cd - change directory

Synopsis

cd [DIRECTORY]

Description

cd changes the current working directory.

If DIRECTORY is given, it will become the new directory. If no parameter is given, the $HOME environment variable will be used.

If DIRECTORY is a relative path, all the paths in the $CDPATH will be tried as prefixes for it, in addition to $PWD. It is recommended to keep . as the first element of $CDPATH, or $PWD will be tried last.

Fish will also try to change directory if given a command that looks like a directory (starting with ., / or ~, or ending with /), without explicitly requiring cd.

Fish also ships a wrapper function around the builtin cd that understands cd - as changing to the previous directory. See also prevd. This wrapper function maintains a history of the 25 most recently visited directories in the $dirprev and $dirnext global variables. If you make those universal variables your cd history is shared among all fish instances.

As a special case, cd . is equivalent to cd $PWD, which is useful in cases where a mountpoint has been recycled or a directory has been removed and recreated.

Examples

cd
# changes the working directory to your home directory.

cd /usr/src/fish-shell
# changes the working directory to /usr/src/fish-shell

See Also

Navigate directories using the directory history or the directory stack