* when spawned process during register plugin, pass env to child process
* tweak comment
* tweak comment
* remove trailing whitespace
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
* compiles on nightly now. (breaking change)
* less deps
* Switch over to new resolver
(it's been stable for a while.)
* let's leave num-format for another PR
* Resolve rebase artifacts
* Remove leftover dependencies on removed feature
* Remove unnecessary 'pub'
* Start taking notes and fooling around
* Split canonicalize to two versions; Add TODOs
One that takes `relative_to` and one that doesn't.
More TODO notes.
* Merge absolutize to and rename resolve_dots
* Add custom absolutize fn and use it in path expand
* Convert a couple of dunce::canonicalize to ours
* Update nu-path description
* Replace all canonicalize with nu-path version
* Remove leftover dunce dependencies
* Fix broken autocd with trailing slash
Trailing slash is preserved *only* in paths that do not contain "." or
"..". This should be fixed in the future to cover all paths but for now
it at least covers basic cases.
* Use dunce::canonicalize for canonicalizing
* Alow cd recovery from non-existent cwd
* Disable removed canonicalize functionality tests
Remove unused import
* Break down nu-path into separate modules
* Remove unused public imports
* Remove abundant cow mapping
* Fix clippy warning
* Reformulate old canonicalize tests to expand_path
They wouldn't work with the new canonicalize.
* Canonicalize also ~ and ndots; Unify path joining
Also, add doc comments in nu_path::expansions.
* Add comment
* Avoid expanding ndots if path is not valid UTF-8
With this change, no lossy path->string conversion should happen in the
nu-path crate.
* Fmt
* Slight expand_tilde refactor; Add doc comments
* Start nu-path integration tests
* Add tests TODO
* Fix docstring typo
* Fix some doc strings
* Add README for nu-path crate
* Add a couple of canonicalize tests
* Add nu-path integration tests
* Add trim trailing slashes tests
* Update nu-path dependency
* Remove unused import
* Regenerate lockfile
* chore: Replace surf with reqwest
Removes a lot of older, duplication versions of some dependencies
(roughtly 90 dependencies removed in total)
* chore: Remove syn 0.11
* chore: Remove unnecessary features from ptree
Removes some more duplicate dependencies
* cargo update
* Ensure we run the fetch and post plugins on the tokio runtime
* Fix clippy warning
* fix: Github requires a user agent on requests
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
Given we can write nu scripts. As the codebase grows, splitting into many smaller nu scripts is necessary.
In general, when we work with paths and files we seem to face quite a few difficulties. Here we just tackle one of them and it involves sourcing
files that also source other nu files and so forth. The current working directory becomes important here and being on a different directory
when sourcing scripts will not work. Mostly because we expand the path on the current working directory and parse the files when a source command
call is done.
For the moment, we introduce a `lib_dirs` configuration value and, unfortunately, introduce a new dependency in `nu-parser` (`nu-data`) to get
a handle of the configuration file to retrieve it. This should give clues and ideas as the new parser engine continues (introduce a way to also know paths)
With this PR we can do the following:
Let's assume we want to write a nu library called `my_library`. We will have the code in a directory called `project`: The file structure will looks like this:
```
project/my_library.nu
project/my_library/hello.nu
project/my_library/name.nu
```
This "pattern" works well, that is, when creating a library have a directory named `my_library` and next to it a `my_library.nu` file. Filling them like this:
```
source my_library/hello.nu
source my_library/name.nu
```
```
def hello [] {
"hello world"
}
```
```
def name [] {
"Nu"
end
```
Assuming this `project` directory is stored at `/path/to/lib/project`, we can do:
```
config set lib_dirs ['path/to/lib/project']
```
Given we have this `lib_dirs` configuration value, we can be anywhere while using Nu and do the following:
```
source my_library.nu
echo (hello) (name)
```
* Document the lexer and lightly improve its names
The bulk of this pull request adds a substantial amount of new inline
documentation for the lexer. Along the way, I made a few minor changes
to the names in the lexer, most of which were internal.
The main change that affects other files is renaming `group` to `block`,
since the function is actually parsing a block (a list of groups).
* Further clean up the lexer
- Consolidate the logic of the various token builders into a single type
- Improve and clean up the event-driven BlockParser
- Clean up comment parsing. Comments now contain their original leading
whitespace as well as trailing whitespace, and know how to move some
leading whitespace back into the body based on how the lexer decides
to dedent the comments. This preserves the original whitespace
information while still making it straight-forward to eliminate leading
whitespace in help comments.
* Update meta.rs
* WIP
* fix clippy
* remove unwraps
* remove unwraps
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Turner <jonathandturner@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Turner <jonathan.d.turner@gmail.com>
* Put parse_definition related funcs into own module
* Add failing lexer test
* Implement Parsing of definition signature
This commit applied changes how the signature of a function is parsed. Before
there was a little bit of "quick-and-dirty" string-matching/parsing involved.
Now, a signature is a little bit more properly parsed.
The grammar of a definition signature understood by these parsing-functions is
as follows:
`[ (parameter | flag | <eol>)* ]`
where
parameter is:
`name (<:> type)? (<,> | <eol> | (#Comment <eol>))?`
flag is:
`--name (-shortform)? (<:> type)? (<,> | <eol> | (#Comment <eol>))?`
(Note: After the last item no <,> has to come.)
Note: It is now possible to pass comments to flags and parameters
Example:
[
d:int # The required d parameter
--x (-x):string # The all powerful x flag
--y (-y):int # The accompanying y flag
]
(Sadly there seems to be a bug (Or is this expected behaviour?) in the lexer, because of which `--x(-x)` would
be treated as one baseline token and is therefore not correctly recognized as 2. For
now a space has to be inserted)
During the implementation of the module, 2 question arose:
Should flag/parameter names be allowed to be type names?
Example case:
```shell
def f [ string ] { echo $string }
```
Currently an error is thrown
* Fix clippy lints
* Remove wrong comment
* Add spacing
* Add Cargo.lock