type - locate a command and describe its type¶
Synopsis¶
type [OPTIONS] NAME [...]
Description¶
With no options, type indicates how each NAME would be interpreted if used as a command name.
The following options are available:
- -a or --all
 Prints all of possible definitions of the specified names.
- -s or --short
 Suppresses function expansion when used with no options or with -a/--all.
- -f or --no-functions
 Suppresses function and builtin lookup.
- -t or --type
 Prints
function,builtin, orfileif NAME is a shell function, builtin, or disk file, respectively.- -p or --path
 Prints the path to NAME if NAME resolves to an executable file in
PATH, the path to the script containing the definition of the function NAME if NAME resolves to a function loaded from a file on disk (i.e. not interactively defined at the prompt), or nothing otherwise.- -P or --force-path
 Returns the path to the executable file NAME, presuming NAME is found in the
PATHenvironment variable, or nothing otherwise. --force-path explicitly resolves only the path to executable files inPATH, regardless of whether NAME is shadowed by a function or builtin with the same name.- -q or --query
 Suppresses all output; this is useful when testing the exit status. For compatibility with old fish versions this is also --quiet.
- -h or --help
 Displays help about using this command.
The -q, -p, -t and -P flags (and their long flag aliases) are mutually exclusive. Only one can be specified at a time.
type returns 0 if at least one entry was found, 1 otherwise, and 2 for invalid options or option combinations.
Example¶
>_ type fg
fg is a builtin
