Oils Reference — Chapter Builtin Functions

This chapter describes builtin functions (as opposed to builtin commands.)

(in progress)

In This Chapter

Values

len()

Returns the

func/type()

Given an arbitrary value, returns a string representing the value's runtime type.

For example:

var d = {'foo': 'bar'}
var n = 1337

$ = type(d)
(Str)    'Dict'

$ = type(n)
(Str)    'Int'

Similar names: type

repeat()

TODO:

= repeat('a', 3)
(Str)   'aaa'

= repeat(['a'], 3)
(List)   ['a', 'a', 'a']

Note that list elements are NOT copied. They are repeated by reference, which means the List can have aliases.

= repeat([[42]], 3)
(List)   [[42], [42], [42]]

Modeled after these Python expressions:

>>> 'a' * 3
'aaa'
>>> ['a'] * 3
['a', 'a', 'a']

Conversions

bool()

Returns the truth value of its argument. Similar to bool() in python, it returns false for:

Returns true for all other values.

int()

Given a float, returns the largest integer that is less than its argument (i.e. floor()).

$ = int(1.99)
(Int)    1

Given a string, Int() will attempt to convert the string to a base-10 integer. The base can be overriden by calling with a second argument.

$ = int('10')
(Int)   10

$ = int('10', 2)
(Int)   2

ysh$ = Int('foo')
# fails with an expression error

float()

Given an integer, returns the corressponding flaoting point representation.

$ = float(1)
(Float)   1.0

Given a string, Float() will attempt to convert the string to float.

$ = float('1.23')
(Float)   1.23

ysh$ = float('bar')
# fails with an expression error

str()

Converts a Float or Int to a string.

list()

Given a list, returns a shallow copy of the original.

Given an iterable value (e.g. a range or dictionary), returns a list containing one element for each item in the original collection.

$ = list({'a': 1, 'b': 2})
(List)   ['a', 'b']

$ = list(1:5)
(List)   [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

dict()

Given a dictionary, returns a shallow copy of the original.

runes()

TODO

Given a string, decodes UTF-8 into a List of integer "runes" (aka code points).

Each rune is in the range U+0 to U+110000, and excludes the surrogate range.

runes(s, start=-1, end=-1)

TODO: How do we signal errors?

(runes() can be used to implement implemented Python's ord().)

encodeRunes()

TODO

Given a List of integer "runes" (aka code points), return a string.

(encodeRunes() can be used to implement implemented Python's chr().)

bytes()

TODO

Given a string, return a List of integer byte values.

Each byte is in the range 0 to 255.

encodeBytes()

TODO

Given a List of integer byte values, return a string.

Str

strcmp()

TODO

split()

TODO

If no argument is passed, splits by whitespace

If a delimiter Str with a single byte is given, splits by that byte.

Modes:

shSplit()

Split a string into a List of strings, using the shell algorithm that respects $IFS.

Prefer split() to shSplit().

List

join()

Given a List, stringify its items, and join them by a separator. The default separator is the empty string.

var x = ['a', 'b', 'c']

$ echo $[join(x)]
abc

$ echo $[join(x, ' ')]  # optional separator
a b c

It's also often called with the => chaining operator:

var items = [1, 2, 3]

json write (items => join())      # => "123"
json write (items => join(' '))   # => "1 2 3"
json write (items => join(', '))  # => "1, 2, 3"

any()

Returns true if any value in the list is truthy (x is truthy if Bool(x) returns true).

If the list is empty, return false.

= any([])  # => false
= any([true, false])  # => true
= any([false, false])  # => false
= any([false, "foo", false])  # => true

Note, you will need to source --builtin list.ysh to use this function.

all()

Returns true if all values in the list are truthy (x is truthy if Bool(x) returns true).

If the list is empty, return true.

= any([])  # => true
= any([true, true])  # => true
= any([false, true])  # => false
= any(["foo", true, true])  # => true

Note, you will need to source --builtin list.ysh to use this function.

Word

glob()

See glob-pat topic for syntax.

maybe()

Math

abs()

Compute the absolute (positive) value of a number (float or int).

= abs(-1)  # => 1
= abs(0)   # => 0
= abs(1)   # => 1

Note, you will need to source --builtin math.ysh to use this function.

max()

Compute the maximum of 2 or more values.

max takes two different signatures:

  1. max(a, b) to return the maximum of a, b
  2. max(list) to return the greatest item in the list

For example:

  = max(1, 2)  # => 2
  = max([1, 2, 3])  # => 3

Note, you will need to source --builtin math.ysh to use this function.

min()

Compute the minimum of 2 or more values.

min takes two different signatures:

  1. min(a, b) to return the minimum of a, b
  2. min(list) to return the least item in the list

For example:

= min(2, 3)  # => 2
= max([1, 2, 3])  # => 1

Note, you will need to source --builtin math.ysh to use this function.

round()

sum()

Computes the sum of all elements in the list.

Returns 0 for an empty list.

= sum([])  # => 0
= sum([0])  # => 0
= sum([1, 2, 3])  # => 6

Note, you will need to source --builtin list.ysh to use this function.

Serialize

toJson()

Convert an object in memory to JSON text:

$ = toJson({name: "alice"})
(Str)   '{"name":"alice"}'

Add indentation by passing the space param:

$ = toJson([42], space=2)
(Str)   "[\n  42\n]"

Similar to json write (x), except the default value of space is 0.

See err-json-encode for errors.

fromJson()

Convert JSON text to an object in memory:

= fromJson('{"name":"alice"}')
(Dict)   {"name": "alice"}

Similar to json read <<< '{"name": "alice"}'.

See err-json-decode for errors.

toJson8()

Like toJson(), but it also converts binary data (non-Unicode strings) to J8-style b'foo \yff' strings.

In contrast, toJson() will do a lossy conversion with the Unicode replacement character.

See err-json8-encode for errors.

fromJson8()

Like fromJson(), but it also accepts binary data denoted by J8-style b'foo \yff' strings.

See err-json8-decode for errors.

Pattern

_group()

Like Match => group(), but accesses the global match created by ~:

if ('foo42' ~ / d+ /) {
  echo $[_group(0)]  # => 42
}

_start()

Like Match => start(), but accesses the global match created by ~:

if ('foo42' ~ / d+ /) {
  echo $[_start(0)]  # => 3
}

_end()

Like Match => end(), but accesses the global match created by ~:

if ('foo42' ~ / d+ /) {
  echo $[_end(0)]  # => 5
}

Introspection

shvarGet()

Given a variable name, return its value. It uses the "dynamic scope" rule, which looks up the stack for a variable.

It's meant to be used with shvar:

proc proc1 {
  shvar PATH=/tmp {  # temporarily set PATH in this stack frame
    my-proc
  }

  proc2
}

proc proc2 {
  proc3
}

proc proc3 {
  var path = shvarGet('PATH')  # Look up the stack (dynamic scoping)
  echo $path  # => /tmp
}

proc1

Note that shvar is usually for string variables, and is analogous to shopt for "booleans".

If the variable isn't defined, shvarGet() returns null. So there's no way to distinguish an undefined variable from one that's null.

getVar()

Given a variable name, return its value.

$ var x = 42
$ echo $[getVar('x')]
42

The variable may be local or global. (Compare with shvarGet().) the "dynamic scope" rule.)

If the variable isn't defined, getVar() returns null. So there's no way to distinguish an undefined variable from one that's null.

evalExpr()

Given a an expression quotation, evaluate it and return its value:

$ var expr = ^[1 + 2]  

$ = evalExpr(expr)
3

Hay Config

parseHay()

evalHay()

Hashing

sha1dc()

Git's algorithm.

sha256()

Generated on Tue, 09 Jul 2024 16:09:03 +0000