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Aliases are an easy way to create shortcuts for commonly-typed commands, or to set
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Command aliases can be defined in the ``[ALIASES]`` section of your
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``bazaar.conf`` file. Aliases start with the alias name, then an
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equal sign, then a command fragment. Here's an example ALIASES section::
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recentlog=log -r-3..-1
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ll=log --line -r-10..-1
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commit=commit --strict
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diff=diff --diff-options -p
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Here are the explanations of the examples above:
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* The first alias makes a new ``recentlog`` command that shows the logs for the
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* The ``ll`` alias shows the last 10 log entries in line format.
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* the ``commit`` alias sets the default for commit to refuse to commit if new
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files in the tree are not recognized.
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* the ``diff`` alias adds the coveted -p option to diff
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The aliases defined above would be used like so: ::
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* You can override a portion of the options given in an alias by
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specifying the new part on the command-line. For example, if
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you run ``lastlog -r-5..``, you will only get five line-based log
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entries instead of 10. Note that all boolean options have an
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implicit inverse, so you can override the commit alias with
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``commit --no-strict``.
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* Aliases can override the standard behaviour of existing commands by giving
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an alias name that is the same as the original command. For example, default
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commit is changed with ``commit=commit --strict``.
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* Aliases cannot refer to other aliases. In other words making a
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``lastlog`` alias and referring to it with a ``ll`` alias will not work.
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This includes aliases that override standard commands.
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* Giving the ``--no-aliases`` option to the bzr command will tell it to ignore aliases
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for that run. For example, running ``bzr --no-aliases commit`` will perform a
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standard commit instead, not do a ``commit --strict``.