This resolves a small integration issue that would make custom prompts problematic (if they are implemented). The approach was to use the highlighter implementation in Helper to insert colour codes to the prompt however it heavily relies on the prompt being in a specific format, ending with a `> ` sequence. However, this should really be the job of the prompt itself not the presentation layer.
For now, I've simply stripped off the additional `> ` characters and passed in just the prompt itself without slicing off the last two characters. I moved the `\x1b[m` control sequence to the prompt creation in `cli.rs` as this feels like the more logical home for controlling what the prompt looks like. I can think of better ways to do this in future but this should be a fine solution for now.
In future it would probably make sense to completely separate prompts (be it, internal or external) from this code so it can be configured as an isolated piece of code.
Kind of touches on #356 by integrating the Starship prompt directly into the shell.
Not finished yet and has surfaced a potential bug in rustyline anyway. It depends on https://github.com/starship/starship/pull/509 being merged so the Starship prompt can be used as a library.
I could have tackled #356 completely and implemented a full custom prompt feature but I felt this was a simpler approach given that Starship is both written in Rust so shelling out isn't necessary and it already has a bunch of useful features built in.
However, I would understand if it would be preferable to just scrap integrating Starship directly and instead implement a custom prompt system which would facilitate simply shelling out to Starship.
This feature allows a user to set `ctrlc_exit` to `true` or `false` in their config to override how multiple CTRL-C invocations are handled. Without this change pressing CTRL-C multiple times will exit nu. With this change applied the user can configure the behavior to behave like other shells where multiple invocations will essentially clear the line.
This fixes#457.
with the `help` command to explore and list all commands available.
Enter will also try to see if the location to be entered is an existing
Nu command, if it is it will let you inspect the command under `help`.
This provides baseline needed so we can iterate on it.
The original intent of this patch was to remove more unwraps to reduce
panics. I then lost a ton of time to the fact that the playground isn't
in a temp directory (because of permissions issues on Windows).
This commit improves the test facilities to:
- use a tempdir for the playground
- change the playground API so you instantiate it with a block that
encloses the lifetime of the tempdir
- the block is called with a `dirs` argument that has `dirs.test()` and
other important directories that we were computing by hand all the time
- the block is also called with a `playground` argument that you can use
to construct files (it's the same `Playground` as before)
- change the nu! and nu_error! macros to produce output instead of
taking a variable binding
- change the nu! and nu_error! macros to do the cwd() transformation
internally
- change the nu! and nu_error! macros to take varargs at the end that
get interpolated into the running command
I didn't manage to finish porting all of the tests, so a bunch of tests
are currently commented out. That will need to change before we land
this patch.
This ended up being a bit of a yak shave. The basic idea in this commit is to
expand `~` in paths, but only in paths.
The way this is accomplished is by doing the expansion inside of the code that
parses literal syntax for `SyntaxType::Path`.
As a quick refresher: every command is entitled to expand its arguments in a
custom way. While this could in theory be used for general-purpose macros,
today the expansion facility is limited to syntactic hints.
For example, the syntax `where cpu > 0` expands under the hood to
`where { $it.cpu > 0 }`. This happens because the first argument to `where`
is defined as a `SyntaxType::Block`, and the parser coerces binary expressions
whose left-hand-side looks like a member into a block when the command is
expecting one.
This is mildly more magical than what most programming languages would do,
but we believe that it makes sense to allow commands to fine-tune the syntax
because of the domain nushell is in (command-line shells).
The syntactic expansions supported by this facility are relatively limited.
For example, we don't allow `$it` to become a bare word, simply because the
command asks for a string in the relevant position. That would quickly
become more confusing than it's worth.
This PR adds a new `SyntaxType` rule: `SyntaxType::Path`. When a command
declares a parameter as a `SyntaxType::Path`, string literals and bare
words passed as an argument to that parameter are processed using the
path expansion rules. Right now, that only means that `~` is expanded into
the home directory, but additional rules are possible in the future.
By restricting this expansion to a syntactic expansion when passed as an
argument to a command expecting a path, we avoid making `~` a generally
reserved character. This will also allow us to give good tab completion
for paths with `~` characters in them when a command is expecting a path.
In order to accomplish the above, this commit changes the parsing functions
to take a `Context` instead of just a `CommandRegistry`. From the perspective
of macro expansion, you can think of the `CommandRegistry` as a dictionary
of in-scope macros, and the `Context` as the compile-time state used in
expansion. This could gain additional functionality over time as we find
more uses for the expansion system.
Remove a number of unwraps. In some cases, a `?` just worked as is. I also made it possible to use `?` to go from Result<OutputStream, ShellError> to OutputStream. Finally, started updating PerItemCommand to be able to use the signature deserialization logic, which substantially reduces unwraps.
This is still in-progress work, but tests pass and it should be clear to merge and keep iterating on master.
This commit makes it possible to force nu to treat a command as an external command by prefixing it with `^`. For example `^dir` will force `dir` to run an external command, even if `dir` is also a registered nu command.
This ensures that users don't need to leave nu just because we happened to use a command they need.
This commit adds a new token type for external commands, which, among other things, makes it pretty straight forward to syntax highlight external commands uniquely, and generally to treat them as special.