Ruby in your shell!
Ru brings Ruby's expressiveness, cleanliness, and readability to the command line.
It lets you avoid looking up pesky options in man pages and Googling how to write a transformation in bash that would take you approximately 1s to write in Ruby.
For example, to center a file's lines, use String#center:
ru 'map(:center, 80)' myfile
Using traditional tools, this isn't as easy or readable:
awk 'printf "%" int(40+length($0)/2) "s\n", $0' myfile
For another example, let's compare summing the lines of a list of integers using Ru vs. a traditional approach:
ru 'map(:to_i).sum' myfile
awk '{s+=$1} END {print s}' myfile
Any method from Ruby Core and Active Support can be used. Ru also provides new methods (and modifies #map) to make transformations easier. Here are some variations on the above example:
ru 'map(:to_i, 10).sum' myfile
ru 'map(:to_i).reduce(&:+)' myfile
ru 'each_line.to_i.to_a.sum' myfile
ru 'grep(/^\d+$/).map(:to_i).sum' myfile
ru 'map { |n| n.to_i }.reduce(&:+)' myfile
ru 'reduce(0) { |sum, n| sum + n.to_i }' myfile
ru 'each_line.match(/(\d+)/)[1].to_i.to_a.sum' myfile
ru 'map { |n| n.to_i }.reduce(0) { |sum, n| sum + n }' myfile
See Examples and Methods for more.
gem install ru
You can now use Ruby in your shell!
For example, to sum a list of integers:
$ printf "2\n3" | ru 'map(:to_i).sum'
5
See Examples below, too!
Ru reads from stdin:
$ printf "2\n3" | ru 'map(:to_i).sum'
5
$ cat myfile | ru 'map(:to_i).sum'
5
Or from file(s):
$ ru 'map(:to_i).sum' myfile
5
$ ru 'map(:to_i).sum' myfile myfile
10
You can also run Ruby code without any input by prepending a !
:
$ ru '! 2 + 3'
5
The code argument is run as if it has $stdin.each_line.map(&:chomp).
prepended to it. The result is converted to a string and printed. So, if you run ru 'map(&:to_i).sum'
, you can think of it as running puts $stdin.each_line.map(&:chomp).map(&:to_i).sum
.
In addition to the methods provided by Ruby Core and Active Support, Ru provides other methods for performing transformations, like each_line
, files
, and grep
, and it improves map
. See Methods for more.
Let's compare the readability and conciseness of Ru relative to existing tools:
ru 'map(:center, 80)' myfile
awk 'printf "%" int(40+length($0)/2) "s\n", $0' myfile
ru 'map(:to_i).sum' myfile
awk '{s+=$1} END {print s}' myfile
paste -s -d+ myfile | bc
ru '[4]' myfile
sed '5q;d' myfile
ru '[1..-2]' myfile
sed '1d;$d' myfile
ru 'map { |line| [line[/(\d+)( ".+"){2}$/, 1].to_i, line] }.sort.reverse.map(:join, " ")' access.log
awk --re-interval '{ match($0, /(([^[:space:]]+|\[[^\]]+\]|"[^"]+")[[:space:]]+){7}/, m); print m[2], $0 }' access.log | sort -nk 1
In addition to the methods provided by Ruby Core and Active Support, Ru provides other methods for performing transformations.
Provides a shorthand for calling methods on each iteration of the input. Best explained by example:
ru 'each_line.strip.center(80)' myfile
If you'd like to transform it back into a list, call to_a
:
ru 'each_line.strip.to_a.map(:center, 80)' myfile
Converts the lines to Ru::File
objects (see Ru::File below).
$ printf "foo.txt" | ru 'files.map(:updated_at).map(:strftime, ""%Y-%m-%d")'
2014-11-08
Formats a list of Ru::File
s. You'll typically call this after calling files
to transform them into strings:
$ ru 'files.format'
644 tom staff 3 2014-10-26 09:06 bar.txt
644 tom staff 11 2014-11-04 08:29 foo.txt
The default format, 'l'
, is shown above. It prints [omode, owner, group, size, date, name]
.
Selects lines which match the given regex.
$ printf "john\npaul\ngeorge" | ru 'grep(/o[h|r]/)'
john
george
This is the same as Array#map, but it adds a new syntax that allows you to easily pass arguments to a method. For example:
$ printf "john\npaul" | ru 'map(:[], 0)'
j
p
$ printf "john\npaul" | ru 'map(:center, 8, ".")'
..john..
..paul..
Note that the examples above can also be performed with each_line
:
$ printf "john\npaul" | ru 'each_line[0]'
$ printf "john\npaul" | ru 'each_line.center(8, ".")'
The files
method returns an enumerable of Ru::File
s, which are similar to Ruby Core's File
. Each one has the following methods:
basename
created_at
(alias for ctime)ctime
extname
format
(see theformat
method above)ftype
gid
group
mode
mtime
name
(alias for basename)omode
owner
size
to_s
(alias for name)uid
updated_at
(alias for mtime)world_readable?
Ru lets you save commands by name, so that you can easily use them later.
Save a command for future use:
$ ru save sum 'map(:to_i).sum'
Saved command: sum is 'map(:to_i).sum'
Run a saved command:
$ printf "2\n3" | ru run sum
5
$ ru run sum myfile
5
List all of your saved commands:
$ ru list
Saved commands:
sum map(:to_i).sum
Print a help page.
Print the installed version of Ru.
Ru is tested against Active Support 3 and 4. If you'd like to submit a PR, please be sure to use Appraisal to test your changes in both contexts:
appraisal rspec
Ru is released under the MIT License. Please see the MIT-LICENSE file for details.