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# Composure: don't fear the Unix chainsaw

These light-hearted functions make programming the shell easier and more intuitive:

static analysis and automated tests: Build Status

Demo!

Composing a simple network monitoring script (4 minutes)

Compatibility

Composure is POSIX-compliant, and is known to work on ksh93, zsh, and bash, on osx and linux.

Please feel free to open an issue if you have any difficulties on your system.

Installing

Clone this repo, into a directory of your choice and source it from your shell's profile or rc file.

On Bash:

    cd /your/favorite/directory
    git clone https://github.com/erichs/composure.git
    cd composure
    echo "source $(pwd)/composure.sh" >> ~/.bashrc   # or, ~/.bash_profile on osx

Note for users with versions prior to 1.4.0: Previous installation methods will work, but cloning the repo is now recommended, as it makes the glossary and reference commands 100x faster.

Craft - Draft - Revise - Write

journey
    title Typical Usage
    section Craft
      Create Useful Shell Command: 1: Shell
    section Draft
      Give it a name with 'draft': 2: Editor, Git
      Use your new shiny function: 3: Shell
    section Revise
      Edit/maintain your function with 'revise': 4: Editor, Git
    section Write
      Persist to shell scripts with 'write': 5: Shell
      Profit $$$: 6: You

Crafting the command line

REPL environments are great for trying out programming ideas and crafting snippets of working code, aren't they? Composure helps you make better use of the REPL environment constantly at your fingertips: the shell.

Many Unix users I know like to iteratively build up complex commands by trying something out, hitting the up arrow and perhaps adding a filter with a pipe:

  $ cat servers.txt
  bashful: up
  doc: down

  up-arrow

  $ cat servers.txt | grep down
  doc: down

  up-arrow

  $ cat servers.txt | grep down | mail -s "down server(s)" admin@here.com

Composure helps by letting you quickly draft simple shell functions, breaking down your long pipe filters and complex commands into readable and reusable chunks.

Draft first, ask questions later

Once you've crafted your gem of a command, don't throw it away! Use 'draft ()' and give it a good name. This stores your last command as a function you can reuse later. Think of it like a rough draft.

  $ cat servers.txt
  bashful: up
  doc: down

  up-arrow

  $ cat servers.txt | grep down
  doc: down

  $ draft finddown

  $ finddown | mail -s "down server(s)" admin@here.com

Revise, revise, revise!

Now that you've got a minimal shell function, you may want to make it better through refactoring and revision. Use the 'revise ()' command to revise your shell function in your favorite editor.

  $ revise finddown
  finddown ()
  {
      about finds servers marked 'down' in text file
      group admin
      cat $1 | grep down
  }

  $ finddown servers.txt
  doc: down

Get it in Writing

When it is time to put your function or functions to use in a shell script, just call write:

  $ write finddown > finddown.sh

Edit the main() function, chmod +x, and you're ready to go!

Arbitrary shell metadata!

Composure uses a simple system of dynamic keywords that allow you to add metadata to your functions. Just call 'cite ()' to initialize your new keyword(s), and use them freely in your functions:

  foo()
  {
      cite about
      about perform mad script-foo
      echo 'foo'
  }

Retrieve your metadata later by calling 'metafor ()':

  typeset -f foo | metafor about  # displays:
  perform mad script-foo

By default, composure knows the keywords: about, param, group, author, and example.

These default keywords are used by the help system:

Intuitive help system

The 'glossary ()' function will automatically summarize all functions with 'about' metadata. If called with a 'group' name as a parameter, it will summarize functions belonging to that group.

To display apidoc-style help for a function, use 'reference ()'.

  $ glossary   # displays:
  cite                creates a new meta keyword for use in your functions
  draft               wraps last command into a new function
  finddown            finds servers marked 'down' in text file
  foo                 perform mad script-foo
  glossary            displays help summary for all functions, or summary for a group of functions
  metafor             prints function metadata associated with keyword
  reference           displays apidoc help for a specific function
  revise              loads function into editor for revision
  write               writes one or more composed function definitions to stdout

  meanwhile

  $ glossary admin   # displays:
  finddown            finds servers marked 'down' in text file

  and

  $ reference draft  # displays:
  draft               wraps last command into a new function
  parameters:
                      1: name to give function
  examples:
                      $ ls
                      $ draft list
                      $ list

Git integration

If you already use git, installing composure will initialize a ~/.local/composure repository, and store and version your functions there. Just use 'draft ()' and 'revise ()', they automatically version for you.

Composure supports the XDG Base Directory specification, and will respect your local XDG_DATA_HOME environment variable.

Why do this?

Persistent access

Draft or revise a function, and the latest version is automatically sourced into your current shell environment. By default, composure automatically sources all of your composed functions when you source the composure.sh script. If you are concerned about shell startup time, have many hundreds of versioned shell functions, or otherwise want to control which functions are loaded from your composure repository, you may disable the default behavior by adding the following line to your shell's startup script:

export LOAD_COMPOSED_FUNCTIONS=0

Credits

Composure grew out of ideas taken from from Gary Bernhardt's hilarious talk The Unix Chainsaw (31 minutes), which refers to the Elements of Programming described in MIT's SICP text:

Known Issues

'glossary ()' and 'reference ()' do not support nested functions with metadata.

revise works well if your editor is terminal-based, like Emacs or Vim. If you use a windowed editor like Atom, VSCode, or Sublime, you will need to check to see if your editor supports a flag argument that allows it to wait for the files to be closed before returning. If this is supported, you can create a small script to launch your editor in this mode, and specify that script path in your EDITOR var. See https://github.com/erichs/composure/issues/10.