gron
jq
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gron | jq | |
---|---|---|
64 | 306 | |
13,483 | 25,063 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
6 months ago | 11 months ago | |
Go | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
gron
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Frawk: An efficient Awk-like programming language. (2021)
gron (https://github.com/tomnomnom/gron) to transform it and query and then invert the transformation?
- Show HN: Flatito, grep for YAML and JSON files
- Gron: Make JSON greppable
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Make JSON Greppable
It buffers all of its output statements in memory before writing to stdout:
https://github.com/tomnomnom/gron/blob/master/main.go#L204
- Ask HN: What are some unpopular technologies you wish people knew more about?
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Jaq – A jq clone focused on correctness, speed, and simplicity
Have you tried `gron`?
It converts your nested json into a line by line format which plays better with tools like `grep`
From the project's README:
▶ gron "https://api.github.com/repos/tomnomnom/gron/commits?per_page..." | fgrep "commit.author"
json[0].commit.author = {};
json[0].commit.author.date = "2016-07-02T10:51:21Z";
json[0].commit.author.email = "[email protected]";
json[0].commit.author.name = "Tom Hudson";
https://github.com/tomnomnom/gron
It was suggested to me in HN comments on an article I wrote about `jq`, and I have found myself using it a lot in my day to day workflow
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Interactive Examples for Learning Jq
> So all I want is a tool to go from json => line oriented and I will do the rest with the vast library of experience I already have at transformations on the command line.*
The tool for that is likely https://github.com/tomnomnom/gron
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Modern Linux Tools vs. Unix Classics: Which Would I Choose?
If JQ is too much, see GRON &| Miller
gron transforms JSON into discrete assignments to make it easier to grep for what you want https://github.com/tomnomnom/gron
Miller is like awk, sed, cut, join, and sort for data formats such as CSV, TSV, JSON, JSON https://github.com/johnkerl/miller
- XML is better than YAML
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jq 1.7 Released
And jless [1] and gron [2].
This is the first I'm hearing of gron, but adding here for completeness sake. Meanwhile, JSON seems to be becoming a standard for CLI tools. Ideal scenario would be if every CLI tool has a --json flag or something similar, so that jc is not needed anymore.
[1] https://jless.io/
[2] https://github.com/tomnomnom/gron
jq
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GNU Parallel, where have you been all my life?
That should recursively list directories, counting only the files within each, and output² jsonl that can be further mangled within the shell². You could just as easily populate an associative array for further work, or $whatever. Unlike bash, zsh has reasonable behaviour around quoting and whitespace too.
¹ https://zsh.sourceforge.io/Doc/Release/User-Contributions.ht...
² https://github.com/jpmens/jo
³ https://github.com/stedolan/jq
- How do i edit reputation?
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Jj: JSON Stream Editor
What I miss from jq and what is implemented but unreleased is platform independent line delimiters.
jq on Windows produces \r\n terminated lines which can be annoying when used with Cygwin / MSYS2 / WSL. The '--binary' option to not convert line delimiters is one of those pending improvements.
https://github.com/stedolan/jq/commit/0dab2b18d73e561f511801...
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Building and deploying a web API powered by ChatGPT
If you have jq installed you can use it to make the output look nicer.
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Search in your Jupyter notebooks from the CLI, fast.
It requires jq for JSON processing and GNU parallel for concurrent searches in the notebooks.
- Check the jq manual!
- mkv vs mp4 metadata
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Amazon Begs Employees Not to Leak Corporate Secrets to ChatGPT
jq is your friend.
- Memes are all cool and all. But this is your daily remaining that 10000! =
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How to export/import/externally-edit/whatever WI entries?
The jq command (https://stedolan.github.io/jq/) is useful pulling that information out.
What are some alternatives?
jfq - JSONata on the command line
yq - Command-line YAML, XML, TOML processor - jq wrapper for YAML/XML/TOML documents
xidel - Command line tool to download and extract data from HTML/XML pages or JSON-APIs, using CSS, XPath 3.0, XQuery 3.0, JSONiq or pattern matching. It can also create new or transformed XML/HTML/JSON documents.
dasel - Select, put and delete data from JSON, TOML, YAML, XML and CSV files with a single tool. Supports conversion between formats and can be used as a Go package.
pup - Parsing HTML at the command line
gojq - Pure Go implementation of jq
JsonPath - Java JsonPath implementation
json5 - JSON5 — JSON for Humans
fx - Terminal JSON viewer & processor
jp - Validate and transform JSON with Bash
miller - Miller is like awk, sed, cut, join, and sort for name-indexed data such as CSV, TSV, and tabular JSON
nushell - A new type of shell