# Description
This PR does a few things to help improve type hovers and, in the
process, fixes a few outstanding issues in the type system. Here's a
list of the changes:
* `for` now will try to infer the type of the iteration variable based
on the expression it's given. This fixes things like `for x in [1, 2, 3]
{ }` where `x` now properly gets the int type.
* Removed old input/output type fields from the signature, focuses on
the vec of signatures. Updated a bunch of dataframe commands that hadn't
moved over. This helps tie things together a bit better
* Fixed inference of types from subexpressions to use the last
expression in the block
* Fixed handling of explicit types in `let` and `mut` calls, so we now
respect that as the authoritative type
I also tried to add `def` input/output type inference, but unfortunately
we only know the predecl types universally, which means we won't have
enough information to properly know what the types of the custom
commands are.
# User-Facing Changes
Script typechecking will get tighter in some cases
Hovers should be more accurate in some cases that previously resorted to
any.
# Tests + Formatting
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---------
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
# Checklist
- `nu-ansi-term` remains the same
- [x] `reedline` is released and updated
- [x] release scripts are updated for `nu-cmd-base`
- [x] info blog post is online
- [ ] release notes are ready
- fixes#9501
# Description
`chrono::Datetime::to_rfc2822()` panics when it would format a negative
year. 3339 does not. This makes negative-year datetimes inconsistent
compared to positive ones, but it's better than a panic.
# Description
`derive(EnumIter)` is only required to run completeness tests.
Thus make the derive conditional on test and move `strum` and
`strum_macros` to the dev dependencies.
## Is it worth it?
Removing this derive does not change the binary size (checked via `cargo
bloat --crates` from `cargo-bloat`).
Compile time change is below a second so hard to judge based on a single
run of `cargo clean --profile dev; cargo build --timings`
Unsure if this negatively impacts how incremental compilation can
recompile when you switch between `cargo build`/`run` and `cargo test`
in your local workflow.
To get rid of `strum`/`strum_macros` as a proc macro crate we would need
to also remove it from `reedline`.
Further more a crate in the `polars` dependency tree uses `strum`
(curently not as relevant for the 1.0 build).
# Description
This PR improves the error message if an environment variable (that's
visible before the parser begins) is used in the form of `$PATH` instead
of `$env.PATH`.
Before:
```
Error: nu::parser::variable_not_found
× Variable not found.
╭─[entry #31:1:1]
1 │ echo $PATH
· ──┬──
· ╰── variable not found.
╰────
```
After:
```
Error: nu::parser::env_var_not_var
× Use $env.PATH instead of $PATH.
╭─[entry #1:1:1]
1 │ echo $PATH
· ──┬──
· ╰── use $env.PATH instead of $PATH
╰────
```
# User-Facing Changes
Just the improvement to the error message
# Tests + Formatting
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- improves usability of datetime's in displayed text
-
# Description
Creates a config point for specifying long / short date time formats.
Defaults to humanized as we have today.
Provides for adding strftime formats into config.nu such as:
```nu
datetime_format: {
normal: "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"
table: "%Y-%m-%d"
}
```
Example:
```bash
> $env.config.datetime_format
┏━━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┓
┃ normal ┃ %a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S %z ┃
┃ table ┃ %m/%d/%y %I:%M:%S%p ┃
┗━━━━━━━━┻━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┛
> let a = (date now)
> echo $a
Thu, 22 Jun 2023 10:21:23 -0700
> echo [$a]
┏━━━┳━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┓
┃ 0 ┃ 06/22/23 10:21:23AM ┃
┗━━━┻━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┛
```
# User-Facing Changes
Any place converting a datetime to a user displayed value should be
impacted.
# Tests + Formatting
- `cargo fmt --all -- --check` Done
- `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used -A
clippy::needless_collect -A clippy::result_large_err` Done
- `cargo test --workspace` Done
- `cargo run -- crates/nu-std/tests/run.nu` Not done - doesn't seem to
work
```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it automatically
> toolkit check pr
``` - Done
---------
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Antoine Stevan <44101798+amtoine@users.noreply.github.com>
# Description
This PR cleans up the deprecated legacy config options that were
deprecated in nushell version 0.72.0. These are the config points that
were in the root of the config but also duplicated in the nested
structures. For instance `use_ls_colors` was in the root of the config
and also in the `ls.use_ls_colors` nested structure. This was originally
done to preserve backwards compatibility when nested structures were
introduced in the config file.
Here's a list of the legacy config points that were removed.
- `use_ls_colors` - previously replaced with `ls.use_ls_colors`
- `rm_always_trash` - previously replaced with `rm.always_trash`
- `history_file_format` - previously replaced with `history.file_format`
- `sync_history_on_enter` - previously replaced with
`history.sync_on_enter`
- `max_history_size` - previously replaced with `history.max_size`
- `quick_completions` - previously replaced with `completions.quick`
- `partial_completions` - previously replaced with `completions.partial`
- `max_external_completion_results` - previously replaced with
`completions.external.max_results`
- `completion_algorithm` - previously replaced with
`completions.algorithm`
- `case_sensitive_completions` - previously replaced with
`completions.case_sensitive`
- `enable_external_completion` - previously replaced with
`completions.external.enable`
- `external_completer` - previously replaced with
`completions.external.completer`
- `table_mode` - previously replaced with `table.mode`
- `table_index_mode` - previously replaced with `table.index_mode`
- `table_trim` - previously replaced with `table.trim`
- `show_clickable_links_in_ls` - previously replaced with
`ls.clickable_links`
- `cd_with_abbreviations` - previously replaced with `cd.abbreviations`
- `filesize_metric` - previously replaced with `filesize.metric`
- `filesize_format` - previously replaced with `filesize.format`
- `cursor_shape_vi_insert` - previously replaced with
`cursor_shape.vi_insert`
- `cursor_shape_vi_normal` - previously replaced with
`cursor_shape.vi_normal`
- `cursor_shape_emacs` - previously replaced with `cursor_shape.emacs`
Removes log_level from the config since it doesn't do anything any
longer. We moved log-level to a nushell parameter some time ago.
Renames history_isolation to isolation in the config.nu for consistency.
Fixes a couple bugs where values weren't being set in the "//
Reconstruct" sections (history_isolation, table_show_empty).
Reorganized/Moved things around a tiny bit and added a few comments.
# User-Facing Changes
history.histor_isolation is now history.isolation.
If anyone is still using the legacy config points, deprecated since
0.72.0 2022-11-29, their config will break.
# Tests + Formatting
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In my view we should revert nushell/nushell#8395 for now
## Potentially inconsistent application of semantic change
#8395 (1d5e7b441b) was loosening the type
coercion rules significantly, to let missing data / void returns that
were either expressed by `PipelineData::Empty` or the `Value::nothing`
be accept by specifically those commands/operations that made use of
`PipelineData::into_iter_strict()`. This could apply the new rules
inconsistently.
## Turning explicit failures into silent continuations
Furthermore the effect of this breaking change to the missing data
semantics could make previous errors into silent failures.
This could either just reduce the effectiveness of teaching error
messages in interactive use:
### Contrived example before
```bash
> cd . | where blah
Error: nu:🐚:only_supports_this_input_type
× Input type not supported.
╭─[entry #13:1:1]
1 │ cd . | where blah
· ──┬──┬
· │ ╰── input type: null
· ╰── only list, binary, raw data or range input data is supported
╰────
```
### ...after, with #8395
```bash
> cd . | where blah
╭────────────╮
│ empty list │
╰────────────╯
```
In rare cases people could already try to rely on catching an error of a
downstream command to actually deal with the missing data, so it would
be a breaking change for their existing code.
## Problem with `PipelineData::into_iter_strict()`
Maybe this makes `_strict` a bit of a misnomer for this particular
iterator construction.
Further we did not actively test the `PipelineData::empty` branch before
![grafik](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/15833959/c377bf1d-d47c-4c25-a342-9a348539f242)
## Parsimonious solution exists
For the motivating issue https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/8393
there already exists a fix that makes `ls` more consistent with the type
system by returning an empty `Value::List`
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/8439
# Description
This allows empty pipelines to pass their emptiness through a filter.
This helps fix issues like trying to run a filter on an `ls` in an empty
directory. It also feels a bit more reasonable that a filter filters
what is *there* but doesn't require something to be there.
fixes#8393
# User-Facing Changes
No breaking changes (that I know of). Should allow filtering to be a
little less surprising with emptiness.
# Tests + Formatting
Don't forget to add tests that cover your changes.
Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
- `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting (`cargo
fmt --all` applies these changes)
- `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used -A
clippy::needless_collect` to check that you're using the standard code
style
- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass
# After Submitting
If your PR had any user-facing changes, update [the
documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
PR is merged, if necessary. This will help us keep the docs up to date.
---------
Co-authored-by: amtoine <stevan.antoine@gmail.com>
# Description
Fixes a small bug with `rm` where names of files which couldn't be
deleted due to error were not printed.
Fixes https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/9004
# User-Facing Changes
Slightly different error message than previously. Nothing significant,
though.
The new error message looks like this
```
~/Projects/rust/nushell> rm /proc/1/mem 05/06/2023 01:13:23 PM
Error: nu:🐚:remove_not_possible
× Remove not possible
╭─[entry #3:1:1]
1 │ rm /proc/1/mem
· ─────┬─────
· ╰── Could not delete /proc/1/mem: Operation not permitted (os error 1)
╰────
```
or when using a glob (only showing a single entry for brevity)
```
Error: nu:🐚:remove_not_possible
× Remove not possible
╭─[entry #2:1:1]
1 │ rm --recursive --force --verbose /proc/1/*
· ────┬────
· ╰── Could not delete /proc/1/comm: Operation not permitted (os error 1)
╰────
```
# Tests + Formatting
No new unit tests were added for this change as it is pretty difficult
to test this particular case. However, manual testing was run with the
following commands
```
rm /proc/1/mem
rm --recursive --force --verbose /proc/1/*
```
# After Submitting
N/A
This PR reverts https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/9391
We try not to revert PRs like this, though after discussion with the
Nushell team, we decided to revert this one.
The main reason is that Nushell, as a codebase, isn't ready for these
kinds of optimisations. It's in the part of the development cycle where
our main focus should be on improving the algorithms inside of Nushell
itself. Once we have matured our algorithms, then we can look for
opportunities to switch out technologies we're using for alternate
forms.
Much of Nushell still has lots of opportunities for tuning the codebase,
paying down technical debt, and making the codebase generally cleaner
and more robust. This should be the focus. Performance improvements
should flow out of that work.
Said another, optimisation that isn't part of tuning the codebase is
premature at this stage. We need to focus on doing the hard work of
making the engine, parser, etc better.
# User-Facing Changes
Reverts the HashMap -> ahash change.
cc @FilipAndersson245
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# Description
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Added comments to support API docs for the `nu-plugin` crate. Removed a
few items that I'd expect should only be used internally to Nushell from
the documentation and reduced the visibility of some items that did not
need to be public.
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
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There should be no user facing impact.
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Standard tests run. Additionally numerous doctests were added to the
`nu-plugin` crate.
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No changes to the website necessary.
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# Description
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This PR removes ZB and ZiB from file size type, as they
were showing incorrect values due to an integer overflow.
Fixes: #9337
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
see https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/9390
using `ahash` instead of the default hasher. this will not affect
compile time as we where already building `ahash`.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
Fixes: #9165
It's because `sys` returns a lazy record, and `insert`, `update`,
`upsert` can't operate on lazy record yet.
# User-Facing Changes
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
This PR updates most dependencies and tries to get in sync with
reedline.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
Fixes the clippy warnings we're about to get hit with next time we
upgrade Rust.
The big one was shrinking ShellError and related under 128 bytes.
# User-Facing Changes
Shouldn't notice much difference. In theory, we could see a tiny perf
improvement, but I didn't notice one.
# Tests + Formatting
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> toolkit check pr
> ```
-->
# After Submitting
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# Description
This removes some unnecessary SyntaxShapes when parsing a
SyntaxShape::Any. Recent updates to the parser look for `{` and then
handle the logic for that separately.
# User-Facing Changes
This may have a slight parser speedup.
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
Fixes#9254.
# User-Facing Changes
upserting data of a cellpath that doesn't exist into a record now
creates the cellpath.
# Tests + Formatting
```
~/CodingProjects/nushell> mut a = {}
~/CodingProjects/nushell> $a.b.c = 99
~/CodingProjects/nushell> $a
╭───┬────────────╮
│ │ ╭───┬────╮ │
│ b │ │ c │ 99 │ │
│ │ ╰───┴────╯ │
╰───┴────────────╯
```
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# Description
This is a test PR to see if we can remove dependencies. The crates to
remove was generated from cargo machete. If ci works, I'll update the PR
to remove deps instead of comment them out.
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
Despite the innocent-looking title, this PR involves quite a few backend
changes as the existing LazyRecord trait was not at all friendly towards
the idea of these values being generated on the fly from Nu code.
In particular, here are a few changes involved:
- The LazyRecord trait now involves a lifetime `'a`, and this lifetime
is used in the return value of `get_column_names`. This means it no
longer returns `'static str`s (but implementations still can return
these). This is more stringent on the consumption side.
- The LazyRecord trait now must be able to clone itself via a new
`clone_value` method (as requiring `Clone` is not object safe). This
pattern is borrowed from `Value::CustomValue`.
- LazyRecord no longer requires being serde serializable and
deserializable.
These, in hand, allow for the following:
- LazyRecord can now clone itself, which means that they don't have to
be collected into a Record when being cloned.
- This is especially useful in Stack, which is cloned on each repl line
and in a few other cases. This would mean that _every_ LazyRecord
instance stored in a variable would be collected in its entirety and
cloned, which can be catastrophic for performance. See: `let nulol =
$nu`.
- LazyRecord's columns don't have to be static, they can have the same
lifetime of the struct itself, so different instances of the same
LazyRecord type can have different columns and values (like the new
`NuLazyRecord`)
- Serialization and deserialization are no longer meaningless, they are
simply less.
I would consider this PR very "drafty", but everything works. It
probably requires some cleanup and testing, though, but I'd like some
eyes and pointers first.
# User-Facing Changes
New command. New restrictions are largely internal. Maybe there are some
plugins affected?
Example of new command's usage:
```
lazy make --columns [a b c] --get-value { |name| print $"getting ($name)"; $name | str upcase }
```
You can also trivially implement something like `lazy make record` to
take a record of closures and turn it into a getter-like lazy struct:
```
def "lazy make record" [
record: record
] {
let columns = ($record | columns)
lazy make --columns $columns --get-value { |col| do ($record | get $col) }
}
```
Open to bikeshedding. `lazy make` is similar to `error make` which is
also in the core commands. I didn't like `make lazy` since it sounded
like some transformation was going on.
# Tour for reviewers
Take a look at LazyMake's examples. They have `None` as the results, as
such they aren't _really_ correct and aren't being tested at all. I
didn't do this because creating the Value::LazyRecord is a little tricky
and didn't want to risk messing it up, especially as the necessary
variables aren't available when creating the examples (like stack and
engine state).
Also take a look at NuLazyRecord's get_value implementation, or in
general. It uses an Arc<Mutex<_>> for the stack, which must be accessed
mutably for eval_block but get_value only provides us with a `&self`.
This is a sad state of affairs, but I don't know if there's a better
way.
On the same code path, we also have pipeline handling, and any pipeline
that isn't a Pipeline::Value will return Value::nothing. I believe
returning a Value::Error is probably better, or maybe some other
handling. Couldn't decide on which ShellError to settle with for that
branch.
The "unfortunate casualty" in the columns.rs file. I'm not sure just how
bad that is, though, I simply had to fight a little with the borrow
checker.
A few leftover comments like derives, comments about the now
non-existing serde requirements, and impls. I'll definitely get around
to those eventually but they're in atm
Should NuLazyRecord implement caching? I'm leaning heavily towards
**yes**, this was one of the main reasons not to use a record of
closures (besides convenience), but maybe it could be opt-out. I'd
wonder about its implementation too, but a simple way would be to move a
HashMap into the mutex state and keep cached values there.
# Description
Fixes: #8565
Here is another pr #7240 tried to address the issue, but it works in a
wrong way.
After this change `o+e>` won't redirect all stdout message then stderr
message and it works more like how bash does.
# User-Facing Changes
For the given python code:
```python
# test.py
import sys
print('aa'*300, flush=True)
print('bb'*999999, file=sys.stderr, flush=True)
print('cc'*300, flush=True)
```
Running `python test.py out+err> a.txt` shoudn't hang nushell, and
`a.txt` keeps output in the same order
## About the change
The core idea is that when doing lite-parsing, introduce a new variant
`LiteElement::SameTargetRedirection` if we meet `out+err>` redirection
token(which is generated by lex function),
During converting from lite block to block,
LiteElement::SameTargetRedirection will be converted to
PipelineElement::SameTargetRedirection.
Then in the block eval process, if we get
PipelineElement::SameTargetRedirection, we'll invoke `run-external` with
`--redirect-combine` flag, then pipe the result into save command
## What happened internally?
Take the following command as example:
`^ls o+e> log.txt`
lex parsing result(`Tokens`) are not changed, but `LiteBlock` and
`Block` is changed after this pr.
### LiteBlock before
```rust
LiteBlock {
block: [
LitePipeline { commands: [
Command(None, LiteCommand { comments: [], parts: [Span { start: 39041, end: 39044 }] }),
// actually the span of first Redirection is wrong too..
Redirection(Span { start: 39058, end: 39062 }, StdoutAndStderr, LiteCommand { comments: [], parts: [Span { start: 39050, end: 39057 }] }),
]
}]
}
```
### LiteBlock after
```rust
LiteBlock {
block: [
LitePipeline {
commands: [
SameTargetRedirection {
cmd: (None, LiteCommand { comments: [], parts: [Span { start: 147945, end: 147948}]}),
redirection: (Span { start: 147949, end: 147957 }, LiteCommand { comments: [], parts: [Span { start: 147958, end: 147965 }]})
}
]
}
]
}
```
### Block before
```rust
Pipeline {
elements: [
Expression(None, Expression {
expr: ExternalCall(Expression { expr: String("ls"), span: Span { start: 39042, end: 39044 }, ty: String, custom_completion: None }, [], false),
span: Span { start: 39041, end: 39044 },
ty: Any, custom_completion: None
}),
Redirection(Span { start: 39058, end: 39062 }, StdoutAndStderr, Expression { expr: String("out.txt"), span: Span { start: 39050, end: 39057 }, ty: String, custom_completion: None })] }
```
### Block after
```rust
Pipeline {
elements: [
SameTargetRedirection {
cmd: (None, Expression {
expr: ExternalCall(Expression { expr: String("ls"), span: Span { start: 147946, end: 147948 }, ty: String, custom_completion: None}, [], false),
span: Span { start: 147945, end: 147948},
ty: Any, custom_completion: None
}),
redirection: (Span { start: 147949, end: 147957}, Expression {expr: String("log.txt"), span: Span { start: 147958, end: 147965 },ty: String,custom_completion: None}
}
]
}
```
# Tests + Formatting
Don't forget to add tests that cover your changes.
Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
- `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting (`cargo
fmt --all` applies these changes)
- `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used -A
clippy::needless_collect` to check that you're using the standard code
style
- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass
- `cargo run -- crates/nu-utils/standard_library/tests.nu` to run the
tests for the standard library
> **Note**
> from `nushell` you can also use the `toolkit` as follows
> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
# After Submitting
If your PR had any user-facing changes, update [the
documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
PR is merged, if necessary. This will help us keep the docs up to date.
# Description
As title, when I run clippy locally, I get something like following
warning:
<img width="1383" alt="Screenshot 2023-05-15 at 22 34 57"
src="https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/22256154/4d4254bc-9e42-437e-9169-d15e9a97aa57">
This pr is going to fix it
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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- `cargo run -- crates/nu-std/tests/run.nu` to run the tests for the
standard library
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# Description
Bump nushell to 0.80.1 development version
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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# After Submitting
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# Description
closes#8934
this pr improves the diagnostic emitted when the name and parameters of
either `def`, `def-env` or `extern` are not separated by a space
```nu
Error:
× no space between name and parameters
╭─[entry #1:1:1]
1 │ def err[] {}
· ▲
· ╰── expected space
╰────
help: consider adding a space between the `def` command's name and its parameters
```
from
```nu
Error: nu::parser::missing_positional
× Missing required positional argument.
╭─[entry #1:1:1]
1 │ def err[] {}
╰────
help: Usage: def <def_name> <params> <body>
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jelle Besseling <jelle@pingiun.com>
(*third* try at posting this PR, #9104, like #9084, got polluted with
unrelated commits. I'm never going to pull from the github feature
branch again!)
# Description
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Show parameter defaults in scope command signature, where they're
available for display by help.
per https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/8928.
I found unexpected ramifications in one completer (NuHelpCompleter) and
plugins, which both use the flag-formatting routine from builtin help.
For the moment I made the minimum necessary changes to get the mainline
scenario to pass tests and run. But we should circle back on what to do
with plugins and help completer..
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
1. New `parameter_default` column to `signatures` table in
`$nu.scope.commands`
It is populated with whatever parameters can be defaulted: currently
positional args and named flags.
2. Built in help (both `help <command>` and `<command> --help` will
display the defaults
3. Help completer will display defaults for flags, but not for
positionals.
Example:
A custom command with some default parameters:
```
〉cat ~/work/dflts.nu
# sample function to show defaults in help
export def main [
arg1: string # mandatory positional
arg2:string=abc # optional positional
--switch # no default here
--named:int # named flag, no default
--other:string=def # flag
--hard:record<foo:int bar:string, bas:bool> # default can be compound type
= {foo:22, bar:"other worlds", bas:false}
] { {arg1: $arg1,
arg2: $arg2,
switch: $switch,
named: $named,
other: $other,
hard: $hard, }
}
〉use ~/work/dflts.nu
〉$nu.scope.commands | where name == 'dflts' | get signatures.0.any | reject short_flag description custom_completion
╭───┬────────────────┬────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────┬─────────────┬───────────────────────────╮
│ # │ parameter_name │ parameter_type │ syntax_shape │ is_optional │ parameter_default │
├───┼────────────────┼────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼─────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ 0 │ │ input │ any │ false │ │
│ 1 │ arg1 │ positional │ string │ false │ │
│ 2 │ arg2 │ positional │ string │ true │ abc │
│ 3 │ switch │ switch │ │ true │ │
│ 4 │ named │ named │ int │ true │ │
│ 5 │ other │ named │ string │ true │ def │
│ 6 │ hard │ named │ record<foo: int, bar: string, bas: bool> │ true │ ╭───────┬───────────────╮ │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ foo │ 22 │ │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ bar │ other worlds │ │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ bas │ false │ │
│ │ │ │ │ │ ╰───────┴───────────────╯ │
│ 7 │ │ output │ any │ false │ │
╰───┴────────────────┴────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────┴─────────────┴───────────────────────────╯
〉help dflts
sample function to show defaults in help
Usage:
> dflts {flags} <arg1> (arg2)
Flags:
--switch - switch -- no default here
--named <Int> - named flag, typed, but no default
--other <String> - flag with default (default: 'def')
--hard <Record([("foo", Int), ("bar", String), ("bas", Boolean)])> - default can be compound type (default: {foo: 22, bar: 'other worlds', bas: false})
-h, --help - Display the help message for this command
Parameters:
arg1 <string>: mandatory positional
arg2 <string>: optional positional (optional, default: 'abc')
```
Compared to (relevant bits of) help output previously:
```
Flags:
-h, --help - Display the help message for this command
-, --switch - no default here
-, --named <int> - named flag, no default
-, --other <string> - flag
-, --hard <record<foo: int, bar: string, bas: bool>> - default can be compound type
Signatures:
<any> | dflts <string> <string> -> <any>
Parameters:
arg1 <string>: mandatory positional
(optional) arg2 <string>: optional positional
```
# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
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# Description
Follow-up of #8940. As @bobhy pointed out, it makes sense for the
behaviour of flags to match the one for positional arguments, where
default values are of type `Option<Value>` instead of
`Option<Expression>`.
# User-Facing Changes
The same ones from the original PR:
- Flag default values will now be parsed as constants.
- If the default value is not a constant, a parser error is displayed.
# Tests + Formatting
A [new
test](e34e2d35f4/src/tests/test_engine.rs (L338-L344))
has been added to verify the new restriction.
# Description
This PR impacts the nushell sqlite history only.
This is the first PR that enables history isolation in nushell for the
sqlite history. Hopefully, we can continue building on this.
This PR allows "history isolation" which means that other nushell
session's history won't be available in the current session when using
the uparrow/downarrow history navigation. This change only impacts the
uparrow downarrow history navigation.
What remains to be done is making ctrl+r history menu respect this
setting too. Right now, the history menu will still show you all entries
from all sessions.
The history command also shows all history items from all sessions. This
may remain unchanged since you can just filter by history session right
now.
This also fixes a bug where the session id is 0 in the sqlite history
since my April 18th reedline PR.
Closes#9064
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
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- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass
- `cargo run -- crates/nu-std/tests/run.nu` to run the tests for the
standard library
> **Note**
> from `nushell` you can also use the `toolkit` as follows
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> ```
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# After Submitting
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# Description
Fixes#8939.
# User-Facing Changes
- Parameter default values will now be parsed as constants.
- If the default value is not a constant, a parser error is displayed.
# Tests + Formatting
The [only affected
test](d42c2b2dbc/src/tests/test_engine.rs (L325-L328))
has been updated to reflect the new behavior.
# Description
follow up to #8529
cleaned up version of #8892
- the original syntax is okay
```nu
def okay [rec: record] {}
```
- you can now add type annotations for fields if you know
them before hand
```nu
def okay [rec: record<name: string>] {}
```
- you can specify multiple fields
```nu
def okay [person: record<name: string age: int>] {}
# an optional comma is allowed
def okay [person: record<name: string, age: int>] {}
```
- if annotations are specified, any use of the command will be type
checked against the specified type
```nu
def unwrap [result: record<ok: bool, value: any>] {}
unwrap {ok: 2, value: "value"}
# errors with
Error: nu::parser::type_mismatch
× Type mismatch.
╭─[entry #4:1:1]
1 │ unwrap {ok: 2, value: "value"}
· ───────┬─────
· ╰── expected record<ok: bool, value: any>, found record<ok: int, value: string>
╰────
```
> here the error is in the `ok` field, since `any` is coerced into any
type
> as a result `unwrap {ok: true, value: "value"}` is okay
- the key must be a string, either quoted or unquoted
```nu
def err [rec: record<{}: list>] {}
# errors with
Error:
× `record` type annotations key not string
╭─[entry #7:1:1]
1 │ def unwrap [result: record<{}: bool, value: any>] {}
· ─┬
· ╰── must be a string
╰────
```
- a key doesn't have to have a type in which case it is assumed to be
`any`
```nu
def okay [person: record<name age>] {}
def okay [person: record<name: string age>] {}
```
- however, if you put a colon, you have to specify a type
```nu
def err [person: record<name: >] {}
# errors with
Error: nu::parser::parse_mismatch
× Parse mismatch during operation.
╭─[entry #12:1:1]
1 │ def unwrap [res: record<name: >] { $res }
· ┬
· ╰── expected type after colon
╰────
```
# User-Facing Changes
**[BREAKING CHANGES]**
- this change adds a field to `SyntaxShape::Record` so any plugins that
used it will have to update and include the field. though if you are
unsure of the type the record expects, `SyntaxShape::Record(vec![])`
will suffice
# Description
This PR changes the `ast` command to be able to output `--json` as well
as `nuon` (default) with "pretty" and "minified" output. I'm hoping this
functionality will be usable in the vscode extension for semantic
tokenization and highlighting.
# User-Facing Changes
There's a new `--json`/`-j` option. Prior version output of nuon is
maintained as default.
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
Close: #8988
Thanks to new crossterm version, nushell can support blink cursor shape.
It can be config with the following value:
1. blink_block
2. blink_line
3. blink_underscore
And original block, line, underscore will be steady. It also fixes wrong
shape of `underscore`.
# User-Facing Changes
Here is a little breaking change, before the change: `line` cursor shape
is blinking line, but after this pr, it will be `steady line`. To make a
blink line, we need to change the value to `blink_line`.
But I think it's ok, because after the change, we have a good naming
convention about the name of shape
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
This does a lookup in the cache of parsed files to see if a span can be
found for a file that was previously loaded with the same contents, then
uses that span to find the parsed block for that file. The end result
should, in theory, be identical but doesn't require any reparsing or
creating new blocks/new definitions that aren't needed.
This drops the sg.nu benchmark from:
```
╭───┬───────────────────╮
│ 0 │ 280ms 606µs 208ns │
│ 1 │ 282ms 654µs 416ns │
│ 2 │ 252ms 640µs 541ns │
│ 3 │ 250ms 940µs 41ns │
│ 4 │ 241ms 216µs 375ns │
│ 5 │ 257ms 310µs 583ns │
│ 6 │ 196ms 739µs 416ns │
╰───┴───────────────────╯
```
to:
```
╭───┬───────────────────╮
│ 0 │ 118ms 698µs 125ns │
│ 1 │ 121ms 327µs │
│ 2 │ 121ms 873µs 500ns │
│ 3 │ 124ms 94µs 708ns │
│ 4 │ 113ms 733µs 291ns │
│ 5 │ 108ms 663µs 125ns │
│ 6 │ 63ms 482µs 625ns │
╰───┴───────────────────╯
```
I was hoping to also see some startup time improvements, but I didn't
notice much there.
# User-Facing Changes
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# Tests + Formatting
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# After Submitting
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