Commit Graph

92 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jakub Žádník
2b97bc54c5
Fix example for extern-wrapped (#10004)
Fixes example and some signature text of `extern-wrapped`.

# User-Facing Changes

Minor help text changes
2023-08-14 15:41:25 +02:00
Reilly Wood
0674d4960b
Fix match example whitespace (#9961)
I was looking up `match` documentation and noticed that the formatting
was a bit off for the last example (starts on the wrong line, is several
columns too far to the right).

## Before:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/26268125/cea55875-894c-442f-aa93-d5c18a0cdfa5)

## After:


![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/26268125/064c9f80-6a70-4748-a877-5344ec6e6a80)
2023-08-09 07:13:02 +02:00
Michael Angerman
b1974fae39
Categorification: move commands histogram and version out of the default category (#9946)
* histogram to chart
* version to core

This completes moving commands out of the *Default* category...

When you run 

```rust
nu -n --no-std-lib
```

```rust
help commands | where category == "default"
```

You now get an *Empty List* 😄
2023-08-07 09:23:53 -07:00
WindSoilder
f6033ac5af
Module: support defining const and use const variables inside of function (#9773)
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# Description
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Relative: #8248 

After this pr, user can define const variable inside a module.

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/22256154/e3e03e56-c4b5-4144-a944-d1b20bec1cbd)

And user can export const variables, the following screenshot shows how
it works (it follows
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/8248#issuecomment-1637442612):

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/22256154/b2c14760-3f27-41cc-af77-af70a4367f2a)

## About the change
1. To make module support const, we need to change `parse_module_block`
to support `const` keyword.
2. To suport export `const`, we need to make module tracking variables,
so we add `variables` attribute to `Module`
3. During eval, the const variable may not exists in `stack`, because we
don't eval `const` when we define a module, so we need to find variables
which are already registered in `engine_state`

## One more thing to note about the const value.
Consider the following code
```
module foo { const b = 3; export def bar [] { $b } }
use foo bar
const b = 4;
bar
```
The result will be 3 (which is defined in module) rather than 4. I think
it's expected behavior.

It's something like [dynamic
binding](https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Dynamic-Binding-Tips.html)
vs [lexical
binding](https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Lexical-Binding.html)
in lisp like language, and lexical binding should be right behavior
which generates more predicable result, and it doesn't introduce really
subtle bugs in nushell code.

What if user want dynamic-binding?(For example: the example code returns
`4`)
There is no way to do this, user should consider passing the value as
argument to custom command rather than const.

## TODO
- [X] adding tests for the feature.
- [X] support export const out of module to use.

# User-Facing Changes
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# Tests + Formatting
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2023-08-01 07:09:52 +08:00
Ian Manske
583ef8674e
Replace &Span with Span since Span is Copy (#9770)
# Description
`Span` is `Copy`, so we probably should not be passing references of
`Span` around. This PR replaces all instances of `&Span` with `Span`,
copying spans where necessary.

# User-Facing Changes
This alters some public functions to take `Span` instead of `&Span` as
input. Namely, `EngineState::get_span_contents`,
`nu_protocol::extract_value`, a bunch of the math commands, and
`Gstat::gstat`.
2023-07-31 21:47:46 +02:00
Darren Schroeder
955de76116
bump to dev version 0.83.2 (#9866)
# Description

This PR bumps the development version of nushell to version 0.83.2.
2023-07-30 22:16:57 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
b2e191f836
Remove Signature.vectorizes_over_list entirely (#9777)
# Description
With the current typechecking logic this property has no effect.
It was only used in the example testing, and provided some indication of
this vectorizing property.
With #9742 all commands that previously declared it have explicit list
signatures. If we want to get it back in the future we can reconstruct
it from the signature.

Simplifies the example testing a bit.

# User-Facing Changes
Causes a breaking change for plugins that previously declared it. While
this causes a compile fail, this was already broken by our more
stringent type checking.
This will be a good reminder for plugin authors to update their
signature as well to reflect the more stringent type checking.
2023-07-26 23:34:43 +02:00
Darren Schroeder
88a890c11f
bump to dev version 0.83.1 (#9811)
# Description

This bumps nushell to the dev version of 0.83.1 and updates the default
config files with the proper version.

# User-Facing Changes
# Tests + Formatting
# After Submitting
2023-07-26 19:02:13 +02:00
JT
a33b5fe6ce
bump to 0.83 (#9802)
# Description

Bump 0.83

# 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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2023-07-26 07:36:36 +12:00
Stefan Holderbach
d7ebe5fdc3
Update nu-ansi-term, lscolors, and reedline (#9787)
# Description
Now use `nu-ansi-term` 0.49
Small adjustments to accommodate breaking changes.


# User-Facing Changes
None
2023-07-24 13:16:18 +02:00
mike
5bfec20244
add match guards (#9621)
## description

this pr adds [match
guards](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/match-expr.html#match-guards)
to match patterns
```nushell
match $x {
   _ if $x starts-with 'nu' => {},
   $x => {}
}
```

these work pretty much like rust's match guards, with few limitations:

1. multiple matches using the `|` are not (yet?) supported
 
```nushell
match $num {
    0 | _ if (is-odd $num) => {},
    _ => {}
}
```

2. blocks cannot be used as guards, (yet?)

```nushell
match $num {
    $x if { $x ** $x == inf } => {},
     _ => {}
}
```

## checklist
- [x] syntax
- [x] syntax highlighting[^1]
- [x] semantics
- [x] tests
- [x] clean up

[^1]: defered for another pr
2023-07-16 12:25:12 +12:00
JT
57d96c09fa
fix input signature of let/mut (#9695)
# Description

This updates `let` and `mut` to allow for any input. This lets them
typecheck any collection they do.

For example, this now compiles:

```
def foo []: [int -> int, string -> int] {
  let x = $in
  if ($x | describe) == "int" { 3 } else { 4 }
}

100 | foo
```

# 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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2023-07-15 19:41:48 +12:00
JT
53ae03bd63
Custom command input/output types (#9690)
# Description

This adds input/output types to custom commands. These are input/output
pairs that related an input type to an output type.

For example (a single int-to-int input/output pair):

```
def foo []: int -> int { ... }
```

You can also have multiple input/output pairs:
```
def bar []: [int -> string, string -> list<string>] { ... }
```

These types are checked during definition time in the parser. If the
block does not match the type, the user will get a parser error.

This `:` to begin the input/output signatures should immediately follow
the argument signature as shown above.

The PR also improves type parsing by re-using the shape parser. The
shape parser is now the canonical way to parse types/shapes in user
code.

This PR also splits `extern` into `extern`/`extern-wrapped` because of
the parser limitation that a multi-span argument (which Signature now
is) can't precede an optional argument. `extern-wrapped` now takes the
required block that was previously optional.

# User-Facing Changes

The change to `extern` to split into `extern` and `extern-wrapped` is a
breaking change.

# Tests + Formatting
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

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2023-07-15 09:51:28 +12:00
JT
786ba3bf91
Input output checking (#9680)
# Description

This PR tights input/output type-checking a bit more. There are a lot of
commands that don't have correct input/output types, so part of the
effort is updating them.

This PR now contains updates to commands that had wrong input/output
signatures. It doesn't add examples for these new signatures, but that
can be follow-up work.

# User-Facing Changes

BREAKING CHANGE BREAKING CHANGE

This work enforces many more checks on pipeline type correctness than
previous nushell versions. This strictness may uncover incompatibilities
in existing scripts or shortcomings in the type information for internal
commands.

# Tests + Formatting
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- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass
- `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

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2023-07-14 15:20:35 +12:00
Jakub Žádník
e66139e6bb
Fix broken constants in scopes (#9679) 2023-07-14 00:02:05 +03:00
Stefan Holderbach
bd0032898f
Apply nightly clippy lints (#9654)
# Description
- A new one is the removal of unnecessary `#` in raw strings without `"`
inside.
-
https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/needless_raw_string_hashes
- The automatically applied removal of `.into_iter()` touched several
places where #9648 will change to the use of the record API. If
necessary I can remove them @IanManske to avoid churn with this PR.
- Manually applied `.try_fold` in two places
- Removed a dead `if`
- Manual: Combat rightward-drift with early return
2023-07-12 00:00:31 +02:00
JT
ad11e25fc5
allow mut to take pipelines (#9658)
# Description

This extends the syntax fix for `let` (#9589) to `mut` as well.

Example: `mut x = "hello world" | str length; print $x`

closes #9634

# User-Facing Changes

`mut` now joins `let` in being able to be assigned from a pipeline

# 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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2023-07-12 06:36:34 +12:00
JT
5d9e2455f7
Let with pipeline (#9589)
# Description

This changes the default behaviour of `let` to be able to take a
pipeline as its initial value.

For example:

```
> let x = "hello world" | str length
```

This is a change from the existing behaviour, where the right hand side
is assumed to be an expression. Pipelines are more general, and can be
more powerful.

My google foo is failing me, but this also fixes this issue:

```
let x = foo
```

Currently, this reads `foo` as a bareword that gets converted to a
string rather than running the `foo` command. In practice, this is
really annoying and is a really hard to spot bug in a script.

# User-Facing Changes

BREAKING CHANGE BREAKING CHANGE

`let` gains the power to be assigned via a pipeline. However, this
changes the behaviour of `let x = foo` from assigning the string "foo"
to `$x` to being "run the command `foo` and give the result to `$x`"

# Tests + Formatting
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- `cargo run -- crates/nu-std/tests/run.nu` to run the tests for the
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2023-07-03 17:45:10 +12:00
JT
4af24363c2
remove let-env, focus on mutating $env (#9574)
# Description

For years, Nushell has used `let-env` to set a single environment
variable. As our work on scoping continued, we refined what it meant for
a variable to be in scope using `let` but never updated how `let-env`
would work. Instead, `let-env` confusingly created mutations to the
command's copy of `$env`.

So, to help fix the mental model and point people to the right way of
thinking about what changing the environment means, this PR removes
`let-env` to encourage people to think of it as updating the command's
environment variable via mutation.

Before:

```
let-env FOO = "BAR"
```

Now:

```
$env.FOO = "BAR"
```

It's also a good reminder that the environment owned by the command is
in the `$env` variable rather than global like it is in other shells.

# User-Facing Changes

BREAKING CHANGE BREAKING CHANGE

This completely removes `let-env FOO = "BAR"` so that we can focus on
`$env.FOO = "BAR"`.

# Tests + Formatting
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- `cargo run -- crates/nu-std/tests/run.nu` to run the tests for the
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# After / Before Submitting
integration scripts to update:
- ✔️
[starship](https://github.com/starship/starship/blob/master/src/init/starship.nu)
- ✔️
[virtualenv](https://github.com/pypa/virtualenv/blob/main/src/virtualenv/activation/nushell/activate.nu)
- ✔️
[atuin](https://github.com/ellie/atuin/blob/main/atuin/src/shell/atuin.nu)
(PR: https://github.com/ellie/atuin/pull/1080)
- 
[zoxide](https://github.com/ajeetdsouza/zoxide/blob/main/templates/nushell.txt)
(PR: https://github.com/ajeetdsouza/zoxide/pull/587)
- ✔️
[oh-my-posh](https://github.com/JanDeDobbeleer/oh-my-posh/blob/main/src/shell/scripts/omp.nu)
(pr: https://github.com/JanDeDobbeleer/oh-my-posh/pull/4011)
2023-07-01 07:57:51 +12:00
Stefan Holderbach
088e6dffbe
Bump to 0.82.1 dev version (#9543)
# Description
Marks development or hotfix
2023-06-27 21:33:53 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
ecdb023e2f
Bump version for 0.82.0 release (#9530)
# 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
2023-06-27 19:11:46 +02:00
TrMen
b74d508c0b
Test examples of use (#9032)
# Description
Add `test_examples()` to `use` that verifies its examples. For that, add
the necessary definitions and the `PWD` to the `nu-cmd-lang` test
support.

Note: `let-env` is a `nu-command` and thus not accessible from the
`nu-cmd-lang` tests. So replace `let-env` with `$env.<var> =`. This
should be fine, since `let-env` is supposed to be removed before 1.0
anyway.


# User-Facing Changes
Nothing

# Question for reviewer
Is there any particular reason why so many core commands (parser
keywords) don't verify their examples with tests? E.g. `break`, `hide`,
`overlay use`, etc. (I think most of them?). If there is no particular
reason, I'd make a follow up PR to enable tests for as many of them as
possible.
2023-06-25 07:43:48 -05:00
JT
fbf3f7cf1c
split $nu variable into scope commands and simpler $nu (#9487)
# Description

This splits off `scope` from `$nu`, creating a set of `scope` commands
for the various types of scope you might be interested in.

This also simplifies the `$nu` variable a bit.

# User-Facing Changes

This changes `$nu` to be a bit simpler and introduces a set of `scope`
subcommands.

# Tests + Formatting
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- `cargo run -- crates/nu-std/tests/run.nu` to run the tests for the
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> ```
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# After Submitting
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2023-06-21 09:33:01 +12:00
dependabot[bot]
d78e3c3b0d
Bump shadow-rs from 0.22.0 to 0.23.0 (#9473) 2023-06-19 12:40:17 +00:00
JT
6c730def4b
revert: move to ahash (#9464)
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
2023-06-18 15:27:57 +12:00
Michael Angerman
e09d482fb7
nu-cmd-lang readme (#9446)
Add a Readme file to the crate nu-cmd-lang to better explain what this
crate is about.
2023-06-15 08:45:23 -07:00
Stefan Holderbach
d371a78a0b
Drop unused nu-color-config in nu-cmd-lang (#9444)
# Description
Unneeded dependency as `help` moved back to `nu-command`.
Currently probably won't provide a compile time benefit.
2023-06-15 13:12:01 +02:00
Filip Andersson
2fd4a36c0d
Changes global allocator to mimalloc, improving performance. (#9415)
# Description
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guide](../CONTRIBUTING.md) and talk to the core team before making major
changes.

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this PR makes nushell use mimalloc as the default allocator, this has
the benefit of reducing startup time on my machine. `17%` on linux and
`22%` on windows, when testing using hyperfine.
the overhead to compile seem to be quite small, aswell as the increase
of binary size quite small
on linux the binary went from `33.1mb` to `33.2mb`

linux

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/17986183/ba5379b4-2c08-483a-a9ff-a9d8524d2943)

windows 

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/17986183/fda5090f-96a9-48d1-ada4-617694b9d880)


# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
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# Tests + Formatting
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2023-06-14 17:27:12 -05:00
Stefan Holderbach
46eebc644c
Break up interdependencies of command crates (#9429)
# Description
Make sure that our different crates that contain commands can be
compiled in parallel.
This can under certain circumstances accelerate the compilation with
sufficient multithreading available.

## Details
- Move `help` commands from `nu-cmd-lang` back to `nu-command`
- This also makes sense as the commands are implemented in an
ANSI-terminal specific way
- Make `nu-cmd-lang` only a dev dependency for `nu-command`
- Change context creation helpers for `nu-cmd-extra` and
`nu-cmd-dataframe` to have a consistent api used in
`src/main.rs`:`get_engine_state()`
- `nu-command` now indepedent from `nu-cmd-extra` and `nu-cmd-dataframe`
that are now dependencies of `nu` directly. (change to internal
features)
- Fix tests that previously used `nu-command::create_default_context()`
with replacement functions

## From scratch compilation times:

just debug (dev) build and default features
```
cargo clean --profile dev && cargo build --timings
```

### before

![grafik](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/15833959/e49f1f42-2e53-4a6c-bc23-625b686af1bc)

### after

![grafik](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/15833959/8dec4723-e625-4a86-b91e-e6e808f64726)

# User-Facing Changes
None direct, only change to compilation on multithreaded jobs expected.

# Tests + Formatting
Tests that previously chose to use `nu-command` for their scope will
still use `nu-cmd-lang` + `nu-command` (command list in the granularity
at the time)
2023-06-14 23:12:55 +02:00
Filip Andersson
1433f4a520
Changes HashMap to use aHash instead, giving a performance boost. (#9391)
# 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
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
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2023-06-10 11:41:58 -05:00
Stefan Holderbach
d15859dd86
Bump to 0.81.1 as development version (#9379)
# Description
Primarily used as a marker on issues and if necessary as a patch release
version.
2023-06-07 15:06:42 +02:00
JT
63cb01e83b
bump to 0.81 (#9374)
# Description
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changes.

Description of your pull request goes here. **Provide examples and/or
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standard library

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2023-06-07 10:08:11 +12:00
Jakub Žádník
82e6873702
Fix config creation during printing (#9353) 2023-06-04 22:04:28 +03:00
solodov
55689ddb50
use "search_result" style to colorize matching strings (fixes #9275) (#9326)
This change introduces new `search_result` style supported in the color
config. The change also removes obsolete check for `config.ls_colors`
for computing the style. `config.ls_colors` has been removed last year,
so this removes the reference to the obsolete flag, along with a cleanup
that removes all the code that used to rely on ls_colors for
highlighting search results.


# Description
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guide](../CONTRIBUTING.md) and talk to the core team before making major
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# User-Facing Changes
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- `cargo run -- crates/nu-std/tests/run.nu` to run the tests for the
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2023-06-01 15:51:18 -05:00
Michael Angerman
b9e65e35b8
include the nu-cmd-extra crate in the version command features (#9333)
We needed to include the nu-cmd-extra crate in the version command's
features...

In the style of this PR which fixed the dataframe feature upon adding
the nu-cmd-dataframe crate...

https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/9262
2023-06-01 13:10:39 -07:00
Michael Angerman
356e05177c
nu-cmd-extra crate infrastructure in place with the Bits command as the model for adding other commands (#9327)
I wanted to get the infrastructure in place for starters for our
*nu-cmd-extra* crate...

The plan is to put inside here the following commands...

* bits
* bytes
* math

I thought it would be easier to do one at a time as well as get the
nu-cmd-extra crate out there on crates.io
for this upcoming release...

Once this lands the infrastructure will be in place to move over the
other noted commands for now...
And then add other stuff we do NOT want to be in 1.0.
2023-06-01 10:46:16 -07:00
Maxim Zhiburt
7f758d3e51
Merge stack before printing (#9304)
Could you @fdncred try it?

close?: #9264

---------

Signed-off-by: Maxim Zhiburt <zhiburt@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-05-29 19:03:00 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
5f92fd20e9
update most dependencies except where deeper code changes are needed (#9296)
# Description

This PR updates most dependencies and tries to get in sync with
reedline.

# 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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clippy::needless_collect -A clippy::result_large_err` to check that
you're using the standard code style
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- `cargo run -- crates/nu-std/tests/run.nu` to run the tests for the
standard library

> **Note**
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> ```
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2023-05-26 10:32:48 -05:00
WMR
8e538c650e
Fix version to show build features after crateification (#9262)
# Description

Addresses missing features per #9261 

# User-Facing Changes

Fixes output of version.  Adds wasi feature output

 # Tests + Formatting

No tests written

Co-authored-by: Robert Waugh <robert@waugh.io>
2023-05-22 08:42:38 -07:00
Darren Schroeder
e752d8a964
remove unused dependencies (#9230)
# 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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clippy::needless_collect -A clippy::result_large_err` to check that
you're using the standard code style
- `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**
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> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
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> ```
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# After Submitting
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2023-05-18 11:37:20 -05:00
Doru
dacf80f34a
Feature: Userland LazyRecords (#8332)
# 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.
2023-05-17 18:35:22 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
057de06613
bump nushell from release version to development version (#9215)
# 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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clippy::needless_collect -A clippy::result_large_err` to check that
you're using the standard code style
- `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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2023-05-17 07:59:01 -05:00
Stefan Holderbach
8695b57584
Bump version for 0.80.0 release (#9212)
# Checklist

- [x] merged reedline PR
- [ ] release notes
2023-05-17 10:11:13 +12:00
Jakub Žádník
a2a346e39c
Allow creating modules from directories (#9066) 2023-05-06 21:39:54 +03:00
Jelle Besseling
44493dac51
Add extern def which allows raw arguments (#8956)
# Description

Extends the `extern` syntax to allow commands that accept raw arguments.
This is mainly added to allow wrapper type scripts for external
commands.

This is an example on how this can be used:

```nushell
extern foo [...rest] { 
  print ($rest | str join ',' ) 
}
foo --bar baz -- -q -u -x
# => --bar,baz,--,-q,-u,-x
```

(It's only possible to accept a single ...varargs argument in the
signature)

# User-Facing Changes

No breaking changes, just extra possibilities.

# Tests + Formatting

Added a test for this new behaviour and ran the toolkit pr checker

# After Submitting

This is advanced functionality but it should be documented, I will open
a new PR on the book for that

Co-authored-by: Jelle Besseling <jelle@bigbridge.nl>
2023-04-28 09:06:43 +02:00
TrMen
6f9b9914cf
Add more examples to help use (#9024)
# Description
The `members` parameter of `use` is specified as type `any`, but it's
really a string or list of strings or `*`. So add some examples that
mention what you can specify for `members`.

Also mention `help modules` and `help std`, since you probably want to
use the standard library or another defined modules.

Sidenote: I tried to run the examples for `use` as tests like is done
for the other commands. That panics with `missing module command`. I
assume this is known.

# User-Facing Changes
`help use` now looks like this:
```nushell
Use definitions from a module, making them available in your shell.

See `help std` for the standard library module.
See `help modules` to list all available modules.

This command is a parser keyword. For details, check:
  https://www.nushell.sh/book/thinking_in_nu.html

Usage:
  > use <module> (members)

Flags:
  -h, --help - Display the help message for this command

Parameters:
  module <string>: Module or module file
  (optional) members <any>: Which members of the module to import

Examples:
  Define a custom command in a module and call it
  > module spam { export def foo [] { "foo" } }; use spam foo; foo
  foo

  Define a custom command that participates in the environment in a module and call it
  > module foo { export def-env bar [] { let-env FOO_BAR = "BAZ" } }; use foo bar; bar; $env.FOO_BAR
  BAZ

  Use a plain module name to import its definitions qualified by the module name
  > module spam { export def foo [] { "foo" }; export def bar [] { "bar" } }; use spam; (spam foo) + (spam bar)
  foobar

  Specify * to use all definitions in a module
  > module spam { export def foo [] { "foo" }; export def bar [] { "bar" } }; use spam *; (foo) + (bar)
  foobar

  To use commands with spaces, like subcommands, surround them with quotes
  > module spam { export def 'foo bar' [] { "baz" } }; use spam 'foo bar'; foo bar
  baz

  To use multiple definitions from a module, wrap them in a list
  > module spam { export def foo [] { "foo" }; export def 'foo bar' [] { "baz" } }; use spam ['foo', 'foo bar']; (foo) + (foo bar)
  foobaz
```
2023-04-27 15:58:07 -05:00
mike
77ca73f414
allow records to have type annotations (#8914)
# 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
2023-04-26 08:16:55 -05:00
Stefan Holderbach
7d6a32c5f8
Bump to 0.79.1 dev version (#8998)
# Description

For development or hotfixes
2023-04-26 01:05:23 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
a1b7261121
Bump version for 0.79.0 release (#8980) 2023-04-25 23:06:17 +03:00
mike
a122e55129
use let-else syntax where possible (#8886)
# Description
this pr changes some `if-let`s to `let-else`s

# User-Facing Changes
none
2023-04-14 20:51:38 +02:00