One day, I'm not sure exactly when, I stumbled over the standard readline binding of M-. for 'yank-last-arg'. The description you can find in your local readline manpage may be a little abstract, so here's the simplified version: M-. inserts whatever was the last word on the previous command line into your current command line.
Did you perhaps type:
$ ls *some*[Cc]omplex*pattern and now you want to grep through files matching that pattern? Easy; type ' grep thing M-. ' and you'll wind up with ' grep thing *some*[Cc]omplex*pattern '.(You can also use M-_ , according to the manpage.)
This turns out to not be the only potentially useful standard readline binding that I wasn't aware of, so here's my current little collection.
M-C-y is 'yank first argument'. With an argument, both it and M-. are 'yank nth argument', but I'm not sure I'd ever do that instead of some form of line editing.(Providing numeric arguments is a bit awkward in readline and we're into the same 'counting words' problem territory thatI have with Vi. It's mentally easier to reshape a command line than count out that I want the third, fourth, and sixth argument.)
C-_ or C-x C-u is incremental undo. M-r reverts the line to its original state. This is probably mostly useful if I've accidentally modified a line in the history buffer and want to discard those changes to revert it to its pristine as-originally-typed state.In Bash specifically (although not necessarily other things that use readline), you can force certain completions regardless of bad attempts to be clever . These are:
M-/ for filename completion M-! for command name completion M-$ for variable name completion M-@ for hostname completion M-~ for user name completionAll have C-x <char> versions that list all the possible completions. The keys for these are reasonably related to what you're forcing a completion for, so I have at least some chance of remembering them in the future.
(There are probably other readline bindings that are useful, and for that matter you can rebind things with a .inputrc . Advanced users of readline probably do all sorts of things there, especially with conditional constructs and variables and so on.)