We've relied on `clap` for building our cli app bootstrapping that figures out the positionals, flags, and other convenient facilities. Nu has been capable of solving this problem for quite some time. Given this and much more reasons (including the build time caused by `clap`) we start here working with our own.
* Sample command
* Join command with checks
* More dataframes commands
* Groupby and aggregate commands
* Missing feature dataframe flag
* Renamed file
* New commands for dataframes
* error parser and df reference
* filter command for dataframes
* removed name from nu_dataframe
* commands to save to parquet and csv
* polars new version
* new dataframe commands
* series type and print
* Series basic arithmetics
* Add new column to dataframe
* Command names changed to nushell standard
Previous to this commit, the sysinfo crate would show blank `brand` for
Apple M1 architectures whenever you would run `sys | get cpu`.
I have fixed the issue in sysinfo, so bumping the dependency version to 0.18.2
means brand now is retrieved successfully on M1 architectures.
Changes:
* Bug fix - bat adds markers only when a file path is passed and it can use git2
on it. It doesn't add markers when bytes are passed. Hence, the code is
adjusted accordingly. The sideeffect is files being opened multiple
times and its content being unnecessarily loaded in memory.
* Refactoring of the crate - Config is extracted to its struct file.
Repetitive blocks of code are dried and nested conditionals are
flattened.
* Sample command
* Join command with checks
* More dataframes commands
* Groupby and aggregate commands
* Missing feature dataframe flag
* Renamed file
* New commands for dataframes
* error parser and df reference
* filter command for dataframes
* removed name from nu_dataframe
* commands to save to parquet and csv
* Dataframe MVP
* Removed test csv file
* Dataframe MVP
* Removed test csv file
* New revision polars
* New revision polars
* csv file reader
* argument parser for file reader
* Parser from Row primitive
* Column conversion
* Added as f32 and f64
* Parsing row to dataframe
* Removed repeated push to vector
* Accept table values to create dataframe
* Removed default serde
* Dataframe to rows to show data
* Save name of file with dataframe
* Usage example
* Upgrade polars version
* Clippy changes
* Added print function with head and tail
* Move dataframe struct to folder
* Lock file after running tests and merge
* Optional feature for dataframe
* Removed dataframe from plugins
* Update primitive.rs
Co-authored-by: JT <jonathandturner@users.noreply.github.com>
* add nu-pretty-hex, add into binary, update binaryview
* updated parameter name, updated examples
* fixed nu-pretty-hex test
* fixed tests again! and added a no color option to pretty-hex
* add query json plugin for experimentation
* add some error handling
* closer but Kind::Array is still horked
* unravel the table so the output looks right
* clippy
* added the ability to use gjson modifiers
* Revert "History, more test coverage improvements, and refactorings. (#3217)"
This reverts commit 8fc8fc89aa.
* Add tests
* Refactor .nu-env
* Change logic of Config write to logic of read()
* Fix reload always appends to old vars
* Fix reload always takes last_modified of global config
* Add reload_config in evaluation context
* Reload config after writing to it in cfg set / cfg set_into
* Add --no-history to cli options
* Use --no-history in tests
* Add comment about maybe_print_errors
* Get ctrl_exit var from context.global_config
* Use context.global_config in command "config"
* Add Readme in engine how env vars are now handled
* Update docs from autoenv command
* Move history_path from engine to nu_data
* Move load history out of if
* No let before return
* Add import for indexmap
* Playground infraestructure (tests, etc) additions.
A few things to note:
* Nu can be started with a custom configuration file (`nu --config-file /path/to/sample_config.toml`). Useful for mocking the configuration on test runs.
* When given a custom configuration file Nu will save any changes to the file supplied appropiately.
* The `$nu.config-path` variable either shows the default configuration file (or the custom one, if given)
* We can now run end to end tests with finer grained control (currently, since this is baseline work, standard out) This will allow to check things like exit status, assert the contents with a format, etc)
* Remove (for another PR)
* Move run_script to engine
* Add which dep and feature to engine
* Change unwrap to expect
* Add wasm specification
* Remove which from default, add specification correctly
* Add nu-platform-specifics
* Move is_external_cmd to platform_specifics
* Add is_external_cmd to host and use it instead of nu_platform directly
* Clean up if else logic in is_external_cmd
* Bump nu-platform-specifics version
* Pass context to print_err
* Commit cargo.lock
* Move print functions to own module inside nu-engine
* Hypocratic change to run windows-nightly again
* Add import for Ordering
* Move printing of error to host
* Move platform specific which functionality to basic host
* Allow no use of cmd_name
* Fix windows compile issue
For now the trash doesn't work because the trash-support flag isn't enabled in nu-engine
crate, so make it work by adding this flag.
Signed-off-by: Tw <wei.tan@intel.com>
Co-authored-by: Tw <wei.tan@intel.com>
* remove parking_lot crate from nu-data as it is no longer being used
* remove commented out code from parse.rs
* remove commented out code from scope.rs
The autoenv logic mutates environment variables in the running session as
it operates and decides what to do for trusted directories containing `.nu-env`
files. Few of the ways to interact with it were all in a single test function.
We separate out all the ways that were done in the single test function to document
it better. This will greatly help once we start refactoring our way out from setting
environment variables this way to just setting them to `Scope`.
This is part of an on-going effort to keep variables (`PATH` and `ENV`)
in our `Scope` and rely on it for everything related to variables.
We expect to move away from setting (`std::*`) envrironment variables in the current
running process. This is non-trivial since we need to handle cases from vars
coming in from the outside world, prioritize, and also compare to the ones
we have both stored in memory and in configuration files.
Also to send out our in-memory (in `Scope`) variables properly to external
programs once we no longer rely on `std::env` vars from the running process.