ls

In order to group related commands, each command is associated with a list of tags. You can filter the listed commands by a tag or a substring of the command name. Can also be invoked as dir.

Usage

ls [<options>]

Lists all available commands and the tags associated with them.

ls <tag> [<options>]

Shows only commands that have the given tag. Use the tags command to see the list of available tags.

ls <string> [<options>]

Shows commands that include the given string. E.g. ls quick will show all the commands with “quick” in their names. If the string is also the name of a tag, then it will be interpreted as a tag name.

Examples

ls quick

List all commands that match the substring “quick”.

ls adventure

List all commands with the adventure tag.

ls --dev trigger

List all commands, including developer and modding commands, that match the substring “trigger”.

Options

--notags

Don’t print out the tags associated with each command.

--dev

Include commands intended for developers and modders.

--exclude <string>[,<string>...]

Exclude commands that match any of the given strings.