I want to make a command like:
chrome "site.com"
which will make a google chrome window to pop up with the site instantly. Is there any way to achieve this?
I want to make a command like:
chrome "site.com"
which will make a google chrome window to pop up with the site instantly. Is there any way to achieve this?
 
    
    This worked for me on Windows 10 and using Git Bash.
start chrome www.google.com
 
    
     start http://example.com
Opens the default browser with the URL.
Tested on Git Bash/Windows 10.
 
    
    You can use explorer.exe that can open URL in default browser:
explorer.exe "https://www.google.com/"
Therefore there is a weird bug: URL should not contain ?, so:
explorer.exe "https://www.google.com/search?q=foo+bar"
will fail, and you need to use:
explorer.exe "https://www.google.com/search?q=foo+bar&\""
to work around.
By the way, I created bash function to open up Google page:
urlencode ()
{
    echo $1 | sed -e 's:%:%25:g' -e 's: :%20:g' -e 's:<:%3C:g' -e 's:\[:%5B:g' \
                  -e 's:>:%3E:g' -e 's:#:%23:g' -e 's:{:%7B:g' -e 's:\*:%2A:g' \
                  -e 's:}:%7D:g' -e 's:|:%7C:g' -e 's:+:%2B:g' -e 's:\\:%5C:g' \
                  -e 's:/:%2F:g' -e 's:?:%3F:g' -e 's^:^%3A^g' -e 's:\!:%21:g' \
                  -e 's:@:%40:g' -e 's:=:%3D:g' -e 's:&:%26:g' -e 's:\$:%24:g' \
                  -e 's:;:%3B:g' -e 's:~:%7E:g' -e 's:`:%60:g' -e 's:\^:%5E:g' -e 's:\]:%5D:g' 
}
google ()
{
    local a="$(urlencode "$(echo "$@")")"; a="${a// /+}"; 
    explorer.exe "https://www.google.com/search?q=${a// /+}&\""
}
alias ggle='google'
alias g='google'
You can use it as follows:
 g site:cppreference.com c++ empty string view
I find it quite useful, especially while coding ;)
Tested on Bash on Windows (Ubuntu 16.04.3 LTS; GNU bash, wersja 4.3.48).
 
    
    Here's what I'm using to open a URL or a file with Google Chrome into incognito mode from Git bash (provided with Git for Windows):
 +R at the same time to
get command prompt.
+R at the same time to
get command prompt.sysdm.cpl and hit the Enter key.Advanced1 and select Environmental Variables2Path3 from System variables and click on Edit button4.Keep this window opened (while get the chrome.exe folder path).
chrome.exe folder pathRight click (or left if you have your mouse as left-handed) the Chrome icon5 (the one you use to open it) and select Properties7. Usually this method opens more Chrome actions so locate Google Chrome option6 and right-click on it and click on Properties7.
On the Shortcut8 tab select the folder path from Start in:9 (Commonly %programfiles(x86)%\Google\Chrome\Application)
Environment variablesClick on the New button10 from previously opened Edit environment variable window and paste the Google Chrome folder path into the new added line11 (delete the double quotes if exist at the beginning or the end of the path) and click on all the OK buttons from the opened windows.
Open the Git bash terminal and edit (or create) the .bashrc file with your prefered text editor (Visual Studio code in this example)
code ~/.bashrc
Append the code from below. You can rename the function name (chromeIt in this example) to your needs.
# Open google Chrome
function chromeIt {
    if [ -z "$1" ]; then
        # display usage if no parameters given
        echo "Usage: chromeIt <file_name>|<url>"
    else
        if [ -f "$1" ] ; then
            chrome --incognito $(pwd)/$1
        else
            chrome --incognito $1
        fi
    fi
}
If you don't want incognito mode remove the --incognito parameter.
Very important note: Verify that your line ending is set as UNIX (LF)12. If you don't know how to do it search into google.
Save the .bashrc file and reload it (using the Git bash terminal):
source ~/.bashrc
or you can use the shorter version of the command:
. ~/.bashrc
Close the Git bash terminal window or enter exit and re-open it.
Try to open a URL:
chromeIt google.com
or a file:
chromeIt index.html
I hope it works for you.
Depending on your situation, a more cross-platform solution might be to use git web--browse, which will attempt to open a url (or file) in a browser.
For example, this would open a link to github for opening a PR:
URL="${GIT_REPO}/compare/${CURRENT_BRANCH}?expand=1"
echo "opening $URL"
git web--browse $URL
There is also a --browser option where you can target a specific browser.
 
    
    This should do the trick. I can't test on Windows 10 but works fine on bash in Ubuntu
google-chrome http://www.google.com
 
    
    You have few options here:
chrome "google.com". For me it is C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application. This post explains it."C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" google.com. Please comment if you need more details.
