* Add different features combinations
* Specify styles manually
* Fix args
* Fix typo
* Let other CI jobs finish if one fails
* Fix unused symbols without plugin feature
* Put "which" tests behind "which" feature
* Add Python virtualenv job
* Oops forgot git command
* Install Nushell in virtualenv tests
* Add names to steps; Test v.env in separate step
* cd into virtualenv
* Do not run on Python 2.7
* Build Nushell after formatting and clippy checks
* Fix "index out of bounds" when input to group-by is empty #4369
* Fix formatting #4369
* Adds test for empty input
Co-authored-by: Ray Henry <ray.henry@thermofisher.com>
* Allow range in 'drop nth'
* Unit tests for drop nth range
* Add range case to the description
* Fix description 2
* format fixes
* Fix example and some refactoring
* clippy fixes
* fix into filesize tests and filesize
* tweaks
* added span back for like the 10th time
* Update filesize.rs
Co-authored-by: JT <547158+jntrnr@users.noreply.github.com>
* have save --append create file if not exists
Currently, doing:
echo a | save --raw --append file.txt
will fail if file.txt does not exist. This PR changes that
* test that `save --append` will create new file
* Change path join signature
* Appending now works without flag
* Column path operation is behind a -c flag
* Move column path arg retrieval to a function
Also improves errors
* Fix path join tests
* Propagate column path changes to all path commands
* Update path command examples with columns paths
* Modernize path command examples by removing "echo"
* Improve structured path error message
* Fix typo
* Add subcommand `into filesize`
It's currently not possible to convert a number or a string containing a number
into a filesize. The only way to create an instance of filesize type today is
with a literal in nushell syntax. This commit adds the `into filesize`
subcommand so that file sizes can be created from the outputs of programs
producing numbers or strings, like standard unix tools.
There is a limitation with this - it doesn't currently parse values like `10 MB`
or `10 MiB`, it can only look at the number itself. If the desire is there, more
flexible parsing can be added.
* fixup! Add subcommand `into filesize`
* fixup! Add subcommand `into filesize`