Commit Graph

193 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonathan Turner
81691e07c6 Add prepend and append commands 2019-10-30 19:54:06 +13:00
Jonathan Turner
30b6eac03d Allow updating path in config 2019-10-29 10:22:31 +13:00
Jonathan Turner
aed386b3cd Always save history, add history command 2019-10-28 05:58:39 +13:00
Andrés N. Robalino
0611f56776 Can group cells by given column name. 2019-10-20 18:42:07 -05:00
Andrés N. Robalino
821ee5e726 count command introduced. 2019-10-15 05:19:06 -05:00
Thomas Hartmann
65546646a7 Pull in upstream changes. 2019-10-14 23:05:52 +02:00
Thomas Hartmann
de1c4e6c88 Implements from-ssv 2019-10-13 22:50:45 +02:00
Jonathan Turner
193b00764b
Stream support (#812)
* Moves off of draining between filters. Instead, the sink will pull on the stream, and will drain element-wise. This moves the whole stream to being lazy.
* Adds ctrl-c support and connects it into some of the key points where we pull on the stream. If a ctrl-c is detect, we immediately halt pulling on the stream and return to the prompt.
* Moves away from having a SourceMap where anchor locations are stored. Now AnchorLocation is kept directly in the Tag.
* To make this possible, split tag and span. Span is largely used in the parser and is copyable. Tag is now no longer copyable.
2019-10-13 17:12:43 +13:00
Yehuda Katz
c2c10e2bc0 Overhaul the coloring system
This commit replaces the previous naive coloring system with a coloring
system that is more aligned with the parser.

The main benefit of this change is that it allows us to use parsing
rules to decide how to color tokens.

For example, consider the following syntax:

```
$ ps | where cpu > 10
```

Ideally, we could color `cpu` like a column name and not a string,
because `cpu > 10` is a shorthand block syntax that expands to
`{ $it.cpu > 10 }`.

The way that we know that it's a shorthand block is that the `where`
command declares that its first parameter is a `SyntaxShape::Block`,
which allows the shorthand block form.

In order to accomplish this, we need to color the tokens in a way that
corresponds to their expanded semantics, which means that high-fidelity
coloring requires expansion.

This commit adds a `ColorSyntax` trait that corresponds to the
`ExpandExpression` trait. The semantics are fairly similar, with a few
differences.

First `ExpandExpression` consumes N tokens and returns a single
`hir::Expression`. `ColorSyntax` consumes N tokens and writes M
`FlatShape` tokens to the output.

Concretely, for syntax like `[1 2 3]`

- `ExpandExpression` takes a single token node and produces a single
  `hir::Expression`
- `ColorSyntax` takes the same token node and emits 7 `FlatShape`s
  (open delimiter, int, whitespace, int, whitespace, int, close
  delimiter)

Second, `ColorSyntax` is more willing to plow through failures than
`ExpandExpression`.

In particular, consider syntax like

```
$ ps | where cpu >
```

In this case

- `ExpandExpression` will see that the `where` command is expecting a
  block, see that it's not a literal block and try to parse it as a
  shorthand block. It will successfully find a member followed by an
  infix operator, but not a following expression. That means that the
  entire pipeline part fails to parse and is a syntax error.
- `ColorSyntax` will also try to parse it as a shorthand block and
  ultimately fail, but it will fall back to "backoff coloring mode",
  which parsing any unidentified tokens in an unfallible, simple way. In
  this case, `cpu` will color as a string and `>` will color as an
  operator.

Finally, it's very important that coloring a pipeline infallibly colors
the entire string, doesn't fail, and doesn't get stuck in an infinite
loop.

In order to accomplish this, this PR separates `ColorSyntax`, which is
infallible from `FallibleColorSyntax`, which might fail. This allows the
type system to let us know if our coloring rules bottom out at at an
infallible rule.

It's not perfect: it's still possible for the coloring process to get
stuck or consume tokens non-atomically. I intend to reduce the
opportunity for those problems in a future commit. In the meantime, the
current system catches a number of mistakes (like trying to use a
fallible coloring rule in a loop without thinking about the possibility
that it will never terminate).
2019-10-10 19:30:04 -07:00
Yehuda Katz
1ad9d6f199 Overhaul the expansion system
The main thrust of this (very large) commit is an overhaul of the
expansion system.

The parsing pipeline is:

- Lightly parse the source file for atoms, basic delimiters and pipeline
  structure into a token tree
- Expand the token tree into a HIR (high-level intermediate
  representation) based upon the baseline syntax rules for expressions
  and the syntactic shape of commands.

Somewhat non-traditionally, nu doesn't have an AST at all. It goes
directly from the token tree, which doesn't represent many important
distinctions (like the difference between `hello` and `5KB`) directly
into a high-level representation that doesn't have a direct
correspondence to the source code.

At a high level, nu commands work like macros, in the sense that the
syntactic shape of the invocation of a command depends on the
definition of a command.

However, commands do not have the ability to perform unrestricted
expansions of the token tree. Instead, they describe their arguments in
terms of syntactic shapes, and the expander expands the token tree into
HIR based upon that definition.

For example, the `where` command says that it takes a block as its first
required argument, and the description of the block syntactic shape
expands the syntax `cpu > 10` into HIR that represents
`{ $it.cpu > 10 }`.

This commit overhauls that system so that the syntactic shapes are
described in terms of a few new traits (`ExpandSyntax` and
`ExpandExpression` are the primary ones) that are more composable than
the previous system.

The first big win of this new system is the addition of the `ColumnPath`
shape, which looks like `cpu."max ghz"` or `package.version`.
Previously, while a variable path could look like `$it.cpu."max ghz"`,
the tail of a variable path could not be easily reused in other
contexts. Now, that tail is its own syntactic shape, and it can be used
as part of a command's signature.

This cleans up commands like `inc`, `add` and `edit` as well as
shorthand blocks, which can now look like `| where cpu."max ghz" > 10`
2019-10-10 08:27:51 -07:00
Jonathan Turner
7113c702ff
Merge pull request #706 from landaire/ctrlc_config
feat(cli): add `ctrlc_exit` config option
2019-09-26 09:22:11 +12:00
Lander Brandt
0377efdc16 feat(cli): add ctrlc_exit config option
This feature allows a user to set `ctrlc_exit` to `true` or `false` in their config to override how multiple CTRL-C invocations are handled. Without this change pressing CTRL-C multiple times will exit nu. With this change applied the user can configure the behavior to behave like other shells where multiple invocations will essentially clear the line.

This fixes #457.
2019-09-24 18:04:53 -07:00
Pirmin Kalberer
3480cdb3b4 Fix build without crossterm 2019-09-24 23:33:30 +02:00
Andrés N. Robalino
898b99d7c2 Ignore incompatible plugins and continue plugin search. 2019-09-23 17:27:18 -05:00
Andrés N. Robalino
95ea3fcf4e Load plugin if and only if it hasn't been registered. 2019-09-23 17:01:40 -05:00
Pirmin Kalberer
9623a255c4 Include history path in env command 2019-09-20 10:37:05 +02:00
Pirmin Kalberer
484d8c26ac Save history when leaving with Ctrl-C 2019-09-19 22:55:53 +02:00
Pirmin Kalberer
df7a3a4863 Store history.txt in user data path 2019-09-19 22:29:11 +02:00
Pirmin Kalberer
d7e7f48aaa Deactivate fuzzy search on Windows for now 2019-09-19 20:45:58 +02:00
Pirmin Kalberer
0a0be19bed Rename histsearch to fuzzysearch 2019-09-19 20:18:39 +02:00
Pirmin Kalberer
1c95bf05dc Process selected command 2019-09-19 20:18:39 +02:00
Pirmin Kalberer
1e3549571c Bind fuzzy history search to Ctrl-R 2019-09-19 20:18:39 +02:00
Jonathan Turner
5ff94004c6 Add urlencode/urldecode 2019-09-19 16:25:29 +12:00
Jonathan Turner
f6b82e4c0c Replace vtable with pivot command 2019-09-17 19:07:11 +12:00
Jonathan Turner
7fbd6ce232 Fix internal paths 2019-09-17 14:09:15 +12:00
Jonathan Turner
17855d37a4 Add env command 2019-09-16 19:52:58 +12:00
Andrés N. Robalino
6bb277baaa
Merge pull request #668 from nushell/span-to-tag
Span to tag
2019-09-14 15:10:04 -05:00
Jonathan Turner
2b88f1eed0 Serialize bigint/bigdecimal as i64/f64 2019-09-15 05:48:24 +12:00
Yehuda Katz
ab915f1c44 Revert "Revert "Migrate most uses of the Span concept to Tag""
This reverts commit bee7c5639c.
2019-09-14 11:30:24 -05:00
Andrés N. Robalino
d0d56deaf1 Permit Nu finding and picking up development plugins if there are any first. 2019-09-12 18:49:29 -05:00
Andrés N. Robalino
e4ed8c94ad dot character is valid in Windows plugin binaries. 2019-09-12 02:20:22 -05:00
Andrés N. Robalino
c57c0eb371 pass lint checks. 2019-09-12 01:49:01 -05:00
Andrés N. Robalino
b35549adac Removes regex crate dependency. 2019-09-11 22:20:42 -05:00
Jonathan Turner
bee7c5639c
Revert "Migrate most uses of the Span concept to Tag" 2019-09-11 19:53:05 +12:00
Yehuda Katz
58b7800172 Migrate most uses of the Span concept to Tag
Also migrate mv, rm and commands like that to taking a
SyntaxType::Pattern instead of a SyntaxType::Path for their first
argument.
2019-09-10 20:41:03 -07:00
Jonathan Turner
448b1a4848 Make some plugins optional, move ps to plugin 2019-09-08 19:06:15 +12:00
Jonathan Turner
4cdaed1ad4 Add echo command 2019-09-08 11:43:53 +12:00
Pradeep Chhetri
ee301f9f54 Adds pwd command 2019-09-07 23:53:56 +08:00
Jonathan Turner
dcd97b6346 Move internal terminology to tables/rows 2019-09-06 04:23:42 +12:00
Jonathan Turner
479f0a566e Covert to_* commands to work on whole table 2019-09-04 18:48:40 +12:00
Jan Koprowski
ab97459d0e Stop printing CTRL-D on EOF 2019-09-03 21:40:42 +02:00
Jonathan Turner
8a9cdcab17 Split fetch command away from open 2019-09-03 18:04:46 +12:00
Yehuda Katz
7fa09f59c2 Remove unused code
Closes #467
2019-09-01 23:11:05 -07:00
Jonathan Turner
7d46f9e860 Another attempt to fix the zombie processes 2019-09-02 04:45:30 +12:00
Andrés N. Robalino
ca0c6eaf58 This commit introduces a basic help feature. We can go to it
with the `help` command to explore and list all commands available.

Enter will also try to see if the location to be entered is an existing
Nu command, if it is it will let you inspect the command under `help`.

This provides baseline needed so we can iterate on it.
2019-08-31 19:06:11 -05:00
Jonathan Turner
1a67ac6102 Random fixes 2019-09-01 09:19:59 +12:00
Jonathan Turner
1d77595576 Merge branch 'master' into post 2019-08-31 15:12:03 +12:00
Jonathan Turner
2cec8168c7 Merge master 2019-08-31 13:30:41 +12:00
Patrick Meredith
3d147d1143 Add SQLite support 2019-08-30 20:54:45 -04:00
Jonathan Turner
fa2c6ec227 Merge master 2019-08-31 10:13:09 +12:00