+++ title = "Nushell first impressions" date = 2024-03-01T11:34:04-06:00 draft = true +++ :caution-caption: pass:[] :important-caption: pass:[] :note-caption: pass:[✏️] :tip-caption: pass:[💡] :warning-caption: pass:[] :toc: :toclevels: 6 Ive been trying out a bunch of new shell utilites lately, switching up my shell, terminal multiplexer, and even experimenting with my editor. Today, Id like to focus on my experiments with my shell. == My old setup Before this, I had been using a minimal zsh setup for a long time, with only built in features and a handmade prompt. Zsh is a good shell, probably one of the best posix shells out there, and I still use it when a posix shell is needed. However, I got tired of the endless footguns that posix shell scripting imposes, easy to make errors around quoting, word splitting, and escaping, the sort of thing that makes https://www.shellcheck.net/[shellcheck] necessary. I played around with fish for a few days, but it had many of the same fundamental design choices, mainly, being 'stringly typed', that made posix shells such a displeasure to work with. == A Nu shell While googling around for alternative shells, I stumbled across https://www.nushell.sh/[nushell], a shell that claimed to work around structured data instead of just strings. This was *exactly* what I was looking for, and I installed it immediately. I decided to work with it for around a month, give myself enough time to really use it, see not only how it felt with ordinary usage, but to give myself time and opportunity to construct a few pipelines and scripts in it. All that said, the month is up, and ive been collecting examples, thoughts, and some criticisms along the way. == Piping structured data // show some examples of grouping, sorting, etc without endless invocations of `cut`. == Parsing non-nu tools // show parsing initcall_debug logs, and how it then lets one do analysis on it == Defining custom commands // show the basic syntax for custom commands === Built in arg parsing? // show syntax for custom args, and how it leads to auto completion and help generation. == Error messages == Whats not there yet // explain some limitations, tools that assume the existence of a posix shell (esp files one is instructed to source) // also explain the limitations where nushell scripts cannot pass structured data, but are treated as external commands, therefore their usefullness in a pipeline is limited.