* Fix "index out of bounds" when input to group-by is empty #4369
* Fix formatting #4369
* Adds test for empty input
Co-authored-by: Ray Henry <ray.henry@thermofisher.com>
* Allow range in 'drop nth'
* Unit tests for drop nth range
* Add range case to the description
* Fix description 2
* format fixes
* Fix example and some refactoring
* clippy fixes
* fix into filesize tests and filesize
* tweaks
* added span back for like the 10th time
* Update filesize.rs
Co-authored-by: JT <547158+jntrnr@users.noreply.github.com>
* have save --append create file if not exists
Currently, doing:
echo a | save --raw --append file.txt
will fail if file.txt does not exist. This PR changes that
* test that `save --append` will create new file
* 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
* 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`
* Allow environment variables to be hidden
This change allows environment variables in Nushell to have a value of
`Nothing`, which can be set by the user by passing `$nothing` to
`let-env` and friends.
Environment variables with a value of Nothing behave as if they are not
set at all. This allows a user to shadow the value of an environment
variable in a parent scope, effectively removing it from their current
scope. This was not possible before, because a scope can not affect its
parent scopes.
This is a workaround for issues like #3920.
Additionally, this allows a user to simultaneously set, change and
remove multiple environment variables via `load-env`. Any environment
variables set to $nothing will be hidden and thus act as if they are
removed. This simplifies working with virtual environments, which rely
on setting multiple environment variables, including PATH, to specific
values, and remove/change them on deactivation.
One surprising behavior is that an environment variable set to $nothing
will act as if it is not set when querying it (via $nu.env.X), but it is
still possible to remove it entirely via `unlet-env`. If the same
environment variable is present in the parent scope, the value in the
parent scope will be visible to the user. This might be surprising
behavior to users who are not familiar with the implementation details.
An additional corner case is the the shorthand form of `with-env` does
not work with this feature. Using `X=$nothing` will set $nu.env.X to the
string "$nothing". The long-form works as expected: `with-env [X
$nothing] {...}`.
* Remove unused import
* Allow all primitives to be convert to strings
Given we can write nu scripts. As the codebase grows, splitting into many smaller nu scripts is necessary.
In general, when we work with paths and files we seem to face quite a few difficulties. Here we just tackle one of them and it involves sourcing
files that also source other nu files and so forth. The current working directory becomes important here and being on a different directory
when sourcing scripts will not work. Mostly because we expand the path on the current working directory and parse the files when a source command
call is done.
For the moment, we introduce a `lib_dirs` configuration value and, unfortunately, introduce a new dependency in `nu-parser` (`nu-data`) to get
a handle of the configuration file to retrieve it. This should give clues and ideas as the new parser engine continues (introduce a way to also know paths)
With this PR we can do the following:
Let's assume we want to write a nu library called `my_library`. We will have the code in a directory called `project`: The file structure will looks like this:
```
project/my_library.nu
project/my_library/hello.nu
project/my_library/name.nu
```
This "pattern" works well, that is, when creating a library have a directory named `my_library` and next to it a `my_library.nu` file. Filling them like this:
```
source my_library/hello.nu
source my_library/name.nu
```
```
def hello [] {
"hello world"
}
```
```
def name [] {
"Nu"
end
```
Assuming this `project` directory is stored at `/path/to/lib/project`, we can do:
```
config set lib_dirs ['path/to/lib/project']
```
Given we have this `lib_dirs` configuration value, we can be anywhere while using Nu and do the following:
```
source my_library.nu
echo (hello) (name)
```
* Allow sourcing paths with emojis
* Add source command tests for emoji paths
* Fmt
* Disable source tests on Windows with illegal paths
* Test sourcing also ASCII and single-quoted paths
We introduce it here and allow it to work with regular lists (tables with no columns) as well as symmetric tables. Say we have two lists and wish to zip them, like so:
```
[0 2 4 6 8] | zip {
[1 3 5 7 9]
} | flatten
───┬───
0 │ 0
1 │ 1
2 │ 2
3 │ 3
4 │ 4
5 │ 5
6 │ 6
7 │ 7
8 │ 8
9 │ 9
───┴───
```
In the case for two tables instead:
```
[[symbol]; ['('] ['['] ['{']] | zip {
[[symbol]; [')'] [']'] ['}']]
} | each {
get symbol | $'($in.0)nushell($in.1)'
}
───┬───────────
0 │ (nushell)
1 │ [nushell]
2 │ {nushell}
───┴───────────
```
* Refactor Hash code to simplify md5 and sha256 implementations
Md5 and Sha256 (and other future digests) require less boilerplate code
now. Error reporting includues the name of the hash again.
* Add missing hash sha256 test
* Fix swapped PATH env var separators
* Support pathvar to manipulate other vars than PATH
* Add tests for pathvar and its subcommands
* Adjust pathvar tests to comply with env quirks
* Make pathvar tests work on non-Windows as well
* Compact the comments in pathvar tests
* Fix last failing test
Co-authored-by: Jakub Žádník <jakub.zadnik@tuni.fi>
* Fix swapped PATH env var separators
* Support pathvar to manipulate other vars than PATH
* Add tests for pathvar and its subcommands
* Fix PATH env name for Windows
Seems like Windows uses PATH as well.
Co-authored-by: Jakub Žádník <jakub.zadnik@tuni.fi>
* 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
* Fixed panic on operations with very large durations
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Turner <jonathandturner@users.noreply.github.com>
Using the `*` wildcard should not attempt to delete files with a leading dot
unless the more explicit `.*` is used. `rm *` should also not attempt to delete
the current directory or its parent directory (`.` and `..`). I have resolved
this bug as well in a less satisfactory way. I think it may be the case that we
can only disambiguate the `.` and `..` path segments by using `Path::display`.
Here is a short list of alternatives that I tried:
- `Path::ends_with()` can detect `/..` but not `/.`.
- `Path::iter()` and `Path::components()` leave out `/.`.
- `Path::file_name()` normalizes `/.` to the parent component's file name.
Fixes#3508
* commands to engine
* Correction of error in parser
* Added detailed regex error to parse
* better regex error parsing
* clippy corrections
* parse example with test
* secondary error for regex
* removed clone in error parser
* Secondary error message