imex 0.2.1

A library/CLI for merging multiple iterators/files into one, with the optional use of an IMEx, or Iterator-Merging-Expression, for controlling the merge.
Documentation

IMEx

Latest version Documentation

A library/CLI for merging multiple iterators/files into one, with the optional use of an IMEx, or Iterator-Merging-Expression, for controlling the merge.

Writing an IMEx

IMEx is based off of RegEx. A quick reference of IMEx syntax:

  • Digits - indicates the index of the iterator to consume an item from
  • () - defines a group
  • * - repeats the previous digit/group until the relevant iterator(s) are exhausted
  • {x} - repeats the previous digit/group x times, or until the relevant iterator(s) are exhausted.

Examples

"0110" on two iterators: results in a merged iterator that starts with the first item of the first iterator, then the first two items of the second iterator, then the second item of the first iterator

"(01)*" on two iterators: results in a merged iterator whose elements alternate between the elements of the input iterators until they are both exhausted.

"(012){4}(122)*" on three iterators: results in a merged iterator whose elements rotate through the elements of the input iterators 4 times, then picks an element of the second iterator followed by two elements of the third repeatedly until they are both exhausted.

IMEx as a CLI tool

Using the CLI tool allows you to merge multiple files line-by-line. To respect the Unix philosophy, stdin can also be merged with other files, and the result is printed to the screen.

Usage

Files are provided as positional arguments, and an IMEx can be provided using the -i option. The digits of the IMEx will refer to one of the files you provide in the order you provide them, 0-indexed. The filename - is reserved for stdin.

So, the following command will merge the output of the ls command with two other files, taking 10 lines from stdin and then one from each of the files until they're all exhausted, then output it to a file called out.txt:

$ ls | imex - file1.txt file2.txt -i "(0{10}12)*" > out.txt

Installation

If you are a rust developer, you can install IMEx through cargo:

$ cargo install imex

Currently, imex doesn't exist in any other package manager.

IMEx as a library

Using the IMEx crate in your code primarily gives you access to some new functions on iterators that merge and return iterators. These can all be used in a typical iterator processing chain. Details on usage and implementation can be read in the crate's documentation.

Planned Functionality

There is one main feature planned for imex:

  • An optional interactive mode in the CLI to edit the IMEx and see results in real time, along with a peek into the upcoming lines of the files being merged.

License

Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.