command-macros
,
crate
Macros for creating std::process::Command
with shell-like syntax.
Created to make using Rust as a scripting language more pleasant.
This crate contains two macros, command!() – fully-featured,
but requires nightly, and a simpler cmd!(), built by macro_rules.
command!
Installation
This macro requires nightly Rust and
enabling a "nightly" feature.
Put the following in your Cargo.toml.
[]
= "0.2.9"
= ["nightly"]
And then add on top of your root module:
extern crate command_macros;
use command;
If you're not running the latest nightly, try the following versions:
| nightly date | command-macros version |
|---|---|
| 2020-05-20 — | 0.2.9 |
| 2018-10-06 — 2021-06-05 | 0.2.7 |
| 2018-10-06 — 2019-08-27 | 0.2.6 |
| 2018-10-04 — 2018-10-05 | 0.2.5 |
| 2018-07-17 — 2018-10-03 | 0.2.4 |
| 2018-05-17 — 2018-07-16 | 0.2.3 |
| 2018-04-07 — 2018-05-16 | 0.2.2 |
Examples
command!.status.unwrap;
should be roughly equivalent to running
new
.args
.args
.args
.args
.arg
.status
.unwrap;
As you see, you use (expr) to create an argument (or a part of it)
from arbitrary Rust expression and [expr] for multiple arguments.
The & is added automatically, similarly to how print! works.
Moreover, command! will handle file and tmpname being OsStr correctly,
while the manual version would require some modifications.
Additionally, you can use if, if let, match and for.
This snippet also showcases (( expr )) feature.
command!.status.unwrap;
Both macros return Command by value, so you can store them in a variable for later:
let cmd = command!;
If you have partially prepared command (Command or &mut Command),
you can also pass it to this macro:
let base: Command = prepare;
let cmd = command!;
cmd!
Installation
Put the following in your Cargo.toml.
[]
= "0.2"
And then add on top of your root module:
extern crate command_macros;
Limitations
This macro is a "lite" version of the command!.
Differences:
- Worse error messages.
- It is whitespace-insensitive.
- Creating arguments from arbitrary tokens (such as
-c:a) is not supported (only idents). The workaround is to use Rust string as an expression:("-c:a"). ((expr))and(expr)always evaluate to full argument (no tricks likefile:(filename)).- Expressions in
if,matchandforhave to be surrounded by parens. - No support for
else if(useelse { if ... }instead).
Besides, all other features should work.
Examples
Examples from command! section rewritten to match cmd! syntax:
command!.status.unwrap;
command!.status.unwrap;