forked from extern/nushell
60e6ea5abd
now nu_std only depends on nu_parser, nu_protocol and miette and removes the nu_cli dependency this enables developers moving forward to come along and implement their own CLI's without having to pull in a redundant nu-cli which will not be needed for them. I did this by moving report_error into nu_protocol which nu_std already has a dependency on anyway.... - `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting (`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes) - `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used -A clippy::needless_collect` 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.nu` to run the tests for the standard library > **Note** > from `nushell` you can also use the `toolkit` as follows > ```bash > use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it automatically > toolkit check pr > ``` |
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.. | ||
src | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
std.nu | ||
test_asserts.nu | ||
test_dirs.nu | ||
test_logger.nu | ||
test_std.nu | ||
test_xml.nu | ||
tests.nu |
Welcome to the standard library of `nushell`!
The standard library is a pure-nushell
collection of commands to allow anyone to build
complex applications using standardized tools gathered incrementally.
In this library, you might find rust
-like assert
commands to write tests, tools to
manipulate paths and strings, etc, etc, ...
🧰 use the standard library in the REPL or in scripts
in order to "import" the standard library to either the interactive REPL of
nushell
or inside some .nu
script, you might want to use the
use
command!
use /path/to/standard_library/std.nu
🔍 a concrete example
- my name is @amtoine and i use the
ghq
tool to managegit
projectsNote
ghq
stores any repository inside$env.GHQ_ROOT
under<host>/<owner>/<repo>/
- the path to my local fork of
nushell
is then defined aslet-env NUSHELL_REPO = ($env.GHQ_ROOT | path join "github.com" "amtoine" "nushell")
- and the full path to the standard library is defined as
let-env STD_LIB = ($env.NUSHELL_REPO | path join "crates" "nu-utils" "standard_library")
see the content of
$env.STD_LIB
😋>_ ls $env.STD_LIB | get name | str replace $env.STD_LIB "" | str trim -l -c "/" ╭───┬───────────╮ │ 0 │ README.md │ │ 1 │ std.nu │ │ 2 │ tests.nu │ ╰───┴───────────╯
- finally we can
use
the standard library and have access to the commands it exposes 👍>_ use std.nu >_ help std Module: std Exported commands: assert (std assert), assert eq (std assert eq), assert ne (std assert ne), match (std match) This module does not export environment.
✏️ contribute to the standard library
- all the commands of the standard_library are located in
std.nu
- the tests are located in files that have a name starting with "test_", e.g.
test_std.nu
- a test runner, at
tests.nu
, allows to run all the tests automatically
🔧 add new commands
- add new standard commands by appending to
std.nu
- add associated tests to
test_std.nu
or preferably totest_<submodule>.nu
.- define a new exported (!)
test_<feature>
command - import the
assert
functions you need at the top of the functions, e.g.use std.nu "assert eq"
- define a new exported (!)
🧪 run the tests
the following call should return no errors
NU_LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG nu /path/to/standard_library/tests.nu
🔍 a concrete example
with
STD_LIB
defined as in the example aboveNU_LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG nu ($env.STD_LIB | path join "tests.nu")