1 | ---
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2 | in_progress: yes
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3 | body_css_class: width40 help-body
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4 | default_highlighter: oils-sh
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5 | preserve_anchor_case: yes
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6 | ---
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7 |
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8 | Front End
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9 | ===
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10 |
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11 | This chapter in the [Oils Reference](index.html) describes command line usage
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12 | and lexing.
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13 |
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14 | <div id="toc">
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15 | </div>
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16 |
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17 | <h2 id="usage">Command Line Usage</h3>
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18 |
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19 | <h3 id="oils-usage" class="osh-ysh-topic" oils-embed="1">
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20 | oils-usage
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21 | </h3>
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22 |
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23 | <!-- pre-formatted for help builtin -->
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24 |
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25 | ```
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26 | bin/oils-for-unix is an executable that contains OSH, YSH, and more.
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27 |
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28 | Usage: oils-for-unix MAIN_NAME ARG*
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29 | MAIN_NAME ARG*
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30 |
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31 | It behaves like busybox. The command name can be passed as the first argument:
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32 |
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33 | oils-for-unix ysh -c 'echo hi'
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34 |
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35 | More commonly, it's invoked through a symlink like 'ysh', which causes it to
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36 | behave like that command:
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37 |
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38 | ysh -c 'echo hi'
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39 |
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40 | ```
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41 |
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42 | <h3 id="osh-usage" class="osh-topic" oils-embed="1">
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43 | osh-usage
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44 | </h3>
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45 |
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46 | <!-- pre-formatted for help builtin -->
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47 |
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48 | ```
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49 | bin/osh is compatible with POSIX shell, bash, and other shells.
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50 |
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51 | Usage: osh FLAG* SCRIPT ARG*
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52 | osh FLAG* -c COMMAND ARG*
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53 | osh FLAG*
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54 |
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55 | The command line accepted by `bin/osh` is compatible with /bin/sh and bash.
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56 |
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57 | osh -c 'echo hi'
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58 | osh myscript.sh
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59 | echo 'echo hi' | osh
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60 |
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61 | It also has a few enhancements:
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62 |
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63 | osh -n -c 'hello' # pretty-print the AST
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64 | osh --ast-format text -n -c 'hello' # print it full
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65 |
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66 | osh accepts POSIX sh flags, with these additions:
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67 |
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68 | -n parse the program but don't execute it. Print the AST.
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69 | --ast-format what format the AST should be in
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70 | ```
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71 |
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72 | <h3 id="ysh-usage" class="ysh-topic" oils-embed="1">
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73 | ysh-usage
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74 | </h3>
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75 |
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76 | <!-- pre-formatted for help builtin -->
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77 |
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78 | ```
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79 | bin/ysh is the shell with data tYpes, influenced by pYthon, JavaScript, ...
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80 |
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81 | Usage: ysh FLAG* SCRIPT ARG*
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82 | ysh FLAG* -c COMMAND ARG*
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83 | ysh FLAG*
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84 |
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85 | `bin/ysh` is the same as `bin/osh` with a the `ysh:all` option group set. So
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86 | `bin/ysh` also accepts shell flags.
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87 |
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88 | ysh -c 'echo hi'
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89 | ysh myscript.ysh
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90 | echo 'echo hi' | ysh
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91 | ```
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92 |
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93 |
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94 | <h3 id="config" class="osh-ysh-topic">config</h3>
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95 |
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96 | If the --rcfile flag is specified, that file will be executed on startup.
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97 | Otherwise:
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98 |
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99 | - `bin/osh` runs `~/.config/oils/oshrc`
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100 | - `bin/ysh` runs `~/.config/oils/yshrc`
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101 |
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102 | Pass --rcfile /dev/null or --norc to disable the startup file.
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103 |
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104 | If the --rcdir flag is specified, files in that folder will be executed on
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105 | startup.
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106 | Otherwise:
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107 |
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108 | - `bin/osh` runs everything in `~/.config/oils/oshrc.d/`
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109 | - `bin/ysh` runs everything in `~/.config/oils/yshrc.d/`
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110 |
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111 | Pass --norc to disable the startup directory.
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112 |
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113 | <h3 id="startup" class="osh-ysh-topic">startup</h3>
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114 |
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115 | History is read?
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116 |
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117 | <h3 id="exit-codes" class="osh-ysh-topic">exit-codes</h3>
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118 |
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119 | The meaning of exit codes is a convention, and generally follows one of two
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120 | paradigms.
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121 |
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122 | #### The Success / Failure Paradigm
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123 |
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124 | - `0` for **success**.
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125 | - `1` for **runtime error**
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126 | - Example: `echo foo > out.txt` and `out.txt` can't be opened.
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127 | - Example: `fg` and there's not job to put in the foreground.
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128 | - `2` for **parse error**. This means that we didn't *attempt* to do
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129 | anything, rather than doing something, then it fails.
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130 | - Example: A language parse error, like `echo $(`.
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131 | - Example: Builtin usage error, like `read -z`.
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132 | - `3` for runtime **expression errors**. The expression language is new to
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133 | Oils, so its errors have a new exit code.
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134 | - Example: divide by zero `42 / 0`
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135 | - Example: index out of range `a[1000]`
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136 |
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137 | POSIX exit codes:
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138 |
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139 | - `126` for permission denied when running a command (`errno EACCES`)
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140 | - `127` for command not found
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141 |
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142 | Hint: Error checking often looks like this:
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143 |
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144 | try {
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145 | ls /bad
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146 | }
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147 | if (_status !== 0) {
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148 | echo 'failed'
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149 | }
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150 |
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151 | #### The Boolean Paradigm
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152 |
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153 | - `0` for **true**
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154 | - `1` for **false**.
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155 | - Example: `test -f foo` and `foo` isn't a file.
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156 | - `2` for **error** (usage error, parse error, etc.)
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157 | - Example: `test -q`: the flag isn't accepted.
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158 |
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159 | Hint: The `boolstatus` builtin ensures that false and error aren't confused:
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160 |
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161 | if boolstatus test -f foo {
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162 | echo 'foo exists'
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163 | }
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164 |
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165 | See [YSH Fixes Shell's Error Handling](../error-handling.html) for more detail.
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166 |
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167 | ## Lexing
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168 |
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169 | <h3 id="comment" class="osh-ysh-topic">comment</h3>
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170 |
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171 | A comment starts with `#` and goes until the end of the line.
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172 |
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173 | echo hi # print a greeting
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174 |
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175 | <h3 id="line-continuation" class="osh-ysh-topic">line-continuation</h3>
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176 |
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177 | A backslash `\` at the end of a line continues the line without executing it:
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178 |
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179 | ls /usr/bin \
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180 | /usr/lib \
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181 | ~/src # A single command split over three lines
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182 |
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183 | <h3 id="ascii-whitespace" class="osh-ysh-topic">ascii-whitespace</h3>
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184 |
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185 | In most places, Oils uses the same definition of ASCII whitespace as JSON.
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186 | That is, any of these 4 bytes are considered whitespace:
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187 |
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188 | [ \t\r\n] # space, tab, carriage return, newline
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189 |
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190 | Sometimes newlines are significant, e.g. after shell commands. Then the set of
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191 | whitespace characters is:
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192 |
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193 | [ \t\r]
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194 |
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195 | (We don't handle the Windows `\r\n` sequence in a special way. Instead, `\r`
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196 | is often treated like space and tab.)
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197 |
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198 | Examples:
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199 |
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200 | - Inside shell arithmetic `$(( 1 + 2 ))`, ASCII whitespace is ignored.
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201 | - Inside YSH expressions `42 + a[i] * f(x)`, ASCII whitespace is ignored.
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202 |
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203 | Exceptions:
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204 |
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205 | - Carriage return `\r` may not always be whitespace.
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206 | - It can appear in an unquoted shell words, a rule that all POSIX shells
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207 | follow.
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208 | - The default `$IFS` doesn't include `\r`.
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209 | - YSH `trim()` functions also respect Unicode space.
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210 |
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211 | <h3 id="ascii-control-chars" class="osh-ysh-topic">ascii-control-chars</h3>
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212 |
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213 | The ASCII control chars have byte values `0x00` to `0x1F`. This set includes 3
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214 | whitespace chars:
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215 |
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216 | - tab - `\t` aka `0x09`
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217 | - newline - `\n` aka `0x0a`
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218 | - carriage return - `\r` aka `0x0d`
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219 |
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220 | (It doesn't include the space - `0x20`.)
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221 |
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222 | General rules:
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223 |
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224 | - In J8 **data** languages, control chars other than whitespace are illegal.
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225 | This is consistent with the JSON spec.
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226 | - In **source code**, control chars are allowed (but discouraged).
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227 | - For example, we don't check for control chars in unquoted OSH words, or YSH
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228 | string literals. They are treated like printable chars.
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229 |
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230 | Note about `NUL` aka `0x00`:
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231 |
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232 | - The NUL byte is often used to terminate buffers, i.e. as a sentinel for
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233 | [re2c](https://re2c.org) lexing. This means that data after the NUL will be
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234 | ignored.
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235 | - J8 **data** input is read all at once, i.e. **not** split into lines. So
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236 | everything after the first NUL may be ignored.
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237 | - Shell **source code** is split into lines.
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238 |
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239 | <h3 id="doc-comment" class="ysh-topic">doc-comment</h3>
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240 |
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241 | Doc comments look like this:
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242 |
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243 | proc deploy {
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244 | ### Deploy the app
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245 | echo hi
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246 | }
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247 |
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248 | <h3 id="multiline-command" class="ysh-topic">multiline-command</h3>
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249 |
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250 | The ... prefix starts a single command over multiple lines. It allows writing
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251 | long commands without \ continuation lines, and the resulting limitations on
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252 | where you can put comments.
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253 |
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254 | Single command example:
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255 |
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256 | ... chromium-browser
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257 | # comment on its own line
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258 | --no-proxy-server
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259 | --incognito # comment to the right
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260 | ;
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261 |
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262 | Long pipelines and and-or chains:
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263 |
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264 | ... find .
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265 | # exclude tests
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266 | | grep -v '_test.py'
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267 | | xargs wc -l
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268 | | sort -n
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269 | ;
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270 |
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271 | ... ls /
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272 | && ls /bin
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273 | && ls /lib
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274 | || error "oops"
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275 | ;
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276 |
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277 | ## Tools
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278 |
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279 | ### cat-em
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280 |
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281 | Print files embedded in the `oils-for-unix` binary to stdout. Example:
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282 |
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283 | osh --tool cat-em stdlib/math.ysh stdlib/other.ysh
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284 |
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285 |
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286 | ## Help Chapters
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287 |
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288 | <h3 id="osh-chapters" class="osh-topic" oils-embed="1">
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289 | osh-chapters
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290 | </h3>
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291 |
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292 | <!-- shown at the bottom of 'help' -->
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293 |
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294 | ```
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295 | The reference is divided in to "chapters", each of which has its own table of
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296 | contents. Type:
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297 |
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298 | help osh-$CHAPTER
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299 |
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300 | Where $CHAPTER is one of:
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301 |
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302 | front-end
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303 | command-lang
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304 | osh-assign
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305 | word-lang
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306 | mini-lang
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307 | builtin-cmd
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308 | option
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309 | special-var
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310 | plugin
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311 |
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312 | Example:
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313 |
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314 | help osh-word-lang
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315 | ```
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316 |
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317 |
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318 | <h3 id="ysh-chapters" class="ysh-topic" oils-embed="1">
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319 | ysh-chapters
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320 | </h3>
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321 |
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322 | <!-- shown at the bottom of 'help' -->
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323 |
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324 | ```
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325 | The reference is divided in to "chapters", each of which has its own table of
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326 | contents. Type:
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327 |
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328 | help ysh-$CHAPTER
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329 |
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330 | Where $CHAPTER is one of:
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331 |
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332 | front-end
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333 | command-lang
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334 | expr-lang
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335 | word-lang
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336 | builtin-cmd
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337 | option
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338 | special-var
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339 | type-method
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340 | builtin-func
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341 |
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342 | Example:
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343 |
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344 | help ysh-expr-lang
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345 | ```
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346 |
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347 | <!-- h4 needed to end last card: ysh-chapters -->
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348 | <h4></h4>
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