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# Description
Bump miette from 5.10.0 to 7.0.0
# User-Facing Changes
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---------
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
# Description
Clippy fixes for
[items_after_test_module](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/items_after_test_module)
# User-Facing Changes
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Fix#9878
# User-Facing Changes
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Writing comments in match blocks will be allowed.
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# Description
When using a table (or a list of records) as input to `input list`,
allow specifying a cellpath for the field/column to use as the display
value.
For instance, at the moment, using a table as input results in the
following:
```
❯ [[name price]; [Banana 12] [Kiwi 4] [Pear 7]] | input list
> {name: Banana, price: 12}
{name: Kiwi, price: 4}
{name: Pear, price: 7}
```
With the new `--display` flag introduced by this PR, you can do the
following:
```
❯ [[name price]; [Banana 12] [Kiwi 4] [Pear 7]] | input list -d name
> Banana
Kiwi
Pear
```
Note that it doesn't change what gets returned after selecting an item:
the full row/record is still returned.
# User-Facing Changes
A new optional flag is allowed.
# Tests + Formatting
# After Submitting
# Description
Does a little cleanup in `record.rs`:
- Makes the `record!` macro more hygienic.
- Converts regular comments to doc comments from #11718.
- Converts the `Record` iterators to new types.
# Description
Fixes: https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/11762
The auto-completion is somehow annoying if a path contains a glob
pattern, let's say if user type `ls` and it auto-completes to <code>ls
`[a] bc.txt`</code>, and user can't list the file because it's backtick
quoted.
This pr is going to fix it.
# User-Facing Changes
### Before
```
❯ | ls
`[a] bc.txt` `a bc`
```
### After
```
❯ | ls
"[a] bc.txt" `a bc`
```
# Tests + Formatting
Done
# After Submitting
NaN
# Description
Previously, only direcly-recursive calls were checked for recursion
depth. But most recursive calls in nushell are mutually recursive since
expressions like `for`, `where`, `try` and `do` all execute a separte
block.
```nushell
def f [] {
do { f }
}
```
Calling `f` would crash nushell with a stack overflow.
I think the only general way to prevent such a stack overflow is to
enforce a maximum call stack depth instead of only disallowing directly
recursive calls.
This commit also moves that logic into `eval_call()` instead of
`eval_block()` because the recursion limit is tracked in the `Stack`,
but not all blocks are evaluated in a new stack. Incrementing the
recursion depth of the caller's stack would permanently increment that
for all future calls.
Fixes#11667
# User-Facing Changes
Any function call can now fail with `recursion_limit_reached` instead of
just directly recursive calls. Mutually-recursive calls no longer crash
nushell.
# After Submitting
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# Description
This PR makes the `char` command a `const` command. The only real
changes are to get the arguments different and I extracted code into
functions so they could be called via run and run_cost. No algorithms
were harmed in the making of this PR.
# User-Facing Changes
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# Description
This PR help `ansi strip` work on more nushell values. It does this by
converting values like filesize and dates to strings. This may not be
precisely correct but I think it does more what the user expects.
### Before
![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/343840/768ffbb2-e3d7-424e-8e3b-1d20c9aa7d91)
### After
![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/343840/6141aebb-481f-45a9-9cb7-084ca9ca1ea5)
# User-Facing Changes
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# Description
This PR allows `into value` to recognize ints and change them into file
sizes if you prefer.
### Before
```nushell
❯ free | ^column -t | lines | update 0 {$"type ($in)"} | to text | ^column -t | detect columns | into value
╭─#─┬─type──┬──total───┬──used───┬───free───┬shared┬buff/cache┬available─╮
│ 0 │ Mem: │ 24614036 │ 3367680 │ 16196240 │ 3688 │ 5449736 │ 21246356 │
│ 1 │ Swap: │ 6291456 │ 0 │ 6291456 │ │ │ │
╰───┴───────┴──────────┴─────────┴──────────┴──────┴──────────┴──────────╯
```
### After
```nushell
❯ free | ^column -t | lines | update 0 {$"type ($in)"} | to text | ^column -t | detect columns | into value --prefer-filesizes
╭─#─┬─type──┬──total──┬──used──┬──free───┬─shared─┬buff/cache┬available╮
│ 0 │ Mem: │ 24.6 MB │ 3.4 MB │ 16.2 MB │ 3.7 KB │ 5.4 MB │ 21.2 MB │
│ 1 │ Swap: │ 6.3 MB │ 0 B │ 6.3 MB │ │ │ │
╰───┴───────┴─────────┴────────┴─────────┴────────┴──────────┴─────────╯
```
# User-Facing Changes
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# Description
Bump nushell version to the dev version of 0.90.2
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Merge after https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/11786
# Description
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See full release notes:
https://github.com/nushell/reedline/releases/tag/v0.29.0
# Description
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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# Description
This PR changes `into int` and `into filesize` so that they allow
thousands separators.
### Before
```nushell
❯ '1,000' | into filesize
Error: nu:🐚:cant_convert
× Can't convert to int.
╭─[entry #1:1:1]
1 │ '1,000' | into filesize
· ───┬───
· ╰── can't convert string to int
╰────
❯ '1,000' | into int
Error: nu:🐚:cant_convert
× Can't convert to int.
╭─[entry #2:1:1]
1 │ '1,000' | into int
· ────┬───
· ╰── can't convert string to int
╰────
help: string "1,000" does not represent a valid integer
```
### After
```nushell
❯ '1,000' | into filesize
1.0 KB
❯ '1,000' | into int
1000
```
This works by getting the system locale and from that, determining what
the thousands separator is. So, hopefully, this will work across
locales.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
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Fixes https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/11716
The problem is in our [record creation
API](0d518bf813/crates/nu-protocol/src/value/record.rs (L33))
which panics if the numbers of columns and values are different. I added
a safe variant that returns a `Result` and used it in the `rotate`
command.
## TODO in another PR:
Go through all `from_raw_cols_vals_unchecked()` (this includes the
`record!` macro which uses the unchecked version) and make sure that
either
a) it is guaranteed the number of cols and vals is the same, or
b) convert the call to `from_raw_cols_vals()`
Reason: Nushell should never panic.
# User-Facing Changes
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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> ```
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Fixes https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/11711
Previously, syntax `def a [] (echo 4)` was allowed to parse and then
failed with panic duting eval.
Current error:
```
Error: nu::parser::parse_mismatch
× Parse mismatch during operation.
╭─[entry #1:1:1]
1 │ def a [] (echo 4)
· ────┬───
· ╰── expected definition body closure { ... }
╰────
```
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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## Problem
I tried converting one of my Rust web scrapers to Nushell just to see
how it would be done, but quickly ran into an issue that proved annoying
to fix without diving into the source.
For instance, let's say we have the following HTML
```html
<p>Hello there, <span style="color: red;">World</span></p>
```
and we want to extract only the text within the `p` element, but not the
`span`. With the current version of nu_plugin_query, if we run this code
```nushell
echo `<p>Hello there, <span style="color: red;">World</span></p>` | query web -q "p" | get 0
# returns "Hello there, World"
# but we want only "Hello there, "
```
we will get back a `list<string>` that contains 1 string `Hello there,
World`.
To avoid scraping the span, we would have to do something like this
```nushell
const html = `<p>Hello there, <span style="color: red;">World</span></p>`
$html
| query web -q "p"
| get 0
| str replace ($html | query web -q "p > span" | get 0) ""
# returns "Hello there, "
```
In other words, we would have to make a sub scrape of the text we
*don't* want in order to subtract it from the text we *do* want.
## Solution
I didn't like this behavior, so I decided to change it. I modified the
`execute_selector_query` function to collect all text nodes in the HTML
element matching the query. Now `query web --query` will return a
`list<list<string>>`
```nushell
echo `<p>Hello there, <span style="color: red;">World</span></p>` | query web -q "p" | get 0 | to json --raw
# returns ["Hello there, ","World"]
```
This also brings `query web --query`'s behavior more in line with
[scraper's
ElementRef::text()](https://docs.rs/scraper/latest/scraper/element_ref/struct.ElementRef.html#method.text)
which "Returns an iterator over descendent text nodes", allowing you to
choose how much of an element's text you want to scrape without
resorting to string substitutions.
## Consequences
As this is a user-facing change, the usage examples will produce
different results than before. For example
```nushell
http get https://phoronix.com | query web --query 'header'
```
will return a list of lists of 1 string each, whereas before it was just
a list of strings.
I only modified the 3rd example
```nushell
# old
http get https://www.nushell.sh | query web --query 'h2, h2 + p' | group 2 | each {rotate --ccw tagline description} | flatten
# new
http get https://www.nushell.sh | query web --query 'h2, h2 + p' | each {str join} | group 2 | each {rotate --ccw tagline description} | flatten
```
to make it behave like before because I thought this one ought to show
the same results as before.
However, the second reason I changed the 3rd example is because it
otherwise panics! If we run the original 3rd example with my
modifications, we get a panic
```
thread 'main' panicked at crates/nu-protocol/src/value/record.rs:34:9:
assertion `left == right` failed
left: 2
right: 17
```
This happens because `rotate` receives a list of lists where the inner
lists have a different number of elements.
However this panic is unrelated to the changes I've made, because it can
be triggered easily without using the plugin. For instance
```nushell
# this is fine
[[[one] [two]] [[three] [four]]] | each {rotate --ccw tagline description}
# this panics!
[[[one] [two]] [[three] [four five]]] | each {rotate --ccw tagline description}
```
Though beyond the scope of this PR, I thought I'd mention this bug since
I found it while testing the usage examples. However, I intend to make a
proper issue about it tomorrow.
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
`query web --query "css selector"` now returns a `list<list<string>>`
instead of a `list<string>` to make it more in line with [scraper's
ElementRef::text()](https://docs.rs/scraper/latest/scraper/element_ref/struct.ElementRef.html#method.text).
# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
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check that you're using the standard code style
- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass (on Windows make
sure to [enable developer
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
> **Note**
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> ```bash
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automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
-->
I ran `cargo fmt --all -- --check`, `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D
warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used` and the tests in the plugin.
# After Submitting
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documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
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-->
PR that updates the documentation to match the new 3rd example:
https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io/pull/1235
# Description
This PR updates to the latest reedline after the column menu fix.
# 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
This PR tries to make `query web` more resilient and easier to debug
with the `--inspect` parameter when trying to scrape tables. Previously
it would just fail, now at least it tries to give you a hint.
This is some example output now of when something went wrong.
```
❯ http get https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_India_by_population | query web --as-table [Rank City 'Population(2011)[3]' 'Population(2001)[3][a]' 'State or union territory'] --inspect
Passed in Column Headers = ["Rank", "City", "Population(2011)[3]", "Population(2001)[3][a]", "State or union territory"]
First 2048 HTML chars = <!DOCTYPE html>
<html class="client-nojs vector-feature-language-in-header-enabled vector-feature-language-in-main-page-header-disabled vector-feature-sticky-header-disabled vector-feature-page-tools-pinned-disabled vector-feature-toc-pinned-clientpref-1 vector-feature-main-menu-pinned-disabled vector-feature-limited-width-clientpref-1 vector-feature-limited-width-content-enabled vector-feature-custom-font-size-clientpref-0 vector-feature-client-preferences-disabled vector-feature-client-prefs-pinned-disabled vector-toc-available" lang="en" dir="ltr">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<title>List of cities in India by population - Wikipedia</title>
<script>(function(){var className="client-js vector-feature-language-in-header-enabled vector-feature-language-in-main-page-header-disabled vector-feature-sticky-header-disabled vector-feature-page-tools-pinned-disabled vector-feature-toc-pinned-clientpref-1 vector-feature-main-menu-pinned-disabled vector-feature-limited-width-clientpref-1 vector-feature-limited-width-content-enabled vector-feature-custom-font-size-clientpref-0 vector-feature-client-preferences-disabled vector-feature-client-prefs-pinned-disabled vector-toc-available";var cookie=document.cookie.match(/(?:^|; )enwikimwclientpreferences=([^;]+)/);if(cookie){cookie[1].split('%2C').forEach(function(pref){className=className.replace(new RegExp('(^| )'+pref.replace(/-clientpref-\w+$|[^\w-]+/g,'')+'-clientpref-\\w+( |$)'),'$1'+pref+'$2');});}document.documentElement.className=className;}());RLCONF={"wgBreakFrames":false,"wgSeparatorTransformTable":["",""],"wgDigitTransformTable":["",""],"wgDefaultDateFormat":"dmy","wgMonthNames":["",
"January","February","March","April","May","June","July","August","September","October","November","December"],"wgRequestId":"9ecdad8f-2dbd-4245-b54d-9c57aea5ca45","wgCanonicalNamespace":"","wgCanonicalSpecialPageName":false,"wgNamespaceNumber":0,"wgPageName":"List_of_cities_in_India_by_population","wgTitle":"List of cities in India by population","wgCurRevisionId":1192093210,"wgRev
Potential HTML Headers = ["City", "Population(2011)[3]", "Population(2001)[3][a]", "State or unionterritory", "Ref"]
Potential HTML Headers = ["City", "Population(2011)[5]", "Population(2001)", "State or unionterritory"]
Potential HTML Headers = [".mw-parser-output .navbar{display:inline;font-size:88%;font-weight:normal}.mw-parser-output .navbar-collapse{float:left;text-align:left}.mw-parser-output .navbar-boxtext{word-spacing:0}.mw-parser-output .navbar ul{display:inline-block;white-space:nowrap;line-height:inherit}.mw-parser-output .navbar-brackets::before{margin-right:-0.125em;content:\"[ \"}.mw-parser-output .navbar-brackets::after{margin-left:-0.125em;content:\" ]\"}.mw-parser-output .navbar li{word-spacing:-0.125em}.mw-parser-output .navbar a>span,.mw-parser-output .navbar a>abbr{text-decoration:inherit}.mw-parser-output .navbar-mini abbr{font-variant:small-caps;border-bottom:none;text-decoration:none;cursor:inherit}.mw-parser-output .navbar-ct-full{font-size:114%;margin:0 7em}.mw-parser-output .navbar-ct-mini{font-size:114%;margin:0 4em}vtePopulation of cities in India"]
Potential HTML Headers = ["vteGeography of India"]
╭──────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────────────────────────╮
│ Rank │ error: no data found (column name may be incorrect) │
│ City │ error: no data found (column name may be incorrect) │
│ Population(2011)[3] │ error: no data found (column name may be incorrect) │
│ Population(2001)[3][a] │ error: no data found (column name may be incorrect) │
│ State or union territory │ error: no data found (column name may be incorrect) │
╰──────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────────────────────────╯
```
The key here is to look at the `Passed in Column Headers` and compare
them to the `Potential HTML Headers` and couple that with the error
table at the bottom should give you a hint that, in this situation,
wikipedia has changed the column names, yet again. So we need to update
our query web statement's tables to get closer to what we want.
```
❯ http get https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_India_by_population | query web --as-table [City 'Population(2011)[3]' 'Population(2001)[3][a]' 'State or unionterritory' 'Ref']
╭─#──┬───────City───────┬─Population(2011)[3]─┬─Population(2001)[3][a]─┬─State or unionterritory─┬──Ref───╮
│ 0 │ Mumbai │ 12,442,373 │ 11,978,450 │ Maharashtra │ [3] │
│ 1 │ Delhi │ 11,034,555 │ 9,879,172 │ Delhi │ [3] │
│ 2 │ Bangalore │ 8,443,675 │ 5,682,293 │ Karnataka │ [3] │
│ 3 │ Hyderabad │ 6,993,262 │ 5,496,960 │ Telangana │ [3] │
│ 4 │ Ahmedabad │ 5,577,940 │ 4,470,006 │ Gujarat │ [3] │
│ 5 │ Chennai │ 4,646,732 │ 4,343,645 │ Tamil Nadu │ [3] │
│ 6 │ Kolkata │ 4,496,694 │ 4,580,546 │ West Bengal │ [3] │
│ 7 │ Surat │ 4,467,797 │ 2,788,126 │ Gujarat │ [3] │
│ 8 │ Pune │ 3,124,458 │ 2,538,473 │ Maharashtra │ [3] │
│ 9 │ Jaipur │ 3,046,163 │ 2,322,575 │ Rajasthan │ [3] │
│ 10 │ Lucknow │ 2,817,105 │ 2,185,927 │ Uttar Pradesh │ [3] │
│ 11 │ Kanpur │ 2,765,348 │ 2,551,337 │ Uttar Pradesh │ [3] │
│ 12 │ Nagpur │ 2,405,665 │ 2,052,066 │ Maharashtra │ [3] │
```
# 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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> **Note**
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-->
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Let's disable riscv64 build target temporarily to make release and
nightly-build workflow work, close#11604
We will add this target later if the related issue got fixed
# Description
Fixes: #11683
# User-Facing Changes
NaN
# Tests + Formatting
~~I don't think we need to add a test, or else it'll copy some file to
user's directory, it seems bad.~~
Done.
# After Submitting
NaN
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# Description
Fixes: https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/11677
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# User-Facing Changes
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# Tests + Formatting
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```
'https://example.com' | url parse | update scheme ssh | upda
te username user | url join
# => ssh://user@example.com/
'https://example.com' | url parse | update scheme ssh | upda
te password hackme | url join
# => ssh://example.com/
'https://example.com' | url parse | update scheme ssh | update username user | update password hackme | url join
# => ssh://user:hackme@example.com/
```
# After Submitting
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---------
Co-authored-by: Richard Westhaver <ellis@rwest.io>
While working on #11288 I was having some trouble tracking the main REPL
loop, so I've sent in a bunch of tiny refactorings on this branch.
These are almost all of the "move code from one place to another"
variety, and each commit is meant to be independent, _except for the
last one_, which is trying to be a bit more clever to handle the
decision of autocd'ing vs running a command. Feel free to just go
through each commit and cherry pick the ones that look good.
This leads to `evaluate_repl` going from ending on line 715 to ending on
line 395. Again, this is mostly just moving code around, but I think
this set of changes will make other changes around juggling the stack to
avoid cloning easier to review.
# Description
This PR rolls back the polars updates to 0.37.0 back to 0.36.2 since it
won't compile yet for some reason.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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# Description
This PR fixes `update cells` parameter `--columns`/`-c` so that it takes
a `SyntaxShape::List` instead of `SyntaxShape::Table`.
closes#11689
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
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check that you're using the standard code style
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sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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> ```
-->
# After Submitting
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# Description
This PR changes the `ansi` command to be a `const` command.
- ~~It's breaking because I found that I had to change the way `ansi` is
used in scripts a little bit.
https://github.com/nushell/nu_scripts/pull/751~~
- I had to change one of the examples because apparently `const` can't
be tested yet.
- ~~I'm not sure this is right at all
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/11682/files#diff-ba932369a40eb40d6e1985eac1c784af403dab4500a7f0568e593900bf6cd740R654-R655.
I just didn't want to duplicate a ton of code. Maybe if I duplicated the
code it wouldn't be a breaking change because it would have a run and
run_const?~~
- I had to add `opt_const` to CallExt.
/cc @kubouch Can you take a look at this? I'm a little iffy if I'm doing
this right, or even if we should do this at all.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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# After Submitting
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# Description
This PR uses `str::lines` to simplify the `lines` command (and one other
section of code). This has two main benefits:
1. We no longer need to use regex to split on lines, as `str::lines`
splits on `\r\n` or `\n`.
2. We no longer need to handle blank empty lines at the end. E.g.,
`str::lines` results in `["text"]` for both `"test\n"` and `"text"`.
These changes give a slight boost to performance for the following
benchmarks:
1. lines of `Value::String`:
```nushell
let data = open Cargo.lock
1..10000 | each { $data | timeit { lines } } | math avg
```
current main: 392µs
this PR: 270µs
2. lines of external stream:
```nushell
1..10000 | each { open Cargo.lock | timeit { lines } } | math avg
```
current main: 794µs
this PR: 489µs
# Description
Fixes: #11394
When run `^sleep 3` we have an `exit_code ListStream`, and when we press
ctrl-c, this `ListStream` will return None. But it's not expected,
because `exit_code` sender in `run_external` always send an exit code
out.
This pr is trying to fix the issue by introducing a `first_guard` into
ListStream, it will always generate a value from underlying stream if
`first_guard` is true, so it's guarantee to have at least one value to
return.
And the pr also do a little refactor, which makes use of
`ListStream::from_stream` rather than construct it manually.
# User-Facing Changes
## Before
```
> nu -c "^sleep 3" # press ctrl-c
> echo $env.LAST_EXIT_CODE
0
```
## After
```
> nu -c "^sleep 3" # press ctrl-c
> echo $env.LAST_EXIT_CODE
255
```
# Tests + Formatting
None, sorry that I don't think it's easy to test the ctrlc behavior.
# After Submitting
None
# Description
Adds the `--strict` flag for `from json` which will try to parse text
while following the exact JSON specification (e.g., no comments or
trailing commas allowed). Fixes issue #11548.
this PR should close#9105
# Description
I have implemented highlights for find which work for all strings. The
implementation also works for lists, but with exceptions (for example,
it does not work for list of lists). The implementation is also not
implemented for --regex.
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgiana <geo@LAPTOP-EQP6H37N>
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
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This fixes an issue brought up by nihilander in
[Discord](https://discord.com/channels/601130461678272522/614593951969574961/1201594105986285649).
# Description
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Nushell panics when the spread operator is used like this (the
`...$rest` shouldn't actually be parsed as a spread operator at all):
```nu
$ def foo [...rest: string] {...$rest}
$ foo bar baz
thread 'main' panicked at /root/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/nu-protocol-0.89.0/src/signature.rs:650:9:
Internal error: can't run a predeclaration without a body
stack backtrace:
0: rust_begin_unwind
1: core::panicking::panic_fmt
2: <nu_protocol::signature::Predeclaration as nu_protocol::engine::command::Command>::run
3: nu_engine::eval::eval_call
4: nu_engine::eval::eval_expression_with_input
5: nu_engine::eval::eval_element_with_input
6: nu_engine::eval::eval_block
7: nu_cli::util::eval_source
8: nu_cli::repl::evaluate_repl
9: nu::run::run_repl
10: nu::main
note: Some details are omitted, run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=full` for a verbose backtrace.
```
The problem was that whenever the parser saw something like `{...$`,
`{...(`, or `{...[`, it would treat that as a record with a spread
expression, ignoring the syntax shape of the block it was parsing. This
should now be fixed, and the snippet above instead gives the following
error:
```nu
Error: nu:🐚:external_command
× External command failed
╭─[entry #1:1:1]
1 │ def foo [...rest] {...$rest}
· ────┬───
· ╰── executable was not found
╰────
help: No such file or directory (os error 2)
```
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
Stuff like `do { ...$rest }` will now try to run a command `...$rest`
rather than complaining that variable `$rest` doesn't exist.
# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
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check that you're using the standard code style
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sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` 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
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Sorry about the issue, I am not touching the parser again for a long
time :)
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# Description
A bit hackish but this fixes the precedence of the `not` operator.
Before: `not false and false` => true
Now: `not false and false` => false
Fixes#11633
# 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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check that you're using the standard code style
- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass (on Windows make
sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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# After Submitting
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---------
Co-authored-by: Jakub Žádník <kubouch@gmail.com>
# Description
There are times where explicitly specifying a schema for a dataframe is
needed such as:
- Opening CSV and JSON lines files and needing provide more information
to polars to keep it from failing or in a desire to override default
type conversion
- When converting a nushell value to a dataframe and wanting to override
the default conversion behaviors.
This pull requests provides:
- A flag to allow specifying a schema when using dfr into-df
- A flag to allow specifying a schema when using dfr open that works for
CSV and JSON types
- A new command `dfr schema` which displays schema information and will
allow display support schema dtypes
Schema is specified creating a record that has the key value and the
dtype. Examples usages:
```
{a:1, b:{a:2}} | dfr into-df -s {a: u8, b: {a: i32}} | dfr schema
{a: 1, b: {a: [1 2 3]}, c: [a b c]} | dfr into-df -s {a: u8, b: {a: list<u64>}, c: list<str>} | dfr schema
dfr open -s {pid: i32, ppid: i32, name: str, status: str, cpu: f64, mem: i64, virtual: i64} /tmp/ps.jsonl | dfr schema
```
Supported dtypes:
null
bool
u8
u16
u32
u64
i8
i16
i32
i64
f32
f64
str
binary
date
datetime[time_unit: (ms, us, ns) timezone (optional)]
duration[time_unit: (ms, us, ns)]
time
object
unknown
list[dtype]
structs are also supported but are specified via another record:
{a: u8, b: {d: str}}
Another feature with the dfr schema command is that it returns the data
back in a format that can be passed to provide a valid schema that can
be passed in as schema argument:
<img width="638" alt="Screenshot 2024-01-29 at 10 23 58"
src="https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/56345/b49c3bff-5cda-4c86-975a-dfd91d991373">
---------
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
# Description
This PR updates nushell to the latest reedline main to fix the quick
completions.
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# 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
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check that you're using the standard code style
- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass (on Windows make
sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
> **Note**
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> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
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# After Submitting
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the match-text style (https://github.com/nushell/reedline/pull/730) is
now configurable via the config.nu file.
the option ``correct_cursor_pos`` can now also be set in the config.nu
file.
# Description
This pr is a follow up to #11621, it introduces a `str escape-glob`
command as a workaround for the case:
```nushell
let f = "a[123]b"
ls $f
```
It will glob `a[123]b`, we can get rid of the behavior through `str
escape-glob` command:
```nushll
let f = "a[123]b"
ls ($f | str escape-glob)
```
It's more useful in the `each` context:
`ls | get name | str escape-glob | each {|it| ls $it}`
# User-Facing Changes
NaN
# Tests + Formatting
Done
# After Submitting
---------
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>