Oils Reference — Chapter Standard Library

This chapter in the Oils Reference describes the standard library for OSH and YSH.

(These functions are implemented in OSH or YSH, not C++ or Python.)

(in progress)

In This Chapter

two

These functions are in two.sh

source $OSH_LIB/two.sh

log

Write a message to stderr:

log "hi $x"
log '---'

die

Write an error message with the script name, and exit with status 1.

die 'Expected a number'

no-quotes

nq-assert

Use the syntax of the test builtin to assert a condition is true.

nq-assert 99 = "$status"
nq-assert "$status" -lt 2

nq-run

Run a command and "return" its status with nameref variables.

test-foo() {
  local status

  nq-run status \
    false
  nq-assert 1 = "$status"
}

nq-capture

Run a command and return its status and stdout.

nq-capture-2

Run a command and return its status and stderr.

nq-redir

Run a command and return its status and a file with its stdout, so you can diff it.

nq-redir-2

Run a command and return its status and a file with its stderr, so you can diff it.

task-five

task-five

Dispatch to shell functions, and provide BYO test enumeration.

OSH:

task-five "$@"

YSH:

task-five @ARGV

math

abs()

Compute the absolute (positive) value of a number (float or int).

= abs(-1)  # => 1
= abs(0)   # => 0
= abs(1)   # => 1

Note, you will need to source $LIB_YSH/math.ysh to use this function.

max()

Compute the maximum of 2 or more values.

max takes two different signatures:

  1. max(a, b) to return the maximum of a, b
  2. max(list) to return the greatest item in the list

For example:

  = max(1, 2)  # => 2
  = max([1, 2, 3])  # => 3

Note, you will need to source $LIB_YSH/math.ysh to use this function.

min()

Compute the minimum of 2 or more values.

min takes two different signatures:

  1. min(a, b) to return the minimum of a, b
  2. min(list) to return the least item in the list

For example:

= min(2, 3)  # => 2
= max([1, 2, 3])  # => 1

Note, you will need to source $LIB_YSH/math.ysh to use this function.

round()

TODO

sum()

Computes the sum of all elements in the list.

Returns 0 for an empty list.

= sum([])  # => 0
= sum([0])  # => 0
= sum([1, 2, 3])  # => 6

Note, you will need to source $LIB_YSH/list.ysh to use this function.

list

all()

Returns true if all values in the list are truthy (x is truthy if Bool(x) returns true).

If the list is empty, return true.

= any([])  # => true
= any([true, true])  # => true
= any([false, true])  # => false
= any(["foo", true, true])  # => true

Note, you will need to source $LIB_YSH/list.ysh to use this function.

any()

Returns true if any value in the list is truthy (x is truthy if Bool(x) returns true).

If the list is empty, return false.

= any([])  # => false
= any([true, false])  # => true
= any([false, false])  # => false
= any([false, "foo", false])  # => true

Note, you will need to source $LIB_YSH/list.ysh to use this function.

repeat()

Repeat a string or a list:

= repeat('foo', 3)           # => 'foofoofoo'
= repeat(['foo', 'bar'], 2)  # => ['foo', 'bar', 'foo', 'bar']

Negative repetitions are equivalent to zero:

= repeat('foo', -5)           # => ''
= repeat(['foo', 'bar'], -5)  # => []

Note that the repeat() function is modeled after these Python expressions:

>>> 'a' * 3
'aaa'
>>> ['a'] * 3
['a', 'a', 'a']

yblocks

Helpers to assert the status and output of commands.

yb-capture

Capture the status and stdout of a command block:

yb-capture (&r) {
  echo hi
}
assert [0 === r.status]
assert [u'hi\n' === r.stdout]

yb-capture-2

Capture the status and stderr of a command block:

yb-capture-2 (&r) {
  echo hi >& 2
}
assert [0 === r.status]
assert [u'hi\n' === r.stderr]

args

YSH includes a command-line argument parsing utility called parseArgs. This is intended to be used for command-line interfaces to YSH programs.

To use it, first import args.ysh:

source $LIB_YSH/args.ysh

Then, create an argument parser specification:

parser (&spec) {
  flag -v --verbose (help="Verbosely")  # default is Bool, false

  flag -P --max-procs ('int', default=-1, help='''
    Run at most P processes at a time
    ''')

  flag -i --invert ('bool', default=true, help='''
    Long multiline
    Description
    ''')

  arg src (help='Source')
  arg dest (help='Dest')

  rest files
}

Finally, parse ARGV (or any other array of strings) with:

var args = parseArgs(spec, ARGV)

The returned args is a Dict containing key-value pairs with the parsed values (or defaults) for each flag and argument. For example, given ARGV = :| mysrc -P 12 mydest a b c |, args would be:

{
    "verbose": false,
    "max-procs": 12,
    "invert": true,
    "src": "mysrc",
    "dest": "mydest",
    "files": ["a", "b", "c"]
}

parser

parseArgs() requires a parser specification to indicate how to parse the ARGV array. This specification should be constructed using the parser proc.

parser (&spec) {
  flag -f --my-flag
  arg myarg
  rest otherArgs
}

In the above example, parser takes in a place &spec, which will store the resulting specification and a block which is evaluated to build that specification.

Inside of a parser block, you should call the following procs:

parser will validate the parser specification for errors such as duplicate flag or argument names.

parser (&spec) {
  flag -n --name
  flag -n --name  # Duplicate!
}

# => raises "Duplicate flag/arg name 'name' in spec" (status = 3)

flag

flag should be called within a parser block.

parser (&spec) {
  flag -v --verbose
}

The above example declares a flag "--verbose" and a short alias "-v". parseArgs() will then store a boolean value under args.verbose:

Flags can also accept values. For example, if you wanted to accept an integer count:

parser (&spec) {
  flag -N --count ('int')
}

Calling parseArgs with ARGV = :| -n 5 | or ARGV = :| --count 5 | will store the integer 5 under args.count. If the user passes in a non-integer value like ARGV = :| --count abc |, parseArgs will raise an error.

Default values for an argument can be set with the default named argument.

parser (&spec) {
  flag -N --count ('int', default=2)

  # Boolean flags can be given default values too
  flag -O --optimize ('bool', default=true)
}

var args = parseArgs(spec, :| -n 3 |)
# => args.count = 2
# => args.optimize = true

Each name passed to flag must be unique to that specific parser. Calling flag with the same name twice will raise an error inside of parser.

arg

arg should be called within a parser block.

parser (&spec) {
  arg query
  arg path
}

The above example declares two positional arguments called "query" and "path". parseArgs() will then store strings under args.query and args.path. Order matters, so the first positional argument will be stored to query and the second to path. If not enough positional arguments are passed, then parseArgs will raise an error.

Similar to flag, each arg name must be unique. Calling arg with the same name twice will cause parser to raise an error.

rest

rest should be called within a parser block.

parser (&spec) {
  arg query
  rest files
}

Capture zero or more positional arguments not already captured by arg. So, for ARGV = :| hello file.txt message.txt README.md |, we would have args.query = "file.txt" and args.files = ["file.txt", "message.txt", "README.md"].

Without rest, passing extraneous arguments will raise an error in parseArgs().

rest can only be called once within a parser. Calling it multiple times will raise an error in parser.

parseArgs()

Given a parser specification spec produced by parser, parse a list of strings (usually ARGV.)

var args = parseArgs(spec, ARGV)

The returned args is a dictionary mapping the names of each arg, flag and rest to their captured values. (See the example at the start of this topic.)

parseArgs will raise an error if the ARGV is invalid per the parser specification. For example, if it's missing a required positional argument:

parser (&spec) {
  arg path
}

var args = parseArgs(spec, [])
# => raises an error about the missing 'path' (status = 2)
Generated on Sat, 24 Aug 2024 06:07:11 +0000