A tiny, pure and fast implementation of Clojure in Clojure for shell scripting.
Properties:
If you're a bash expert, you probably don't need this. But for those of us who can use a tiny sprinkle of Clojure on their shell scripts, it may be useful. If most of your script evolves into Clojure, you might want to turn to:
Experimental. Breaking changes are expected to happen at this phase.
Linux and macOS binaries are provided via brew.
Install:
brew install borkdude/brew/babashka
Upgrade:
brew upgrade babashka
Install via the installer script:
$ bash <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/borkdude/babashka/master/install)
By default this will install into /usr/local/bin
. To change this, provide the directory name:
$ bash <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/borkdude/babashka/master/install) /tmp
You may also download a binary from Github.
... | bb [-i] [-o] '<Clojure form>'
There is one special variable, *in*
, which is the input read from stdin. The
input is read as EDN by default. If the -i
flag is provided, then the input is
read as a string which is then split on newlines. The output is printed as EDN
by default, unless the -o
flag is provided, then the output is turned into
shell-scripting friendly output. To combine -i
and -o
you can use -io
.
The current version can be printed with bb --version
.
Currently only the macros if
, when
, and
, or
, ->
and ->>
are
supported.
Examples:
$ ls | bb -i '*in*'
["LICENSE" "README.md" "bb" "doc" "pom.xml" "project.clj" "reflection.json" "resources" "script" "src" "target" "test"]
$ ls | bb -i '(count *in*)'
12
$ bb '(vec (dedupe *in*))' <<< '[1 1 1 1 2]'
[1 2]
$ bb '(filterv :foo *in*)' <<< '[{:foo 1} {:bar 2}]'
[{:foo 1}]
Anonymous functions literals are allowed with currently up to three positional arguments.
$ bb '(#(+ %1 %2 %3) 1 2 *in*)' <<< 3
6
$ ls | bb -i '(filterv #(re-find #"reflection" %) *in*)'
["reflection.json"]
More examples can be found in the gallery.
Test on the JVM:
script/test
Although this tool doesn't offer any benefit when running on the JVM, it is convenient for development.
Test the native version:
BABASHKA_TEST_ENV=native script/test
You will need leiningen and GraalVM.
script/compile
Here's a gallery of more useful examples. Do you have a useful example? PR welcome!
$ cat /tmp/test.txt
1 Hello
2 Clojure
3 Babashka
4 Goodbye
$ < /tmp/test.txt bb -io '(shuffle *in*)'
3 Babashka
2 Clojure
4 Goodbye
1 Hello
For converting JSON to EDN, see jet.
$ curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/borkdude/babashka/tags |
jet --from json --keywordize --to edn |
bb '(-> *in* first :name (subs 1))'
"0.0.4"
$ curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/borkdude/babashka/releases |
jet --from json --keywordize |
bb '(-> *in* first :assets)' |
bb '(some #(re-find #".*linux.*" (:browser_download_url %)) *in*)'
"https://github.com/borkdude/babashka/releases/download/v0.0.4/babashka-0.0.4-linux-amd64.zip"
Copyright © 2019 Michiel Borkent
Distributed under the EPL License, same as Clojure. See LICENSE.
Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Michiel Borkent & Peter StrömbergEdit on GitHub
cljdoc is a website building & hosting documentation for Clojure/Script libraries
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