rustup.rs
shfmt
rustup.rs | shfmt | |
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1 | 10 | |
0 | 26 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 10.0 | |
over 5 years ago | about 5 years ago | |
Rust | Makefile | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
rustup.rs
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Ask HN: Let's Build CheckStyle for Bash?
Much of the time that people are writing shell scripts, they're writing them not because they prefer shell syntax to that of some other language, but rather because they're creating a script that needs to be widely disseminated/deployed to all sorts of machines with unpredictable install bases.
This is why a large fraction of the shell scripts that exist in the world still hold to Bourne shell syntax, rather than using any of the syntax extensions from its descendant shells — Bourne shell (or at least, something at /bin/sh that interprets Bourne-shell syntax) is part of the POSIX standard. So you can expect any POSIX system — no matter how weird — to be able to run (Bourne) shell scripts. You can run them on Alpine. You can run them on Busybox. You can run them on your NAS. You can run them on your router. You can run them in your initramfs, on your Kubernetes nodes, on your Mosix nodes, whatever.
For an example of the type of script I'm talking about — see e.g. the script you download+run when you run the command-line on https://rustup.rs: https://github.com/hsivonen/rustup.rs/blob/master/rustup-ini...
There's absolutely no benefit that this script gets from being written directly in POSIX-compiliant Bourne shell syntax, rather than being written in something that compiles to it; any more than programs for your PC would benefit from being written directly in ASM rather than in something that compiles to it.
shfmt
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Go Run
Are you assuming that based on visiting the vanity import path in a browser?
https://github.com/mvdan/sh is the repo looks like v3.8.0 was released 2 weeks ago.
- FLiP Stack Weekly for 13-Feb-2023
- new user trying to learn what am i doing wrong?
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Production pipelines are tested in production
For shell specifically, ShellCheck and Shfmt are great.
- Bash-Oneliner: A collection of handy Bash One-Liners and terminal tricks
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How common are code bases where 90% of functions have the same signature?
I haven't worked in, like, a ton of Go code bases, but I've worked in several (work, my own code, Gio UI, github.com/mvdan/sh, some others), and I've never seen this pattern that extensively. It does seem like something of an antipattern.
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Ask HN: Let's Build CheckStyle for Bash?
- sh: https://github.com/mvdan/sh
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Autofix missing spaces for test operators in bash
I guess what you're asking is to automatically format on save. There's https://github.com/mvdan/sh, which between other things, is a shell formatter. I don't know what you're using but shfmt is available in the repos of some linux distros.
- s/bash/zsh/g
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Code formatter, linters, etc. Recommendations?
There is shellcheck, and shellharden which is a strict version of it. There are similar stuff here, some that also help with your editor. You can also use a docker version of shfmt. See here for a quick tutorial on shfmt.
What are some alternatives?
shfmt - A shell formatter (sh/bash/mksh)
ShellCheck - ShellCheck, a static analysis tool for shell scripts
bashate - Code style enforcement for bash programs. Mirror of code maintained at opendev.org.
shellharden - The corrective bash syntax highlighter
neoformat - :sparkles: A (Neo)vim plugin for formatting code.
bash-timestamping-sqlite - bash commandline timestamping using a sqlite database for personal analytics, activity logging and auditing
zplug - :hibiscus: A next-generation plugin manager for zsh
volta - Volta: JS Toolchains as Code. ⚡
zsh-syntax-highlighting - Fish shell like syntax highlighting for Zsh.
zsh-autosuggestions - Fish-like autosuggestions for zsh
ale - Check syntax in Vim/Neovim asynchronously and fix files, with Language Server Protocol (LSP) support
bash-language-server - A language server for Bash