docs: Use :doc: role when linking to commands

This makes it so we link to the very top of the document instead of a
special anchor we manually include.

So clicking e.g. :doc:`string <cmds/string>` will link you to
cmds/string.html instead of cmds/string.html#cmd-string.

I would love to have a way to say "this document from the root of the
document path", but that doesn't appear to work, I tried
`/cmds/string`.

So we'll just have to use cmds/string in normal documents and plain
`string` from other commands.
This commit is contained in:
Fabian Boehm
2022-09-23 19:57:49 +02:00
parent bc4e7c3fea
commit 38b24c2325
64 changed files with 262 additions and 262 deletions

View File

@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ The following operations (subcommands) are available:
Returns 0 if fish is currently executing a block of code.
**is-breakpoint**
Returns 0 if fish is currently showing a prompt in the context of a :ref:`breakpoint <cmd-breakpoint>` command. See also the :ref:`fish_breakpoint_prompt <cmd-fish_breakpoint_prompt>` function.
Returns 0 if fish is currently showing a prompt in the context of a :doc:`breakpoint <breakpoint>` command. See also the :doc:`fish_breakpoint_prompt <fish_breakpoint_prompt>` function.
**is-interactive**, **-i** or **--is-interactive**
Returns 0 if fish is interactive - that is, connected to a keyboard.
@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ The following operations (subcommands) are available:
Prints the name of the currently-running function or command, like the deprecated :envvar:`_` variable.
**filename**, **current-filename**, **-f** or **--current-filename**
Prints the filename of the currently-running script. If the current script was called via a symlink, this will return the symlink. If the current script was received by piping into :ref:`source <cmd-source>`, then this will return ``-``.
Prints the filename of the currently-running script. If the current script was called via a symlink, this will return the symlink. If the current script was received by piping into :doc:`source <source>`, then this will return ``-``.
**basename**
Prints just the filename of the running script, without any path components before.