Using the `jump` plugin, using the `marks` command will yield this output:
```
$ marks
desktop marks:printf:5: bad option: ->
dotfiles marks:printf:5: bad option: ->
home marks:printf:5: bad option: ->
```
the `marks` function uses `printf` with `->` and I believe `-` is used by `printf` for left-justification. changing this to `-- "->"` seems to render the appropriate output.
```
desktop -> /Users/uname/Desktop
dotfiles -> /Users/uname/.dotfiles
home -> /Users/uname
```
This allows for the user to combine the jump command with something else. In my example cd and jump are now combined like this:
```bash
jumpcd() {
jump $1 > /dev/null || cd $1
}
alias cd="jumpcd"
```
Autocompletion fails if there's only one mark, since the ls command
will not display the parent directory with the trailing colon.
Handling the single mark case separately and validating the symlink
explicitly, resolves the issue.