See cc3653cfd9 for more on the `-c` flag.
Co-authored-by: Andrés N. Robalino <andres@androbtech.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrés N. Robalino <andres@androbtech.com>
* compiles on nightly now. (breaking change)
* less deps
* Switch over to new resolver
(it's been stable for a while.)
* let's leave num-format for another PR
* Output error when ls into a file without permission
* math sqrt
* added test to check fails when ls into prohibited dir
* fix lint
* math sqrt with tests and doc
* trigger wasm build
* Update filesystem_shell.rs
* Fix Running echo .. starts printing integers forever
* Allow for multiple table scraping
* linting
* Fix clippy
* linting
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Turner <jonathandturner@users.noreply.github.com>
Very often we need to work with tables (say extracted from unstructured data or some
kind of final report, timeseries, and the like).
It's inevitable we will be having columns that we can't know beforehand what their names
will be, or how many.
Also, we may end up with certain cells having values we may want to remove as we explore.
Here, `update cells` fundamentally goes over every cell in the table coming in and updates
the cell's contents with the output of the block passed. Basic example here:
```
> [
[ ty1, t2, ty];
[ 1, a, $nothing]
[(wrap), (0..<10), 1Mb]
[ 1s, ({}), 1000000]
[ $true, $false, ([[]])]
] | update cells { describe }
───┬───────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┬──────────
# │ ty1 │ t2 │ ty
───┼───────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┼──────────
0 │ integer │ string │ nothing
1 │ row Column(table of ) │ range[[integer, integer)] │ filesize
2 │ string │ nothing │ integer
3 │ boolean │ boolean │ table of
───┴───────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┴──────────
```
and another one (in the examples) for cases, say we have a timeseries table generated and
we want to remove the zeros and have empty strings and save it out to something like CSV.
```
> [
[2021-04-16, 2021-06-10, 2021-09-18, 2021-10-15, 2021-11-16, 2021-11-17, 2021-11-18];
[ 37, 0, 0, 0, 37, 0, 0]
] | update cells {|value| i
if ($value | into int) == 0 {
""
} {
$value
}
}
───┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────
# │ 2021-04-16 │ 2021-06-10 │ 2021-09-18 │ 2021-10-15 │ 2021-11-16 │ 2021-11-17 │ 2021-11-18
───┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────
0 │ 37 │ │ │ │ 37 │ │
───┴────────────┴────────────┴────────────┴────────────┴────────────┴────────────┴────────────
```
* Support completion when cursor inside an argument
Bash supports completion even when cursor is in an argument, this is very useful for some fixup after the initial completion.
Let add this feature as well.
Signed-off-by: Tw <wei.tan@intel.com>
* Add test for when cursor inside an argument
To support test this case, let's also take the position into account.
Signed-off-by: Tw <wei.tan@intel.com>
* Change path join signature
* Appending now works without flag
* Column path operation is behind a -c flag
* Move column path arg retrieval to a function
Also improves errors
* Fix path join tests
* Propagate column path changes to all path commands
* Update path command examples with columns paths
* Modernize path command examples by removing "echo"
* Improve structured path error message
* Fix typo
* Expand path when converting value -> PathBuf
Also includes Tagged<PathBuf>.
Fixes#3605
* Expand path for PATH env. variable
Fixes#1834
* Remove leftover Cows after nu-path refactor
There were some unnecessary Cow conversions leftover from the old
nu-path implementation.
* Use canonicalize in source command; Improve errors
Previously, `source` used `expand_path()` which does not follow
symlinks.
As a follow up, I improved the source error messages so they now tell
why the source file could not be canonicalized or read into string.
```
> [
[ msg, labels, span];
["The message", "Helpful message here", ([[start, end]; [0, 141]])]
] | error make
error: The message
┌─ shell:1:1
│
1 │ ╭ [
2 │ │ [ msg, labels, span];
3 │ │ ["The message", "Helpful message here", ([[start, end]; [0, 141]])]
│ ╰─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────^ Helpful message here
```
Adding a more flexible approach for creating error values. One use case, for instance is the
idea of a test framework. A failed assertion instead of printing to the screen it could create
tables with more details of the failed assertion and pass it to this command for making a full
fledge error that Nu can show. This can (and should) be extended for capturing error values as well
in the pipeline. One could also use it for inspection.
For example: `.... | error inspect { # inspection here }`
or "error handling" as well, like so: `.... | error capture { fix here }`
However, we start here only with `error make` that creates an error value for you with limited support for the time being.
* Add subcommand `into filesize`
It's currently not possible to convert a number or a string containing a number
into a filesize. The only way to create an instance of filesize type today is
with a literal in nushell syntax. This commit adds the `into filesize`
subcommand so that file sizes can be created from the outputs of programs
producing numbers or strings, like standard unix tools.
There is a limitation with this - it doesn't currently parse values like `10 MB`
or `10 MiB`, it can only look at the number itself. If the desire is there, more
flexible parsing can be added.
* fixup! Add subcommand `into filesize`
* fixup! Add subcommand `into filesize`
* feat: spawn the executables directly if possible
This pull request changes nu-command so that it spawns the process directly if:
- They are a `.exe` on Windows
- They are not a `.sh` or `.bash` on not windows.
Benefits:
- As I explained in [this comment](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/3898#issuecomment-894000812), this is another step towards making Nushell a standalone shell, that doesn't need to shell out unless it is running a script for a particular shell (cmd, sh, ps1, etc.).
- Fixes the bug with multiline strings
- Better performance due to direct spawning.
For example, this script shows ~20 ms less latency.
After:
```nu
C:\> benchmark { node -e 'console.log("sssss")' }
───┬──────────────────
# │ real time
───┼──────────────────
0 │ 63ms 921us 600ns
───┴──────────────────
```
Before
```nu
C:\> benchmark { node -e 'console.log("sssss")' }
───┬──────────────────
# │ real time
───┼──────────────────
0 │ 79ms 136us 800ns
───┴──────────────────
```
Fixes#3898
* fix: make which dependency optional
Also fixes clippy warnings
* refactor: refactor spawn_exe, spawn_cmd, spawn_sh, and spawn_any
* fix: use which feature instead of which-support
* fix: use which_in to use the cwd of nu
* fix: use case insensitive comparison of the extensions
Sometimes the case of the extension is uppercased by the "which_in" function
Also use unix instead of not windows. Some os might not have sh support