the path search.

		     If	the module supports  features  (see  below),  zmodload
		     tries  to	enable all features when loading a module.  If
		     the module	was successfully loaded	but not	 all  features
		     could be enabled, zmodload	returns	status 2.

		     If	 the  option  -s  is given, no error is	printed	if the
		     module was	not available (though other errors  indicating
		     a	problem	with the module	are printed).  The return sta-
		     tus indicates if the module was loaded.  This  is	appro-
		     priate if the caller considers the	module optional.

		     With -u, zmodload unloads modules.	 The same name must be
		     given  that  was given when the module was	loaded,	but it
		     is	not necessary for the module to	exist in the file sys-
		     tem.  The -i option suppresses the	error if the module is
		     already unloaded (or was never loaded).

		     Each module has a boot and	a cleanup function.  The  mod-
		     ule will not be loaded if its boot	function fails.	 Simi-
		     larly  a module can only be unloaded if its cleanup func-
		     tion runs successfully.

	      zmodload -F [ -almLe -P param ] module [ [+-]feature ... ]
		     zmodload -F allows	more selective control over  the  fea-
		     tures  provided  by  modules.  With no options apart from
		     -F, the module named module is loaded, if it was not  al-
		     ready  loaded, and	the list of features is	set to the re-
		     quired state.  If no features are specified,  the	module
		     is	loaded,	if it was not already loaded, but the state of
		     features is unchanged.  Each feature may be preceded by a
		     +	to  turn the feature on, or - to turn it off; the + is
		     assumed if	neither	character is present.  Any feature not
		     explicitly	mentioned is left in its current state;	if the
		     module was	not previously loaded this means any such fea-
		     tures will	remain disabled.  The return status is zero if
		     all features were set, 1 if the module  failed  to	 load,
		     and  2  if	some features could not	be set (for example, a
		     parameter couldn't	be added because there was a different
		     parameter of the same name) but the module	was loaded.

		     The standard features are builtins,  conditions,  parame-
		     ters  and math functions; these are indicated by the pre-
		     fix `b:', `c:' (`C:' for an infix	condition),  `p:'  and
		     `f:',  respectively, followed by the name that the	corre-
		     sponding feature would have in the	shell.	 For  example,
		     `b:strftime'  indicates  a	 builtin  named	 strftime  and
		     p:EPOCHSECONDS indicates a	parameter named	 EPOCHSECONDS.
		     The module	may provide other (`abstract') features	of its
		     own as indicated by its documentation; these have no pre-
		     fix.

		     With  -l  or  -L,	features  provided  by	the module are
		     listed.  With -l alone, a list of features	together  with
		     their  states  is	shown,	one feature per	line.  With -L
		     alone, a zmodload -F command  that	 would	cause  enabled
		     features  of  the	module to be turned on is shown.  With
		     -lL, a zmodload -F	command	that would cause all the  fea-
		     tures  to be set to their current state is	shown.	If one
		     of	these combinations is given with the option  -P	 param
		     then  the parameter param is set to an array of features,
		     either features together with their state or (if -L alone
		     is	given) enabled features.

		     With the option -L	the module name	may be omitted;	then a
		     list of all enabled features for  all  modules  providing
		     features  is printed in the form of zmodload -F commands.
		     If	-l is also given, the state of both enabled  and  dis-
		     abled features is output in that form.

		     A	set of features	may be provided	together with -l or -L
		     and a module name;	in that	case only the state  of	 those
		     features  is considered.  Each feature may	be preceded by
		     + or - but	the character has no effect.   If  no  set  of
		     features is provided, all features	are considered.

		     With  -e,	the  command  first  tests  that the module is
		     loaded; if	it is not, status 1 is returned.  If the  mod-
		     ule  is loaded, the list of features given	as an argument
		     is	examined.  Any feature given with no prefix is	simply
		     tested  to	 see  if  the  module provides it; any feature
		     given with	a prefix + or -	is tested to see  if  is  pro-
		     vided  and	 in the	given state.  If the tests on all fea-
		     tures in the list succeed,	status	0  is  returned,  else
		     status 1.

		     With  -m,	each  entry  in	 the given list	of features is
		     taken as a	pattern	to be matched against the list of fea-
		     tures provided by the module.  An initial + or - must  be
		     given  explicitly.	  This may not be combined with	the -a
		     option as autoloads must be specified explicitly.

		     With -a, the given	list of	features  is  marked  for  au-
		     toload  from  the	specified module, which	may not	yet be
		     loaded.  An optional +  may  appear  before  the  feature
		     name.   If	 the  feature is prefixed with -, any existing
		     autoload is removed.  The options -l and -L may  be  used
		     to	list autoloads.	 Autoloading is	specific to individual
		     features;	when  the  module is loaded only the requested
		     feature is	enabled.  Autoload requests are	 preserved  if
		     the  module  is  subsequently  unloaded until an explicit
		     `zmodload -Fa module -feature' is issued.	It is  not  an
		     error  to	request	 an autoload for a feature of a	module
		     that is already loaded.

		     When the  module  is  loaded  each	 autoload  is  checked
		     against  the features actually provided by	the module; if
		     the feature is  not  provided  the	 autoload  request  is
		     deleted.	A  warning message is output; if the module is
		     being loaded to provide a different feature, and that au-
		     toload is successful, there is no effect on the status of
		     the current command.  If the module is already loaded  at
		     the  time	when  zmodload -Fa is run, an error message is
		     printed and status	1 returned.

		     zmodload -Fa can be used with the -l, -L, -e and  -P  op-
		     tions  for	listing	and testing the	existence of autoload-
		     able features.  In	this case -l is	ignored	if -L is spec-
		     ified.  zmodload -FaL with	no module name lists autoloads
		     for all modules.

		     Note that only standard features as described  above  can
		     be	 autoloaded;  other  features require the module to be
		     loaded before enabling.

	      zmodload -d [ -L ] [ name	]
	      zmodload -d name dep ...
	      zmodload -ud name	[ dep ... ]
		     The -d option can be used to specify module dependencies.
		     The modules named in the second and subsequent  arguments
		     will be loaded before the module named in the first argu-
		     ment.

		     With  -d and one argument,	all dependencies for that mod-
		     ule are listed.  With -d and no arguments,	all module de-
		     pendencies	are listed.  This listing is by	default	 in  a
		     Makefile-like  format.  The -L option changes this	format
		     to	a list of zmodload -d commands.

		     If	-d and -u are both used, dependencies are removed.  If
		     only one argument is given,  all  dependencies  for  that
		     module are	removed.

	      zmodload -ab [ -L	]
	      zmodload -ab [ -i	] name [ builtin ... ]
	      zmodload -ub [ -i	] builtin ...
		     The  -ab  option defines autoloaded builtins.  It defines
		     the specified builtins.  When any of  those  builtins  is
		     called,  the  module  specified  in the first argument is
		     loaded and	all its	features are  enabled  (for  selective
		     control  of  features  use	 `zmodload -F -a' as described
		     above).  If only the name is given, one  builtin  is  de-
		     fined,  with  the same name as the	module.	 -i suppresses
		     the error if  the	builtin	 is  already  defined  or  au-
		     toloaded,	but not	if another builtin of the same name is
		     already defined.

		     With -ab and no arguments,	all  autoloaded	 builtins  are
		     listed,  with  the	 module	 name  (if different) shown in
		     parentheses  after	 the  builtin  name.   The  -L	option
		     changes this format to a list of zmodload -a commands.

		     If	 -b  is	 used  together	with the -u option, it removes
		     builtins previously defined with -ab.  This is only  pos-
		     sible  if	the  builtin is	not yet	loaded.	 -i suppresses
		     the error if the builtin is already removed (or never ex-
		     isted).

		     Autoload requests are retained if the  module  is	subse-
		     quently unloaded until an explicit	`zmodload -ub builtin'
		     is	issued.

	      zmodload -ac [ -IL ]
	      zmodload -ac [ -iI ] name	[ cond ... ]
	      zmodload -uc [ -iI ] cond	...
		     The  -ac  option  is  used	to define autoloaded condition
		     codes. The	cond strings give the names of the  conditions
		     defined  by the module. The optional -I option is used to
		     define infix condition names. Without this	option	prefix
		     condition names are defined.

		     If	given no condition names, all defined names are	listed
		     (as  a  series  of	 zmodload commands if the -L option is
		     given).

		     The -uc option removes definitions	for autoloaded	condi-
		     tions.

	      zmodload -ap [ -L	]
	      zmodload -ap [ -i	] name [ parameter ... ]
	      zmodload -up [ -i	] parameter ...
		     The  -p  option  is like the -b and -c options, but makes
		     zmodload work on autoloaded parameters instead.

	      zmodload -af [ -L	]
	      zmodload -af [ -i	] name [ function ... ]
	      zmodload -uf [ -i	] function ...
		     The -f option is like the -b, -p,	and  -c	 options,  but
		     makes zmodload work on autoloaded math functions instead.

	      zmodload -a [ -L ]
	      zmodload -a [ -i ] name [	builtin	... ]
	      zmodload -ua [ -i	] builtin ...
		     Equivalent	to -ab and -ub.

	      zmodload -e [ -A ] [ string ... ]
		     The -e option without arguments lists all loaded modules;
		     if	 the  -A  option  is also given, module	aliases	corre-
		     sponding to loaded	modules	are also shown.	 If  arguments
		     are  provided,  nothing  is printed; the return status is
		     set to zero if all	strings	given as arguments  are	 names
		     of	loaded modules and to one if at	least on string	is not
		     the  name	of  a loaded module.  This can be used to test
		     for the availability of things  implemented  by  modules.
		     In	 this case, any	aliases	are automatically resolved and
		     the -A flag is not	used.

	      zmodload -A [ -L ] [ modalias[=module] ... ]
		     For each argument,	if both	modalias and module are	given,
		     define modalias to	be an alias for	the module module.  If
		     the module	modalias is ever subsequently  requested,  ei-
		     ther via a	call to	zmodload or implicitly,	the shell will
		     attempt  to load module instead.  If module is not	given,
		     show the definition of modalias.	If  no	arguments  are
		     given, list all defined module aliases.  When listing, if
		     the  -L  flag  was	 also  given, list the definition as a
		     zmodload command to recreate the alias.

		     The existence of aliases for modules is completely	 inde-
		     pendent  of  whether the name resolved is actually	loaded
		     as	a module: while	the alias exists, loading and  unload-
		     ing  the  module under any	alias has exactly the same ef-
		     fect as using the resolved	name, and does not affect  the
		     connection	 between the alias and the resolved name which
		     can be removed either by zmodload -R or by	redefining the
		     alias.  Chains of aliases (i.e. where the first  resolved
		     name  is  itself an alias)	are valid so long as these are
		     not circular.  As the aliases take	 the  same  format  as
		     module  names, they may include path separators:  in this
		     case, there is no requirement for any part	 of  the  path
		     named  to exist as	the alias will be resolved first.  For
		     example, `any/old/alias' is always	a valid	alias.

		     Dependencies added	to aliased modules are actually	 added
		     to	 the resolved module; these remain if the alias	is re-
		     moved.  It	is valid to create an alias whose name is  one
		     of	 the  standard	shell  modules and which resolves to a
		     different module.	However, if a module has dependencies,
		     it	will not be possible to	use  the  module  name	as  an
		     alias  as the module will already be marked as a loadable
		     module in its own right.

		     Apart from	the above, aliases can be used in the zmodload
		     command anywhere module  names  are  required.   However,
		     aliases will not be shown in lists	of loaded modules with
		     a bare `zmodload'.

	      zmodload -R modalias ...
		     For each modalias argument	that was previously defined as
		     a module alias via	zmodload -A, delete the	alias.	If any
		     was  not defined, an error	is caused and the remainder of
		     the line is ignored.

	      Note that	zsh makes no distinction  between  modules  that  were
	      linked  into  the	shell and modules that are loaded dynamically.
	      In both cases this builtin command has to	be used	to make	avail-
	      able the builtins	and other things defined  by  modules  (unless
	      the  module  is  autoloaded  on these definitions). This is true
	      even for systems that don't support dynamic loading of modules.

       zparseopts
	      See the section `The zsh/zutil Module' in	zshmodules(1).

       zprof  See the section `The zsh/zprof Module' in	zshmodules(1).

       zpty   See the section `The zsh/zpty Module' in zshmodules(1).

       zregexparse
	      See the section `The zsh/zutil Module' in	zshmodules(1).

       zsocket
	      See the section `The zsh/net/socket Module' in zshmodules(1).

       zstyle See the section `The zsh/zutil Module' in	zshmodules(1).

       ztcp   See the section `The zsh/net/tcp Module' in zshmodules(1).

zsh 5.9				 May 14, 2022			ZSHBUILTINS(1)

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