* Read from standard input in `rm`
With this change, rm falls back to reading from the standard input if no
arguments are supplied. This leads to more intuitive pipes as seen in
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/2824
ls | get name | sort-by | first 20 | each {rm $it} becomes
ls | get name | sort-by | first 20 | rm
* [Fix] Run cargo fmt, make files a rest parameter, and fix cargo build warnings
* [Fix] Fix clippy suggestions
* Fix swapped PATH env var separators
* Support pathvar to manipulate other vars than PATH
* Add tests for pathvar and its subcommands
* Adjust pathvar tests to comply with env quirks
* Make pathvar tests work on non-Windows as well
* Compact the comments in pathvar tests
* Fix last failing test
Co-authored-by: Jakub Žádník <jakub.zadnik@tuni.fi>
This allows converting strings to filepaths without having to use
`path expand` roundtrip.
Filepaths are taken as-is without any validation/conversion.
* Fix swapped PATH env var separators
* Support pathvar to manipulate other vars than PATH
* Add tests for pathvar and its subcommands
* Fix PATH env name for Windows
Seems like Windows uses PATH as well.
Co-authored-by: Jakub Žádník <jakub.zadnik@tuni.fi>
* kind of works but not what we really want
* updated `into binary` and `first` to work better together
* attempt to fix wasm build problem
* attempt #2 to fix wasm stuff
Nothing used the `ptree` feature or optional dependency within
`nu-command` except to include it within the `version` output. This
may be related to when `nu-cli` also had a `ptree` feature, but
I'm not sure.
That leaves the code within `nu_plugin_tree` as the sole remaining
user of `ptree`, which is already covered by the feature `tree`
and included in the `version` output.
* Type in command description
* filter name change
* Clean column name
* Clippy error and updated polars version
* Lint correction in file
* CSV Infer schema optional
* Correct float operations
* changes in series castings to allow other types
* Clippy error correction
* Removed lists from command signatures
* Added not command for series
* take command with args
* set with idx command
* Type in command description
* filter name change
* Clean column name
* Clippy error and updated polars version
* Lint correction in file
* CSV Infer schema optional
* Correct float operations
* changes in series castings to allow other types
* Clippy error correction
* Removed lists from command signatures
* Added not command for series
Seems we do `ctrl` feature checks in `nu-cli` and `nu-command`. We should find a better way to report the enabled features un the `version` command without using the conditionals (or somewhere else)
* Add paste command
* fix build and format failures
* Add examples
* Make tests pass
* Format
* add cfg annotation for Clip
* format code
* remove additional import for clip
* Remove test
* Type in command description
* filter name change
* Clean column name
* Clippy error and updated polars version
* Lint correction in file
* CSV Infer schema optional
* Output error when ls into a file without permission
* math sqrt
* added test to check fails when ls into prohibited dir
* fix lint
* math sqrt with tests and doc
* trigger wasm build
* Update filesystem_shell.rs
* Fix Running echo .. starts printing integers forever
* Fixed panic on operations with very large durations
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Turner <jonathandturner@users.noreply.github.com>
We've relied on `clap` for building our cli app bootstrapping that figures out the positionals, flags, and other convenient facilities. Nu has been capable of solving this problem for quite some time. Given this and much more reasons (including the build time caused by `clap`) we start here working with our own.
* Fix and clarify description of 'exec'
Most importantly, I added the information that it replaces the current
process.
* Convert exec to OutputStream; Remove unused trait
* Remove dead code & unused imports on non-unix
* Sample command
* Join command with checks
* More dataframes commands
* Groupby and aggregate commands
* Missing feature dataframe flag
* Renamed file
* New commands for dataframes
* error parser and df reference
* filter command for dataframes
* removed name from nu_dataframe
* commands to save to parquet and csv
* polars new version
* new dataframe commands
* series type and print
* Series basic arithmetics
* Add new column to dataframe
* Command names changed to nushell standard
* Throw an error if path failed to expand
Previously, it just repeated the non-expanded path.
* Allow expanding non-existent paths
This commit has a strange error in examples.
* Specify span manually in examples; Add an example
* Expand relative path without requiring cwd
* Remove redundant tilde expansion
This makes the tilde expansion in relative paths dependant on "dirs"
feature.
* Add missing example result
* Adjust path expand description
* Fix import error with missing feature
* Sample command
* Join command with checks
* More dataframes commands
* Groupby and aggregate commands
* Missing feature dataframe flag
* Renamed file
* New commands for dataframes
* error parser and df reference
* filter command for dataframes
* removed name from nu_dataframe
* commands to save to parquet and csv
Using the `*` wildcard should not attempt to delete files with a leading dot
unless the more explicit `.*` is used. `rm *` should also not attempt to delete
the current directory or its parent directory (`.` and `..`). I have resolved
this bug as well in a less satisfactory way. I think it may be the case that we
can only disambiguate the `.` and `..` path segments by using `Path::display`.
Here is a short list of alternatives that I tried:
- `Path::ends_with()` can detect `/..` but not `/.`.
- `Path::iter()` and `Path::components()` leave out `/.`.
- `Path::file_name()` normalizes `/.` to the parent component's file name.
Fixes#3508
* Add the load-env command
load-env can be used to add environment variables dynamically via an
InputStream. This allows developers to create tools that output environment
variables as key-value pairs, then have the user load those variables in using
load-env. This supplants most of the need for an `eval` command, which is
mostly used in POSIX envs for setting env vars.
Fixes#3481
* fixup! Add the load-env command