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# Operators |
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Nushell supports the following operators for common math, logic, and string operations: |
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| Operator | Description | |
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| ------------- | ------------------------------------------------------- | |
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| `+` | add | |
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| `-` | subtract | |
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| `*` | multiply | |
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| `/` | divide | |
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| `//` | floor division | |
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| `mod` | modulo | |
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| `**` | exponentiation (power) | |
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| `==` | equal | |
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| `!=` | not equal | |
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| `<` | less than | |
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| `<=` | less than or equal | |
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| `>` | greater than | |
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| `>=` | greater than or equal | |
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| `=~` | regex match / string contains another | |
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| `!~` | inverse regex match / string does *not* contain another | |
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| `in` | value in list | |
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| `not-in` | value not in list | |
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| `not` | logical not | |
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| `and` | and two Boolean expressions (short-circuits) | |
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| `or` | or two Boolean expressions (short-circuits) | |
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| `xor` | exclusive or two boolean expressions | |
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| `bit-or` | bitwise or | |
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| `bit-xor` | bitwise xor | |
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| `bit-and` | bitwise and | |
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| `bit-shl` | bitwise shift left | |
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| `bit-shr` | bitwise shift right | |
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| `starts-with` | string starts with | |
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| `ends-with` | string ends with | |
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| `++` | append lists | |
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Parentheses can be used for grouping to specify evaluation order or for calling commands and using the results in an expression. |
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## Order of Operations |
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Operations are evaluated in the following order (from highest precedence to lowest): |
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- Parentheses (`()`) |
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- Exponentiation/Power (`**`) |
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- Multiply (`*`), Divide (`/`), Integer/Floor Division (`//`), and Modulo (`mod`) |
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- Add (`+`) and Subtract (`-`) |
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- Bit shifting (`bit-shl`, `bit-shr`) |
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- Comparison operations (`==`, `!=`, `<`, `>`, `<=`, `>=`), membership tests (`in`, `not-in`, `starts-with`, `ends-with`), regex matching (`=~`, `!~`), and list appending (`++`) |
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- Bitwise and (`bit-and`) |
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- Bitwise xor (`bit-xor`) |
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- Bitwise or (`bit-or`) |
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- Logical and (`&&`, `and`) |
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- Logical xor (`xor`) |
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- Logical or (`||`, `or`) |
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- Assignment operations |
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``` |
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> 3 * (1 + 2) |
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9 |
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``` |
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## Types |
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Not all operations make sense for all data types. |
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If you attempt to perform an operation on non-compatible data types, you will be met with an error message that should explain what went wrong: |
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```nu |
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> "spam" - 1 |
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Error: nu::parser::unsupported_operation (link) |
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ร Types mismatched for operation. |
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โญโ[entry #49:1:1] |
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1 โ "spam" - 1 |
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ยท โโโโฌโโ โฌ โฌ |
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ยท โ โ โฐโโ int |
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ยท โ โฐโโ doesn't support these values. |
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ยท โฐโโ string |
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โฐโโโโ |
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help: Change string or int to be the right types and try again. |
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``` |
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The rules might sometimes feel a bit strict, but on the other hand there should be less unexpected side effects. |
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## Regular Expression / string-contains Operators |
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The `=~` and `!~` operators provide a convenient way to evaluate [regular expressions](https://cheatography.com/davechild/cheat-sheets/regular-expressions/). You don't need to know regular expressions to use them - they're also an easy way to check whether 1 string contains another. |
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- `string =~ pattern` returns **true** if `string` contains a match for `pattern`, and **false** otherwise. |
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- `string !~ pattern` returns **false** if `string` contains a match for `pattern`, and **true** otherwise. |
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For example: |
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```nu |
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foobarbaz =~ bar # returns true |
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foobarbaz !~ bar # returns false |
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ls | where name =~ ^nu # returns all files whose names start with "nu" |
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``` |
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Both operators use [the Rust regex crate's `is_match()` function](https://docs.rs/regex/latest/regex/struct.Regex.html#method.is_match). |
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## Case Sensitivity |
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Operators are usually case-sensitive when operating on strings. There are a few ways to do case-insensitive work instead: |
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1. In the regular expression operators, specify the `(?i)` case-insensitive mode modifier: |
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```nu |
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"FOO" =~ "foo" # returns false |
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"FOO" =~ "(?i)foo" # returns true |
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``` |
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2. Use the [`str contains`](/commands/docs/str_contains.md) command's `--insensitive` flag: |
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```nu |
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"FOO" | str contains --insensitive "foo" |
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``` |
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3. Convert strings to lowercase with [`str downcase`](/commands/docs/str_downcase.md) before comparing: |
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```nu |
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("FOO" | str downcase) == ("Foo" | str downcase) |
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``` |
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## Spread operator |
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Nushell has a spread operator (`...`) for unpacking lists and records. You may be familiar with it |
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if you've used JavaScript before. Some languages use `*` for their spread/splat operator. It can |
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expand lists or records in places where multiple values or key-value pairs are expected. |
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There are three places you can use the spread operator: |
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- [In list literals](#in-list-literals) |
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- [In record literals](#in-record-literals) |
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- [In command calls](#in-command-calls) |
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### In list literals |
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Suppose you have multiple lists you want to concatenate together, but you also want to intersperse |
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some individual values. This can be done with `append` and `prepend`, but the spread |
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operator can let you do it more easily. |
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```nushell |
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> let dogs = [Spot, Teddy, Tommy] |
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> let cats = ["Mr. Humphrey Montgomery", Kitten] |
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> [ |
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...$dogs |
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Polly |
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...($cats | each { |it| $"($it) \(cat\)" }) |
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...[Porky Bessie] |
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...Nemo |
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] |
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โญโโโโฌโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโฎ |
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โ 0 โ Spot โ |
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โ 1 โ Teddy โ |
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โ 2 โ Tommy โ |
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โ 3 โ Polly โ |
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โ 4 โ Mr. Humphrey Montgomery (cat) โ |
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โ 5 โ Kitten (cat) โ |
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โ 6 โ Porky โ |
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โ 7 โ Bessie โ |
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โ 8 โ ...Nemo โ |
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โฐโโโโดโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโฏ |
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``` |
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The below code is an equivalent version using `append`: |
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```nushell |
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> $dogs | |
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append Polly | |
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append ($cats | each { |it| $"($it) \(cat\)" }) | |
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append [Porky Bessie] | |
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append ...Nemo |
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``` |
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Note that each call to `append` results in the creation of a new list, meaning that in this second |
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example, 3 unnecessary intermediate lists are created. This is not the case with the spread operator, |
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so there may be (very minor) performance benefits to using `...` if you're joining lots of large |
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lists together, over and over. |
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You may have noticed that the last item of the resulting list above is `"...Nemo"`. This is because |
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inside list literals, it can only be used to spread lists, not strings. As such, inside list literals, it can |
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only be used before variables (`...$foo`), subexpressions (`...(foo)`), and list literals (`...[foo]`). |
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The `...` also won't be recognized as the spread operator if there's any whitespace between it and |
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the next expression: |
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```nushell |
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> [ ... [] ] |
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โญโโโโฌโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโฎ |
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โ 0 โ ... โ |
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โ 1 โ [list 0 items] โ |
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โฐโโโโดโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโฏ |
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``` |
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This is mainly so that `...` won't be confused for the spread operator in commands such as `mv ... $dir`. |
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### In record literals |
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Let's say you have a record with some configuration information and you want to add more fields to |
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this record: |
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```nushell |
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> let config = { path: /tmp, limit: 5 } |
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``` |
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You can make a new record with all the fields of `$config` and some new additions using the spread |
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operator. You can use the spread multiple records inside a single record literal. |
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```nushell |
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> { |
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...$config, |
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users: [alice bob], |
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...{ url: example.com }, |
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...(sys | get mem) |
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} |
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โญโโโโโโโโโโโโโฌโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโฎ |
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โ path โ /tmp โ |
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โ limit โ 5 โ |
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โ โ โญโโโโฌโโโโโโโโฎ โ |
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โ users โ โ 0 โ alice โ โ |
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โ โ โ 1 โ bob โ โ |
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โ โ โฐโโโโดโโโโโโโโฏ โ |
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โ url โ example.com โ |
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โ total โ 8.3 GB โ |
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โ free โ 2.6 GB โ |
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โ used โ 5.7 GB โ |
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โ available โ 2.6 GB โ |
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โ swap total โ 2.1 GB โ |
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โ swap free โ 18.0 MB โ |
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โ swap used โ 2.1 GB โ |
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โฐโโโโโโโโโโโโโดโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโฏ |
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``` |
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Similarly to lists, inside record literals, the spread operator can only be used before variables (`...$foo`), |
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subexpressions (`...(foo)`), and record literals (`...{foo:bar}`). Here too, there needs to be no |
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whitespace between the `...` and the next expression for it to be recognized as the spread operator. |
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### In command calls |
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You can also spread arguments to a command, provided that it either has a rest parameter or is an |
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external command. |
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Here is an example custom command that has a rest parameter: |
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```nushell |
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> def foo [ --flag req opt? ...args ] { [$flag, $req, $opt, $args] | to nuon } |
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``` |
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It has one flag (`--flag`), one required positional parameter (`req`), one optional positional parameter |
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(`opt?`), and rest parameter (`args`). |
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If you have a list of arguments to pass to `args`, you can spread it the same way you'd spread a list |
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[inside a list literal](#in-list-literals). The same rules apply: the spread operator is only |
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recognized before variables, subexpressions, and list literals, and no whitespace is allowed in between. |
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```nushell |
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> foo "bar" "baz" ...[1 2 3] # With ..., the numbers are treated as separate arguments |
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[false, bar, baz, [1, 2, 3]] |
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> foo "bar" "baz" [1 2 3] # Without ..., [1 2 3] is treated as a single argument |
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[false, bar, baz, [[1, 2, 3]]] |
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``` |
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A more useful way to use the spread operator is if you have another command with a rest parameter |
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and you want it to forward its arguments to `foo`: |
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```nushell |
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> def bar [ ...args ] { foo --flag "bar" "baz" ...$args } |
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> bar 1 2 3 |
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[true, bar, baz, [1, 2, 3]] |
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``` |
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You can spread multiple lists in a single call, and also intersperse individual arguments: |
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```nushell |
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> foo "bar" "baz" 1 ...[2 3] 4 5 ...(6..9 | take 2) last |
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[false, bar, baz, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, last]] |
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``` |
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Flags/named arguments can go after a spread argument, just like they can go after regular rest arguments: |
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```nushell |
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> foo "bar" "baz" 1 ...[2 3] --flag 4 |
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[true, bar, baz, [1, 2, 3, 4]] |
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``` |
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If a spread argument comes before an optional positional parameter, that optional parameter is treated |
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as being omitted: |
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```nushell |
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> foo "bar" ...[1 2] "not opt" # The null means no argument was given for opt |
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[false, bar, null, [1, 2, "not opt"]] |
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``` |
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