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# Scripts |
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In Nushell, you can write and run scripts in the Nushell language. To run a script, you can pass it as an argument to the `nu` commandline application: |
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```nu |
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> nu myscript.nu |
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``` |
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This will run the script to completion in a new instance of Nu. You can also run scripts inside the _current_ instance of Nu using [`source`](/commands/docs/source.md): |
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```nu |
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> source myscript.nu |
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``` |
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Let's look at an example script file: |
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```nu |
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# myscript.nu |
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def greet [name] { |
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["hello" $name] |
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} |
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greet "world" |
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``` |
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A script file defines the definitions for custom commands as well as the main script itself, which will run after the custom commands are defined. |
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In the above, first `greet` is defined by the Nushell interpreter. This allows us to later call this definition. We could have written the above as: |
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```nu |
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greet "world" |
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def greet [name] { |
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["hello" $name] |
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} |
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``` |
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There is no requirement that definitions have to come before the parts of the script that call the definitions, allowing you to put them where you feel comfortable. |
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## How scripts are processed |
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In a script, definitions run first. This allows us to call the definitions using the calls in the script. |
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After the definitions run, we start at the top of the script file and run each group of commands one after another. |
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## Script lines |
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To better understand how Nushell sees lines of code, let's take a look at an example script: |
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```nu |
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a |
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b; c | d |
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``` |
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When this script is run, Nushell will first run the `a` command to completion and view its results. Next, Nushell will run `b; c | d` following the rules in the ["Semicolons" section](pipelines.html#semicolons). |
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## Parameterizing Scripts |
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Script files can optionally contain a special "main" command. `main` will be run after any other Nu code, and is primarily used to add parameters to scripts. You can pass arguments to scripts after the script name (`nu <script name> <script args>`). |
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For example: |
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```nu |
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# myscript.nu |
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def main [x: int] { |
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$x + 10 |
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} |
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``` |
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```nu |
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> nu myscript.nu 100 |
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110 |
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``` |
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## Argument Type Interpretation |
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By default, arguments provided to a script are interpreted with the type `Type::Any`, implying that they are not constrained to a specific data type and can be dynamically interpreted as fitting any of the available data types during script execution. |
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In the previous example, `main [x: int]` denotes that the argument x should possess an integer data type. However, if arguments are not explicitly typed, they will be parsed according to their apparent data type. |
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For example: |
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```nu |
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# implicit_type.nu |
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def main [x] { |
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$"Hello ($x | describe) ($x)" |
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} |
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# explicit_type.nu |
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def main [x: string] { |
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$"Hello ($x | describe) ($x)" |
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} |
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``` |
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```nu |
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> nu implicit_type.nu +1 |
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Hello int 1 |
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> nu explicit_type.nu +1 |
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Hello string +1 |
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``` |
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## Subcommands |
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A script can have multiple sub-commands like `run`, `build`, etc. which allows to execute a specific main sub-function. The important part is to expose them correctly with `def main [] {}`. See more details in the [Custom Command](custom_commands.html#sub-commands) section. |
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For example: |
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```nu |
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# myscript.nu |
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def "main run" [] { |
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print "running" |
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} |
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def "main build" [] { |
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print "building" |
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} |
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# important for the command to be exposed to the outside |
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def main [] {} |
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``` |
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```nu |
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> nu myscript.nu build |
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building |
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> nu myscript.nu run |
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running |
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``` |
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## Shebangs (`#!`) |
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On Linux and macOS you can optionally use a [shebang](<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shebang_(Unix)>) to tell the OS that a file should be interpreted by Nu. For example, with the following in a file named `myscript`: |
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```nu |
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#!/usr/bin/env nu |
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"Hello World!" |
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``` |
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```nu |
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> ./myscript |
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Hello World! |
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``` |
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For script to have access to standard input, `nu` should be invoked with `--stdin` flag: |
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```nu |
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#!/usr/bin/env -S nu --stdin |
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echo $"stdin: ($in)" |
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``` |
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```nu |
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> echo "Hello World!" | ./myscript |
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stdin: Hello World! |
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``` |
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