* Sample command
* Join command with checks
* More dataframes commands
* Groupby and aggregate commands
* Missing feature dataframe flag
* Renamed file
* New commands for dataframes
* error parser and df reference
* filter command for dataframes
* removed name from nu_dataframe
* commands to save to parquet and csv
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
* Add the load-env command
load-env can be used to add environment variables dynamically via an
InputStream. This allows developers to create tools that output environment
variables as key-value pairs, then have the user load those variables in using
load-env. This supplants most of the need for an `eval` command, which is
mostly used in POSIX envs for setting env vars.
Fixes#3481
* fixup! Add the load-env command
* Allow querying the current path separator
* Convert char command to engine-p
* Wrap char args into struct
* Add --list option to char command
This lists all the available character names, along with the character
and its unicode points.
* 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
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)`).