|  | 7 months ago | |
|---|---|---|
| .fossil-custom | ||
| .fossil-settings | ||
| bin | ||
| callbacks | 8 months ago | |
| scriptlib | 8 months ago | |
| src | 7 months ago | |
| .gitignore | ||
| README.md | ||
| compositing_ansi.png | 1 year ago | |
| hype_roysac.png | ||
| punk1.ico | ||
| punk1.png | ||
| punk1_transparent.png | ||
| tclint.toml | 8 months ago | |
		
			
				
				README.md
			
		
		
			
			
		
	
	punkshell - an alternative Tcl Shell
BSD license
2023-08 Note: this is alpha level software and still highly experimental.
Features
- default ansi color output - toggle with 'colour on' and 'colour off' (or set NO_COLOR environment variable)
- rendering of old-school Ansi art (cp437) in the terminal
 
- Relatively easy compositing of text blocks containing Ansi colour codes - (or rendered versions of ansi containing movement and other controls)
    proc welcome_test {} {
        package require textblock
        package require punk::ansi
        package require overtype
        set ansi        [textblock::join -- " " [punk::ansi::ansicat src/testansi/publicdomain/roysac/roy-welc.ans 80x8]]
        # Ansi art courtesy of Carsten Cumbrowski aka Roy/SAC - roysac.com
        set table       [[textblock::spantest] print]
        set punks       [a+ web-lawngreen][>punk . lhs][a]\n\n[a+ rgb#FFFF00][>punk . rhs][a]
        set ipunks      [overtype::renderspace -width [textblock::width $punks] [punk::ansi::enable_inverse]$punks]
        set testblock   [textblock::testblock 15 rainbow]
        set contents    $ansi\n[textblock::join -- "  " $table "  " $punks " " $testblock " " $ipunks " " $punks] 
        set framed      [textblock::frame -type arc -title [a+ cyan]Compositing[a] -subtitle [a+ red]ANSI[a] -ansiborder [a+ web-orange] $contents]
    } 
- 
experimental functional/pattern-matching language features. (will not be performant until more work is done on script compilation) 
 e.g.1 basic pipeline with 2 segments
 var_pipe_output.= var_list.= list a b c |> string toupper
 e.g.2 basic pattern-match multi-assignment to variables x y & z
 x@0,y@1,z@2.= list a b cequivalently:x@,y@,z@.= list a b cor evenx@,y@,z@= {a b c}
 x/0,y/1,z/2,zz/3.= list a b cis similar - but the use of forward-slash instead of @ will not produce a mismatch if an index is out of range.
 where .= indicates following arguments form a command, and a plain = accepts only a single argument as a value
 The diminutive case of this isx= "something"as equivalent toset x "something"
 Assignment operations and pattern-matches are slightly optimised to bytecompile, but are unlikely to compete with raw Tcl commands performance-wise.
 e.g.3 destructuring pattern-match. Get value of key 'k1' from last item in a list of dicts.
 x@end/@@k1.= list {k1 aaa} {k1 bb}returns bbbThere are many more pattern-matching features yet to be documented. 
- 
easy execution of externals commands with return of stdout, stderr and the exitcode of the process 
 The run... commands use a very basic repl-telemetry system to output more information to the console than just the return value,
 but in a way which makes the return value clear. The telemetry only outputs if the command is the first word on the commandline.- run <comand> ...
 (return exitcode of process - and allows process writes to stderr/stdout to appear in console as they occur)
- runout [-n] <command> ...
 (return stdout of process - no output until completion)
- runerr [-n] <command> ...
 (return stderr of process - no output until completion)
- runx [-n] <command> ...(return a dict of stdout stderr exitcode - no output until completion)
 The run... commands attempt to make it clear if a called process outputs a trailing newline by displaying a trailing blank line. 
 The optional-nargument can be used to suppress a trailing newline.runout -n pwdis thus similar to Tcl'sexec pwd
 For simple casesexec <command>is fine - but the equivalentrunout -n <command>when used in the shell will display exitcode and stderr separately (whilst returning only stdout) exec will return stdout and stderr together.
 If you are on a unix-like platform, or a windows platform which has something like msys2 to provide commands like 'which' and 'grep' in the path:
 Tryrunx -n which grep nonexistantvsexec which grep nonexistantto see the difference in terms of easy access to what was written to stderr vs stdout.
 The run... commands are intended as a supplement for rather than a replacement for Tcl's exec/open.
- 
namespace browser (contextual - allowing running of commands within the active namespace - analogous to 'cd' for directories) - n/- display child namespaces of current namespace (alias- :/)
 also- n/ <globpattern>to restrict output
- n/ <childns>- if the argument doesn't contain glob chars '*' or '?' - attempt to switch to a child namespace of that name. Analogous to- cd <dir>
 list any sub namespaces of the namespace we just switched to.
- n//- display child namespaces and commands (alias- ://)
 with colourised indication of type such as proc,alias,ensemble,oo object,oo class,imported,exported where possible.
 (renamed aliases and builtins and commands loaded from binaries will appear unmarked)
- nn/- move up one namespace towards root namespace '::' analogous to- cd ..(alias- ::/)
- n/new <somename>- create a child namespace called 'somename' and switch to it in one operation. (alias- :/new)
 
- 
cross-platform alternative to cd & ls/dir without invoking child processes. Display colourised listing of dirs and folders - with vfs indication. - d/- list current directory (alias- ./)
 also- d/ <globpattern>to restrict output
- d/ <subdir>- switch to subdir and list contents in one operation
- dd/- move up one directory and output listing. Roughly equivalent to- cd ..followed by dir or ls (alias- ../)
- d/new <folder>- create a child directory and switch to it in one operation. (alias- ./new <folder>)
 
missing
- raw mode REPL (read-eval-print-loop) to allow commandline completion etc. Initial version is linemode. (intention is to allow different REPLs to be plugged)
- documentation!
- tests
- signal handling on unix-like platforms (ctrl-c implemented on windows only)
very unripe parts:
- commandline options - in need of urgent work to document and lock down specifics - in particular: punkshell somescript.tcl needs a fix to emit errors.
- shellfilter - api is clumsy
- scriptlib - will likely be reorganised/pruned significantly
