function zsh_stats() {
  fc -l 1 \
    | awk '{ CMD[$2]++; count++; } END { for (a in CMD) print CMD[a] " " CMD[a]*100/count "% " a }' \
    | grep -v "./" | sort -nr | head -n 20 | column -c3 -s " " -t | nl
}

function uninstall_oh_my_zsh() {
  command env ZSH="$ZSH" sh "$ZSH/tools/uninstall.sh"
}

function upgrade_oh_my_zsh() {
  echo >&2 "${fg[yellow]}Note: \`$0\` is deprecated. Use \`omz update\` instead.$reset_color"
  omz update
}

function open_command() {
  local open_cmd

  # define the open command
  case "$OSTYPE" in
    darwin*)  open_cmd='open' ;;
    cygwin*)  open_cmd='cygstart' ;;
    linux*)   [[ "$(uname -r)" != *icrosoft* ]] && open_cmd='nohup xdg-open' || {
                open_cmd='cmd.exe /c start ""'
                [[ -e "$1" ]] && { 1="$(wslpath -w "${1:a}")" || return 1 }
              } ;;
    msys*)    open_cmd='start ""' ;;
    *)        echo "Platform $OSTYPE not supported"
              return 1
              ;;
  esac

  # If a URL is passed, $BROWSER might be set to a local browser within SSH.
  # See https://github.com/ohmyzsh/ohmyzsh/issues/11098
  if [[ -n "$BROWSER" && "$1" = (http|https)://* ]]; then
    "$BROWSER" "$@"
    return
  fi

  ${=open_cmd} "$@" &>/dev/null
}

# take functions

# mkcd is equivalent to takedir
function mkcd takedir() {
  mkdir -p $@ && cd ${@:$#}
}

function takeurl() {
  local data thedir
  data="$(mktemp)"
  curl -L "$1" > "$data"
  tar xf "$data"
  thedir="$(tar tf "$data" | head -n 1)"
  rm "$data"
  cd "$thedir"
}

function takegit() {
  git clone "$1"
  cd "$(basename ${1%%.git})"
}

function take() {
  if [[ $1 =~ ^(https?|ftp).*\.(tar\.(gz|bz2|xz)|tgz)$ ]]; then
    takeurl "$1"
  elif [[ $1 =~ ^([A-Za-z0-9]\+@|https?|git|ssh|ftps?|rsync).*\.git/?$ ]]; then
    takegit "$1"
  else
    takedir "$@"
  fi
}

#
# Get the value of an alias.
#
# Arguments:
#    1. alias - The alias to get its value from
# STDOUT:
#    The value of alias $1 (if it has one).
# Return value:
#    0 if the alias was found,
#    1 if it does not exist
#
function alias_value() {
    (( $+aliases[$1] )) && echo $aliases[$1]
}

#
# Try to get the value of an alias,
# otherwise return the input.
#
# Arguments:
#    1. alias - The alias to get its value from
# STDOUT:
#    The value of alias $1, or $1 if there is no alias $1.
# Return value:
#    Always 0
#
function try_alias_value() {
    alias_value "$1" || echo "$1"
}

#
# Set variable "$1" to default value "$2" if "$1" is not yet defined.
#
# Arguments:
#    1. name - The variable to set
#    2. val  - The default value
# Return value:
#    0 if the variable exists, 3 if it was set
#
function default() {
    (( $+parameters[$1] )) && return 0
    typeset -g "$1"="$2"   && return 3
}

#
# Set environment variable "$1" to default value "$2" if "$1" is not yet defined.
#
# Arguments:
#    1. name - The env variable to set
#    2. val  - The default value
# Return value:
#    0 if the env variable exists, 3 if it was set
#
function env_default() {
    [[ ${parameters[$1]} = *-export* ]] && return 0
    export "$1=$2" && return 3
}


# Required for $langinfo
zmodload zsh/langinfo

# URL-encode a string
#
# Encodes a string using RFC 2396 URL-encoding (%-escaped).
# See: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt
#
# By default, reserved characters and unreserved "mark" characters are
# not escaped by this function. This allows the common usage of passing
# an entire URL in, and encoding just special characters in it, with
# the expectation that reserved and mark characters are used appropriately.
# The -r and -m options turn on escaping of the reserved and mark characters,
# respectively, which allows arbitrary strings to be fully escaped for
# embedding inside URLs, where reserved characters might be misinterpreted.
#
# Prints the encoded string on stdout.
# Returns nonzero if encoding failed.
#
# Usage:
#  omz_urlencode [-r] [-m] [-P] <string> [<string> ...]
#
#    -r causes reserved characters (;/?:@&=+$,) to be escaped
#
#    -m causes "mark" characters (_.!~*''()-) to be escaped
#
#    -P causes spaces to be encoded as '%20' instead of '+'
function omz_urlencode() {
  emulate -L zsh
  setopt norematchpcre

  local -a opts
  zparseopts -D -E -a opts r m P

  local in_str="$@"
  local url_str=""
  local spaces_as_plus
  if [[ -z $opts[(r)-P] ]]; then spaces_as_plus=1; fi
  local str="$in_str"

  # URLs must use UTF-8 encoding; convert str to UTF-8 if required
  local encoding=$langinfo[CODESET]
  local safe_encodings
  safe_encodings=(UTF-8 utf8 US-ASCII)
  if [[ -z ${safe_encodings[(r)$encoding]} ]]; then
    str=$(echo -E "$str" | iconv -f $encoding -t UTF-8)
    if [[ $? != 0 ]]; then
      echo "Error converting string from $encoding to UTF-8" >&2
      return 1
    fi
  fi

  # Use LC_CTYPE=C to process text byte-by-byte
  # Note that this doesn't work in Termux, as it only has UTF-8 locale.
  # Characters will be processed as UTF-8, which is fine for URLs.
  local i byte ord LC_ALL=C
  export LC_ALL
  local reserved=';/?:@&=+$,'
  local mark='_.!~*''()-'
  local dont_escape="[A-Za-z0-9"
  if [[ -z $opts[(r)-r] ]]; then
    dont_escape+=$reserved
  fi
  # $mark must be last because of the "-"
  if [[ -z $opts[(r)-m] ]]; then
    dont_escape+=$mark
  fi
  dont_escape+="]"

  # Implemented to use a single printf call and avoid subshells in the loop,
  # for performance (primarily on Windows).
  local url_str=""
  for (( i = 1; i <= ${#str}; ++i )); do
    byte="$str[i]"
    if [[ "$byte" =~ "$dont_escape" ]]; then
      url_str+="$byte"
    else
      if [[ "$byte" == " " && -n $spaces_as_plus ]]; then
        url_str+="+"
      elif [[ "$PREFIX" = *com.termux* ]]; then
        # Termux does not have non-UTF8 locales, so just send the UTF-8 character directly
        url_str+="$byte"
      else
        ord=$(( [##16] #byte ))
        url_str+="%$ord"
      fi
    fi
  done
  echo -E "$url_str"
}

# URL-decode a string
#
# Decodes a RFC 2396 URL-encoded (%-escaped) string.
# This decodes the '+' and '%' escapes in the input string, and leaves
# other characters unchanged. Does not enforce that the input is a
# valid URL-encoded string. This is a convenience to allow callers to
# pass in a full URL or similar strings and decode them for human
# presentation.
#
# Outputs the encoded string on stdout.
# Returns nonzero if encoding failed.
#
# Usage:
#   omz_urldecode <urlstring>  - prints decoded string followed by a newline
function omz_urldecode {
  emulate -L zsh
  local encoded_url=$1

  # Work bytewise, since URLs escape UTF-8 octets
  local caller_encoding=$langinfo[CODESET]
  local LC_ALL=C
  export LC_ALL

  # Change + back to ' '
  local tmp=${encoded_url:gs/+/ /}
  # Protect other escapes to pass through the printf unchanged
  tmp=${tmp:gs/\\/\\\\/}
  # Handle %-escapes by turning them into `\xXX` printf escapes
  tmp=${tmp:gs/%/\\x/}
  local decoded="$(printf -- "$tmp")"

  # Now we have a UTF-8 encoded string in the variable. We need to re-encode
  # it if caller is in a non-UTF-8 locale.
  local -a safe_encodings
  safe_encodings=(UTF-8 utf8 US-ASCII)
  if [[ -z ${safe_encodings[(r)$caller_encoding]} ]]; then
    decoded=$(echo -E "$decoded" | iconv -f UTF-8 -t $caller_encoding)
    if [[ $? != 0 ]]; then
      echo "Error converting string from UTF-8 to $caller_encoding" >&2
      return 1
    fi
  fi

  echo -E "$decoded"
}