I’ve been trying nushell and words fail me. It’s like it was made for actual humans to use! 🤯 🤯 🤯

It even repeats the column headers at the end of the table if the output takes more than your screen…

Trying to think of how to do the same thing with awk/grep/sort/whatever is giving me a headache. Actually just thinking about awk is giving me a headache. I think I might be allergic.

I’m really curious, what’s your favorite shell? Have you tried other shells than your distro’s default one? Are you an awk wizard or do you run away very fast whenever it’s mentioned?

  • priapus@piefed.social
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    1 month ago

    I love Nushell, it’s so much more pleasant for writing scripts IMO. I know some people say they’d just use Python if they need more than what a POSIX shell offers, but I think Nushell is a perfect option in between.

    With a Nushell scripts you get types, structured data, and useful commands for working with them, while still being able to easily execute and pipe external commands. I’ve only ever had two very minor gripes with Nushell, the inability to detach a process, and the lack of a -l flag for cp. Now that uutils supports the -l flag, Nushell support is a WIP, and I realized systemd-run is a better option than just detaching processes when SSHd into a server.

    I know another criticism is that it doesn’t work well with external cli tools, but I’ve honestly never had an issue with any. A ton of CLI tools support JSON output, which can be piped into from json to make working with it in Nushell very easy. Simpler tools often just output a basic table, which can be piped into detect columns to automatically turn it into a Nushell table. Sometimes strange formatting will make this a little weird, but fixing that formatting with some string manipulation (which Nushell also makes very easy) is usually still easier than trying to parse it in Bash.

  • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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    1 month ago

    I feel like if I was forced to use PowerShell I’d fall in love with it and want to use it on Linux. Passing objects between commands instead of text sounds amazing. So many (Linux) shell commands use slightly differently shaped text, it’s annoying. New line separated? Tab separated? Null separated? Comma separated? Multiple fields? JSON? And converting between them all and using different flags to accept different ones is just such a headache.

  • esa@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 month ago

    I’ve been using fish (with starship for prompt) for like a year I think, after having had a self-built zsh setup for … I don’t know how long.

    I’m capable of using awk but in a very simple way; I generally prefer being able to use jq. IMO both awk and perl are sort of remnants of the age before JSON became the standard text-based structured data format. We used to have to write a lot of dinky little regex-based parsers in Perl to extract data. These days we likely get JSON and can operate on actual data structures.

    I tried nu very briefly but I’m just too used to POSIX-ish shells to bother switching to another model. For scripting I’ll use #!/bin/bash with set -eou pipefail but very quickly switch to Python if it looks like it’s going to have any sort of serious logic.

    My impression is that there’s likely more of us that’d like a less wibbly-wobbly, better shell language for scripting purposes, but that efforts into designing such a language very quickly goes in the direction of nu and oil and whatnot.

    • Overspark@piefed.social
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      1 month ago

      nu 's commands also work on JSON, so you don’t really need jq (or xq or yq) any more. It offers a unified set of commands that’ll work on almost any kind of structured data.

    • phantomwise@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 month ago

      That’s interesting I hadn’t thought about the JSON angle! Do you mean that you can actually use jq on regular command outputs like ls -l?

      Oil is an interesting project and the backward compatibility with bash is very neat! I don’t see myself using it though, since it’s syntax is very close to bash on purpose I’d probably get oil syntax and bash syntax all mixed up in my head and forget which is which… So I went with nushell because it doesn’t look anything like bash. If you know python what do you think about xonsh? I

      • esa@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 month ago

        That’s interesting I hadn’t thought about the JSON angle! Do you mean that you can actually use jq on regular command outputs like ls -l?

        No, you need to be using a tool which has json output as an option. These are becoming more common, but I think still rare among the GNU coreutils. ls output especially is unparseable, as in, there are tons of resources telling people not to do it because it’s pretty much guaranteed to break.

        • elmicha@feddit.org
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          1 month ago

          There’s jc (CLI tool and python library that converts the output of popular command-line tools, file-types, and common strings to JSON, YAML, or Dictionaries).

          • cyrl@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            You’ve opened a rabbit hole I know I’m just going to fall down… thanks netizen!

  • communism@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    Nushell looks cool but I prefer to stick with the POSIXes so that I know my scripts will always work and syntax always does what I expect it to. I use zsh as a daily driver, and put up with various bashes, ashes, dashes, that come pre-installed with systems I won’t be using loads (e.g. temporary vms).

    • nimpnin@sopuli.xyz
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      1 month ago

      Always confuses me when people say this. You can use multiple different shells / scripting languages, just as you can use multiple programming languages.

      • communism@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        I know that. I just don’t have a use case for alternative shells. Zsh works fine for me and I know how it works. I don’t have problems that need fixing, so I don’t need to take the time to learn a new, incompatible shell.

      • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        If you want your scripts to “always work” you’ll need to go with the most common/standard language, because the environments you work on might not be able to use all of those languages.

        • nimpnin@sopuli.xyz
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          1 month ago

          I mean if all your scripts are fully general purpose. That just seems really weird to me. I don’t need to run my yt-dlp scripts on the computational clusters I work on.

          Moreover, none of this applies to the interactive use of the shell.

          • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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            1 month ago

            It’s not only clusters… I have my shell configuration even in my Android phone, where I often connect to by ssh. And also in my Kobo, and in my small portable console running Knulli.

            In my case, my shell configuration is structured in some folders where I can add config specific to each location while still sharing the same base.

            Maybe not everything is general, but the things that are general and useful become ingrained in a way that it becomes annoying when you don’t have them. Like specific shortcuts for backwards history search, or even some readline movement shortcuts that apparently are not standard everywhere… or jumping to most ‘frecent’ directory based on a pattern like z does.

            If you don’t mind that those scripts not always work and you have the time to maintain 2 separate sets of configuration and initialization scripts, and aliases, etc. then it’s fine.

            • nimpnin@sopuli.xyz
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              1 month ago

              those scripts not always work

              This feels like ragebait. I have multiple devices, use fish whenever that can be installed and zsh/bash when not, and have none of these issues.

              EDIT:

              or some methods to jump to most recent directory like z.

              Manually downloading the same shell scripts on every machine is just doing what the package manager is supposed to do for you. I did this once to get some rust utils like eza to get them to work without sudo. It’s terrible.

              • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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                1 month ago

                Manually downloading the same shell scripts on every machine is just doing what the package manager is supposed to do for you

                If you have a package manager available, and what you need is available there, sure. My Synology NAS, my Knulli, my cygwin installs in Windows, my Android device… they are not so easy to have custom shells in (does fish even have a Windows port?).

                I rarely have to manually copy, in many of those environments you can at least git clone, or use existing syncing mechanisms. In the ones that don’t even have that… well, at least copying the config works, I just scp it, not a big deal, it’s not like I have to do that so often… I could even script it to make it automatic if it ever became a problem.

                Also, note that I do not just use things like z straight away… my custom configuration automatically calls z as a fallback when I mistype a directory with cd (or when I intentionally use cd while in a far/wrong location just so I can reach faster/easier)… I have a lot of things customized, the package install would only be the first step.

                • nimpnin@sopuli.xyz
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                  1 month ago

                  So you’re willing to do a lot of manual package managing, in general put a lot of work into optimizing your workflow, adjusting to different package availability, adjusting to different operating systems…

                  …but not writing two different configs?

                  That is your prerogative but you’re not convincing me. Though I don’t think I’ll be convincing you either.

                  I have separate configs/aliases/etc for most of my machines just because, well, they are different machines with different hardware, software, data, operating systems and purposes. Even for those (most) that I can easily install fish on.

      • esa@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 month ago

        Yeah, there should be a clear separation between scripts, which should have a shebang, and interactive use.

        If a script starts acting oddly after someone does a chsh, then that script is broken. Hopefully people don’t actually distribute broken script files that have some implicit dependency on an unspecified interpreter in this day and age.

      • communism@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        They have !/bin/sh shebangs. /bin/sh is a symlink, in my case to zsh. I like using one language.

    • phantomwise@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 month ago

      I don’t really mind having a non-POSIX shell since it doesn’t prevent bash scripts from working, but I get that if you want portability bash is still best since it’ll work mostly anywhere.

      • 4am@lemmy.zip
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        1 month ago

        If I can shebang nutshell (assuming all the builtins from bash or even sh work) and pass a flag to remove all the fancy UI-for-humans formatting so that piped commands int eh scripts work, then I think this is incredible.

        Yeah having this installed along side other more “standard” shells is fine I guess, but it looks like maybe it has some neat functionality that is more difficult in other shells? I guess I’d need to read up on it more but having a non-interactive mode for machines to read more easily would be a huge plus for it overall. I suppose that depends on what it offers/what it’s trying to accomplish.

  • bastion@feddit.nl
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    1 month ago

    I like nushell, but I love xonsh. Xonsh is the bastard love child of Python and Bash.

    it can be thought of as:

    • try this statement in Python
    • if there’s an exception, try it in bash.

    Now, that’s not a very accurate description, because the reality is more nuanced, but it allows for things like:

    for file in !(find | grep -i '[.]mp3^'):
        file = Path(file.strip())
        if file != Path('.') and file != file.with_suffix('.mp3'):
        mv @(file) @(file.with_suffix('.mp3'))
    

    Now, there are things in there I wouldn’t bother with normally - like, rather than using mv, I’d just use file.rename(), but the snippet shows a couple of the tools for interaction between xonsh and sh.

    • !(foo) - if writing python, execute foo, and return lines
    • @(foo) - if writing sh, substitute with the value of the foo variable.

    But, either a line is treated in a pyhony way, or in a shelly way - and if a line is shelly, you can reference Python variables or expressions via @(), and if it’s Pythony, you can execute shell code with !() or $(), returning the lines or the exact value, respectively.

    Granted, I love python and like shell well enough, and chimeras are my jam, so go figure.

    • priapus@piefed.social
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      1 month ago

      Xonsh is also a really cool option. If I used Python more regularly and was more comfortable using it without having to look stuff up, I’d probably use it over Nushell.

      • bastion@feddit.nl
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        1 month ago

        It’s a superset of python, so valid python should run fine. Imports into your shell are doable, too – for example, I import path.Path in my xonshrc, so it’s always available when I hit the shell. I don’t often have to use Path, because regular shell commands are often more straightforward. But when I do, it’s nice to have it already loaded. Granted, that could get kooky, depending on what you import and execute.

        You can associate/shebang Xonsh with .xsh files, or run “xonsh foo.xsh” - and that works like “bash foo.sh” would, except using xonsh syntax, of course.

        It’s not Bash compatible - copypasta of scripts may not work out. But it’s a good shell with some typical shell semantics.

        there are some great plugins, too - like autovox, which allows you to create python venvs associated with specific subfolders. so, cd myproject does the equivalent of cd myproject; . path/to/venv/bin/activate.

        overall, there definitely is some jank, but it’s a great tool and I love it.

        • MonkCanatella@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          Hm. That sounds delightful. I do think once your script hits a not one liner level of complexity, python is a logical next step.

          Does it provide any useful stuff to Python itself? Would I like, derive any benefit to writing a script in xonsh over pure python?

          • bastion@feddit.nl
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            1 month ago

            Succinctness, mainly. but honestly, that succinctness call can also be mostly acquired using sh.py, which is what I normally use if I’m using python as a sort of shell scripting - mostly because sh.py is a very minimal requirement, whereas Xonsh has quite a few dependencies.

            addendum: I’d say, if you’re already using Xonsh, and aren’t really looking to share your script with anyone other than Xonsh users or your own systems, you’d probably like to use .xsh scripts. But if you’re looking to share your script, use sh.py.

  • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    I prefer getting comfortable with bash, because it’s everywhere and I need it for work anyway (no fancy shells in remote VMs). But you can customize bash a lot to give more colored feedback or even customize the shortcuts with readline. Another one is pwsh (powershell) because it’s by default in Windows machines that (sadly) I sometimes have to use as VMs too. But you can also install it in linux since it’s now open source.

    But if I wanted to experiment personally I’d go for xonsh, it’s a python-based one. So you have all the tools and power of python with terminal convenience.

    • phantomwise@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 month ago

      Yeah if you need to work on machines with bash it makes sense to stick with it. Sorry you have to work on Windows… how is powershell compared to bash?

      I don’t know python but xonsh seems really cool, especially since like nushell it works on both linux and windows so you don’t have to bother about OS specific syntax

      • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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        powershell, in concept, is pretty powerful since it’s integrated with C# and allows dealing with complex data structures as objects too, similar to nushell (though it does not “pretty-print” everything the way nushell does, at least by default).

        But in practice, since I don’t use it as much I never really get used to it and I’m constantly checking how to do things… I’m too used to posix tools and I often end up bringing over a portable subset of msys2, cygwin or similar whenever possible, just so I can use grep, sed, sort, uniq, curl, etc in Windows ^^U …however, for scripts where you have to deal with structured data it’s superior since it has builtin methods for that.

  • Obin@feddit.org
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    1 month ago

    I’m really curious, what’s your favorite shell?

    Emacs eshell+eat

    It essentially reverses the terminal/shell relationship. Here, it’s the shell that starts a terminal session for every command. Eshell is also tightly integrated with Emacs and has access to all the extended functionality. You can use Lisp in one-liners, you can pipe output directly to an emacs buffer, you can write custom commands as lisp functions, full shortcut customization not limited to terminal keys, history search via the completion framework (i.e. consult-history), easy prompt customization, etc.

    There’s also Tramp, which lets you transparently cd into remote hosts via ssh, docker containers, SMB/NFS-shares, archive files, and work with them as if they were normal directories (obviously with limited functionality in some cases, like archives).

    And probably a lot of stuff I’m missing right now.

    • Oinks@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 month ago

      The usual problems with parsing ls don’t happen here because Nu’s ls builtin returns properly typed data. You can work with it in pretty much the same way you would work with it in Python, except that Nu has a composition operator that doesn’t suck ass (|), so you don’t have to write as much imperative boilerplate.

      I have a number of reservations regarding Nu (the stability of the scripting language, unintuitive syntax rules, a disappointing standard library) but this particular argument just doesn’t apply.

      • drspod@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        The usual problems with parsing ls don’t happen here because Nu’s ls builtin returns properly typed data.

        Isn’t that the point that the previous commenter was making by linking that answer? I read their comment as “here is why you should use Nu shell instead of parsing ls output.”

      • MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip
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        1 month ago

        Yeah, why are linebreaks & co. in names even allowed on file system level? There’s not even something like a restricted mode mount option for most fs.

        • Oinks@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          There’s an argument to be made that system software like filesystems and kernels shouldn’t get too smart about validating or transforming strings, because once you start caring about a strings meaning, you can no longer treat it as just a byte sequence and instead need to worry about all the complexities of Unicode code points. “Is this character printable” seems like a simple question but it really isn’t.

          Now if I were to develop a filesystem from scratch, would I go for the 80% solution of just banning the ASCII newline specifically? Honestly yes, I don’t see a downside. But regardless of how much effort is put into it, there will always be edge cases – either filenames that break stuff, or filenames that aren’t allowed even though they should be.

        • thetaT [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          1 month ago

          because why not? it’s just characters and any UTF8 string is allowed as a filename so long as it doesn’t contain a null byte. people’s usecases are different, and you really shouldn’t be parsing ls output in the first place

  • KSP Atlas@sopuli.xyz
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    1 month ago

    I’ve used nushell for several months, and it really is an amazing shell

    It feels more like an actual language than arcane runes, and I can easily makes chains and pipelines and things that would be difficult in bash

    Additionally, it makes a pretty good scripting language

  • calliope@retrolemmy.com
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    1 month ago

    I use zsh, mainly because I’ve been using it for a really long time and it felt like an upgraded bash.

    I also have used fish a tiny amount and like the idea but zsh just works for my purposes and I already know how it works.

    nushell looks really cool though!

    I don’t have much occasion to use awk any more but it can be really useful!

    • phantomwise@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 month ago

      I’ve also been using zsh until now, it’s clear it’s a massive improvement over bash. No more accidentally pasting code into the terminal!

      I wasn’t even looking for a new interactive shell, zsh is fine, I was looking for a new language for shell scripts because I’m tired of bash’s legacy quirks… but the interactive nushell was too cool to resist!

      • calliope@retrolemmy.com
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        1 month ago

        nushell seriously looks amazing for working with data. I gotta remember it exists the next time I’m doing stuff like this.

        It seems like a nice shell to have around and usable for cases like this regardless!

  • ArseAssassin@sopuli.xyz
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    1 month ago

    Love nushell. It’s just about the most practical functional programming language I’ve ever had the pleasure of using.

    I’m using fish as my default shell since it’s more standards-compliant and plays nicer with tools that modify your environment. But any time I need to do more complicated shell scripting, I’m breaking out nushell.