zpyi makes your shell smarter, in more ways than one. It's no magic, it's python.
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Your shell now falls back to python if some command couldn't be handled by zsh.
So you can now do 2 3
directly in your shell. Well, something much more complex than that too.
Of course, to prevent breaking any existing functionality provided by Zsh,
you need to use '2**107'
instead of 2**107
and the likes. Simply enclose your python program by some unused delimiters, and you're good to go.
You can assume that anything written at the start of a shell command, within single or double quotes would be interpreted as a python script.
Also, now instead of piping shell output to age-old (and still awesome, don't get me wrong) programs like awk
, grep
, sed
, you can actually pipe shell output to short Python inline scripts, just like the good old awk
scripts.
Of note, this is not a subset of python -c
. python -c
will not let you run python programs. It lets you run interactive python commands. Using zpyi
, you can actually write programs and keep them in shell history, just like you've been doing with awk
and grep
since ages.
Here are some cool things you can now do. Note that all the code blocks below are to be run in the shell itself! No need to write python scripts to do small one-time stuff. And all this stays in your shell history! No need to store your small scripts too.
'2**107'
'sqrt(10)'
'"user".upper()'
- Multiline code!
'
a = 1
b = 2**107
c = a b
print (c*2)
'
"print ('$(whoami)'.upper())"
export myname="me"; "print ('$myname is nice')"
cat /etc/passwd | '
lines = sys.stdin.readlines()
for line in lines:
print line.upper()
'
'print (input().upper())' < infile > outfile
echo "what, my name is shady" | 'print (input().upper())'
Yes, they work too, using either the sys.argv
or argv
to refer to the 1 based indexing.
There is also an array named args
which has the args in 0 based indexing
'print (str(int(sys.argv[1]) int(sys.argv[2])))' 2 3
returns 5'print (str(int(args[0]) int(args[1])))' 2 3
returns 5 too
The modules math
, sys
and os
are already imported!
In addition, you can define an environment variable to use any custom imports, thanks to @orf for the PR on this!
# This is a shell command, run in your shell
export ZPYI_IMPORTS=requests
# This is the python line you run
"get('http://google.com')"
So now you don't need to run python -c 'print(sqrt(2**10))' > outputfile
, only to remember that it won't work because math
is not imported while using python -c
.
Here's a simple zsh script to be run via zsh script.sh
. Just that now you don't need to do complicated string parsing in shell, when you have python for that.
source ~/.zshrc
myname=$(whoami)
"print ('${myname}'.upper())"
The installation script is concise enough:
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/sakshamsharma/zpyi ~/.zpyi
echo "source ~/.zpyi/zpyi.zsh" >> ~/.zshrc
source ~/.zshrc
If you feel lazy, this works too:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sakshamsharma/zpyi/master/install_script.sh | bash
Or if you make use of antigen (which is probably a good idea):
antigen bundle https://github.com/sakshamsharma/zpyi zpyi.zsh
rm -rf ~/.zpyi
sed -i '/zpyi.zsh/d' ~/.zshrc
- Add support for querying for missing packages