nushell/crates/nu-std
Douglas 49d86855ce
Fixes clip copy stripping control characters when de-ansifying (#15428)
Fixes #15414 by changing the method used to de-ansi-fy the input. Control characters will now be kept when using `clip copy`, but ANSI escape codes will be removed (when not using `--ansi (-a)`)
2025-03-28 19:15:17 -04:00
..
src Custom command attributes (#14906) 2025-02-11 06:34:51 -06:00
std Fix path add bug when given a record (#15379) 2025-03-22 08:42:20 -04:00
std-rfc Fixes clip copy stripping control characters when de-ansifying (#15428) 2025-03-28 19:15:17 -04:00
tests Fix path add bug when given a record (#15379) 2025-03-22 08:42:20 -04:00
Cargo.toml Bump to 0.103.1 dev version (#15347) 2025-03-19 00:12:01 -04:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Surprising symlink resolution for std path add (#13258) 2024-06-28 18:11:48 -05:00
LICENSE add LICENSE to nu-std (#8803) 2023-04-07 13:39:21 -07:00
README.md Change the usage misnomer to "description" (#13598) 2024-08-22 12:02:08 +02:00
testing.nu fix(test stdlib): scanning tests shouldn't be affected by user config (#15113) 2025-02-13 20:23:14 +01:00

Welcome to the standard library of `nushell`!

The standard library is a pure-nushell collection of custom commands which provide interactive utilities and building blocks for users writing casual scripts or complex applications.

To see what's here:

> use std
> scope commands | select name description | where name =~ "std "
#┬───────────name────────────┬───────────────────description───────────────────
0│std assert                 │Universal assert command
1│std assert equal           │Assert $left == $right
2│std assert error           │Assert that executing the code generates an error
3│std assert greater         │Assert $left > $right
4│std assert greater or equal│Assert $left >= $right
             ...                                     ...
─┴───────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────────────────────

🧰 Using the standard library in the REPL or in scripts

All commands in the standard library must be "imported" into the running environment (the interactive read-execute-print-loop (REPL) or a .nu script) using the use command.

You can choose to import the whole module, but then must refer to individual commands with a std prefix, e.g:

use std

std log debug "Running now"
std assert (1 == 2)

Or you can enumerate the specific commands you want to import and invoke them without the std prefix.

use std ["log debug" assert]

log debug "Running again"
assert (2 == 1)

This is probably the form of import you'll want to add to your env.nu for interactive use.

✏️ contribute to the standard library

You're invited to contribute to the standard library! See CONTRIBUTING.md for details