In Nu we have variables (E.g. $var-name) and these contain `Value` types.
This means we can bind to variables any structured data and column path syntax
(E.g. `$variable.path.to`) allows flexibility for "querying" said structures.
Here we offer completions for these. For example, in a Nushell session the
variable `$nu` contains environment values among other things. If we wanted to
see in the screen some environment variable (say the var `SHELL`) we do:
```
> echo $nu.env.SHELL
```
with completions we can now do: `echo $nu.env.S[\TAB]` and we get suggestions
that start at the column path `$nu.env` with vars starting with the letter `S`
in this case `SHELL` appears in the suggestions.
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.
* enable theming of the command line syntax
* added missing flatshape, sorted flatshapes for easier reading.
* sorted flat shapes again and saved it this time
* added sample rwb.json syntax them file to docs
* Throw an error if path failed to expand
Previously, it just repeated the non-expanded path.
* Allow expanding non-existent paths
This commit has a strange error in examples.
* Specify span manually in examples; Add an example
* Expand relative path without requiring cwd
* Remove redundant tilde expansion
This makes the tilde expansion in relative paths dependant on "dirs"
feature.
* Add missing example result
* Adjust path expand description
* Fix import error with missing feature
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
It was too error prone when positional arguments were used with the rest
arguments. Now, you need to explicitly state from which position you
want to count the rest args (e.g., `rest(0)`).
* Convert "random bool" to engine-p
Also implements FromValue for Tagged<BigDecimal> and Tagged<f64>.
* Convert "random dice" to engine-p
* Convert "random uuid" to engine-p
* Covert "random chars" to engine-p
* Convert "random" command to engine-p
* Implement minmax for Range; Simplify range command
* Port random integer to enginep; New FromValue impl
Now, FromValue is implemented for Tagged<Range> to allow extracting args
into this type.
* Make sure range value extraction fails properly
The range endpoint extraction methods now return error instead of
silently clipping the value. This now makes `random integer ..-4` fail
properly since -4 can't be cast as u64.
* Port random decimal to enginep & Refactor
This added a way to interpret Range limits as f64 and a Primitive helper
to get its value as f64.
A side effect of this commit is that it is now possible to specify the
command bounds as true decimals. E.g., `random decimal 0.0..3.14` does
not clip 3.14 to 3.
* Removes arg serialization
* action stream -> output stream
* uses nu_protocol::Range instead of NumericRange
* random missing newline I found in the code
If built without `trash_support`, nu should explicitly reject attempts to use `rm` with the `--trash` option, or with a config file which includes `rm_always_trash = true`.
As of 42fac72, there doesn't seem to be any guard in the `#[cfg(not(feature = "trash-support"))]` block of `filesystem_shell::rm`, leading to the behavior described in #3116, where builds without the trash-support feature will delete things permanently regardless of flags/config options.
This should close#3116
* Use ctx.configs in all config commands
* Remove all setting/accessing of vars.("config-path")
* Add tests
* Add comment
* Reload cfg on remove
* Hypocratic ws change
* Use history_path in hist_or_default
* Make clippy happy
* Fix rebase stuff
* Fix clippy lint
* Output error when ls into a file without permission
* added test to check fails when ls into prohibited dir
* fix lint
* trigger wasm build
* be able to remove fifos
* Update filesystem_shell.rs
* I thought windows had fifos
* fixed unix and windows conditional compilation
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Turner <jonathandturner@users.noreply.github.com>
* Output error when ls into a file without permission
* added test to check fails when ls into prohibited dir
* fix lint
* trigger wasm build
* Update filesystem_shell.rs
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Turner <jonathandturner@users.noreply.github.com>
* 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
* enable ability to see all aliases, pull in code from scope branch
* add in the alias tests
* add back in my changes to variables.rs after merging in andrasios changes from PR #3217
Improvements overall to Nu. Also among the changes here, we can also be more confident towards incorporating `3041`. End to end tests for checking envs properly exported to externals is not added here (since it's in the other PR)
A few things added in this PR (probably forgetting some too)
* no writes happen to history during test runs.
* environment syncing end to end coverage added.
* clean up / refactorings few areas.
* testing API for finer control (can write tests passing more than one pipeline)
* can pass environment variables in tests that nu will inherit when running.
* No longer needed.
* no longer under a module. No need to use super.
* add ability to cd to ~/blah. tested on windows.
* added dirs_next
* put change behind feature for linux-minimal/wasm
* clippy
* holy crap minimal, i'm about done with you!
* 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>
* Split help message into brief and full help
Demonstrate on ansi command
Brief help is printed when running `help commands` so it doesn't clutter
the table. Full help is printed when normal help message is requested
(e.g., `help ansi`, `ansi --help`, etc.).
* Split long command descriptions
Some are not split, just edited to be shorter.
* Capitalize the usage of all commands
* Make sure every usage ends with dot
* Fix random typo
* fix case where parent_name was {nu, term} and possibly others in the future by doing an extra test first to see if if the *parent_name key actually exists in cmap
* update with help generate_docs testing
* 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
* Add rest arg to def
This commit applied adds the ability to define the rest parameter of a def
command. It does not implement the functionality to expand the rest argument in
a user defined def function.
The rest argument has to be exactly worded "...rest".
Example after this PR is applied:
file test.nu
```shell
def my_command [
...rest:int # My rest arg
] {
echo 1 2 3
}
```
```shell
> source test.nu
> my_command -h
Usage:
> my_command ...args {flags}
Parameters:
...args: My rest arg
Flags:
-h, --help: Display this help message
```
* Fix space in help on wrong side
* move basic_shell_manager to nu-engine
* move basic_evaluation_context to nu-engine
* fix failing test in feature which commands/classified/external.rs
We split off the evaluation engine part of nu-cli into its own crate. This helps improve build times for nu-cli by 17% in my tests. It also helps us see a bit better what's the core engine portion vs the part specific to the interactive CLI piece.
There's more than can be done here, but I think it's a good start in the right direction.