Saxon-HE
murex
Saxon-HE | murex | |
---|---|---|
2 | 55 | |
72 | 1,378 | |
- | - | |
3.6 | 9.6 | |
12 days ago | 11 days ago | |
Go | ||
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Saxon-HE
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Jaq – A jq clone focused on correctness, speed, and simplicity
Now that is just aggressively dumb: https://github.com/Saxonica/Saxon-HE/tree/SaxonHE12-3/12#sou... and https://github.com/Saxonica/Saxon-HE/tree/SaxonHE12-3/12/sou... (not even the decency to use .gitattributes so it knows the files are binary)
FWIW https://saxonica.plan.io/projects/saxonmirrorhe/repository seems to be the for-real source repo
murex
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Show HN: a Rust Based CLI tool 'imgcatr' for displaying images
This is how murex works too https://github.com/lmorg/murex/blob/master/config/defaults/p...
- Xonsh: Python-powered, cross-platform, Unix-gazing shell
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The Bun Shell
I agree. I’ve written about this before but this is what murex (1) does. It reimplements some of coreutils where there are benefits in doing so (eg sed, grep etc -like parsing of lists that are in formats other than flat lines of text. Such as JSON arrays)
Mutex does this by having these utilities named slightly different to their POSIX counterparts. So you can use all of the existing CLI tools completely but additionally have a bunch of new stuff too.
Far too many alt shells these days try to replace coreutils and that just creates friction in my opinion.
1. https://murex.rocks
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Jaq – A jq clone focused on correctness, speed, and simplicity
This is exactly what Murex shell does. It has lots of builtin tools for querying structured data (of varying formats) but also supports POSIX pipes for using existing tools like `jq` et al seamlessly too.
https://murex.rocks
- Murex rocks v5 is out
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The Case for Nushell
Stable is a problem because a lot of these shells don’t offer any guarantees for breaking changes.
My own shell, https://github.com/lmorg/murex is committed to backwards compatibility but even here, there are occasional changes made that might break backwards compatibility. Though I do push back on such changes as much as possible, to the extent that most of my scripts from 5 years ago still run unmodified.
- Murex
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 20 June 2023
- Show HN: A smarter Unix shell and scripting environment
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Nushell.sh ls – where size > 10mb – –sort-by modified
This is similar to how my shell works. It still just passes bytes around but additionally passes information about how those bytes could be interpreted. A schema if you will. So it works as cleanly with POSIX / GNU / et al tools as it does with fancy JSON, YAML, CSV and other document formats.
It basically sits somewhere between Powershell and Bash: typed pipelines like Powershell but without sacrificing familiarity with all the CLI commands you already use day in and day out.
https://github.com/lmorg/murex
As an aside, I’m about to drop a massive update in the next few days that will make the shell even more intuitive to use.
What are some alternatives?
gron - Make JSON greppable!
elvish - Powerful scripting language & Versatile interactive shell
jql - A JSON Query Language CLI tool
nushell - A new type of shell
jq - Command-line JSON processor
tidy-viewer - 📺(tv) Tidy Viewer is a cross-platform CLI csv pretty printer that uses column styling to maximize viewer enjoyment.
related_post_gen - Data Processing benchmark featuring Rust, Go, Swift, Zig, Julia etc.
fx - Terminal JSON viewer & processor
git-xargs-tasks - Keep git-xargs changes together
jc - CLI tool and python library that converts the output of popular command-line tools, file-types, and common strings to JSON, YAML, or Dictionaries. This allows piping of output to tools like jq and simplifying automation scripts.
jless - jless is a command-line JSON viewer designed for reading, exploring, and searching through JSON data.
xonsh - :shell: Python-powered, cross-platform, Unix-gazing shell.