* fix: absolutize path against its parent if it was a symlink.
On Linux this happens because Rust calls readlink but doesn't canonicalize the resultant path.
* feat: playground function to create symlinks
* fix: use playground dirs
* feat: test for #1631, shift tests names
* Creation of FilesystemShell with custom location may fail
* Replace ichwh with which
* Creation of FilesystemShell with custom location may fail
* Replace ichwh with which
* fix: add ichwh again since it cannot be completely replaced
* fix: replace one more use of which
For example, when running the following:
crates/nu-cli/src
nushell currently parses this as an external command. Before running the command, we check to see if
it's a directory. If it is, we "auto cd" into that directory, otherwise we go through normal
external processing.
If we put a trailing slash on it though, shells typically interpret that as "user is explicitly
referencing directory". So
crates/nu-cli/src/
should not be interpreted as "run an external command". We intercept a trailing slash in the head
position of a command in a pipeline as such, and inject a `cd` internal command.
* make trim apply to strings contained in tables (also at deeper nesting
levels), not just top-level strings
* remove unnecessary clone (thanks clippy)
* from-eml initial ver
* Adding tests for `from-eml`
* Add eml to prepares_and_decorates_filesystem_source_files
* Sort the file order
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Turner <jonathandturner@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix: absolutize path against its parent if it was a symlink.
On Linux this happens because Rust calls readlink but doesn't canonicalize the resultant path.
* feat: playground function to create symlinks
* fix: use playground dirs
* feat: test for #1631, shift tests names
* refactor: expand_path and expand_ndots now work for any string.
* refactor: refactor test and add new ones.
* refactor: convert expanded to owned string
* feat: pub export of expand_ndots
* feat: add completion for ndots in fs-shell
* Fix --headerless option of to-csv and to-tsv
Before to-csv --headerless split the "headerfull" output on lines,
skipped the first, and then concatenated them together. That meant
that all remaining output would be put on the same line, without
any delimiter, making it unusable. Now we replace the range of the
first line with the empty string, maintaining the rest of the
output unchanged.
* Remove extra space in indentation of to_delimited_data
* Add --separator <string> argument to to-csv
This functionaliy has been present before, but wasn't exposed
to the command.