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#Shell REPO#

A bunch of utilities to help with your shell environment.

On the whole, these are less polished than in my other repos, but I find them handy. These are mainly used on MacOSX and/or Linux. I've tried to avoid *nix flavor differences, but some remain.

##Highlights##

  • ecmd -- For "edit command". Give it a command name, and it will try to find the implementation, and if it's reasonably editable, take you there. For example: ** scripts along $PATH ** shell functions or aliases defined in .bash_profile and similar files ** shell functions or aliases defined in any files (not directories) listed in environment variable $ECMDPATH (in my case, that includes the next highlight, 'bash_functions')

  • genKey.py -- generate a random string of symbols or words.

  • hilite -- Find matches to one or more regexes (including some prepackaged sets), and hilite them in one or more colors.

  • unescapeURI -- Replace URI %xx codes.

  • macFilenameSort -- Try to sort files by name, the way MacOSX does (separating out numbers to compare numerically, vs. letters alphabetically). You can set things up to pipe "ls" through this if you really like that order.

  • perl2python -- A boatload of regexes to convert Perl code to Python. It's far from perfect, but even getting most of the punctuation, keywords, and function names mapped saves a lot of time.

  • prettyPrintExpr -- Takes an expression with () [] {}, and displays it in ways that should make it easy to see what's going on. It prints three forms:

  • showNumberInBases -- Show a number in multiple bases.

##Path stuff##

  • _cleanpath -- Process $PATH to remove duplicates.

  • addToPath -- Append a directory to $PATH as long as it exists, and is not already there.

  • checkPath -- Run through $PATH and report problems such as nonexistent directories.

  • identifyAllExecutables -- Ambitious but imperfect code to find everybody along the PATH, not to mention aliases and shell functions. This can be especially helpful for finding commands that show up in several places.

##Output formatting##

  • echoToStderr (bash) -- Syntactic sugar / shorthand.

  • hilite -- Find matches to one or more regexes (including some prepackaged sets), and hilite them in one or more colors.

  • makeGraphvizFromDirTree -- What it says.

  • makeVue.py -- Vue is a handy drawing package; this will take a list of strings and make a node for each one, placing them in a row (I think), to save time vs. hand-creating a lot.

  • spinner.py -- Spins a character by changing between slash, backslash, vertical bar, and hyphen.

  • unescapeURI -- Replace URI %xx codes.

##Processes##

  • countShells.py -- Meh. Attempts to figure out how many shells are running.

  • isrunning (bash) -- Test whether a given program is running.

  • runIfNotRunning (bash) --

##MacOSX specific##

  • macFilenameSort -- Try to sort files by name, the way MacOSX does (automatically separating out numbers to compare numerically, vs. letters alphabetically).

  • macSystemReportToHtml -- Seemed like a good idea once.

  • macmore --

  • maildir2mbox.py --

##Code-related##

  • bash2perl -- Really old. Does a rough-cut conversion of bash syntax to Perl. It knows about bracket conventions, if/else keywords and braces, common function names, regexes, etc. But it's not a turnkey solution. It does a lot of the mechanical editing, which saves a lot of time but is not nearly complete.

  • perl2python -- A boatload of regexes to convert Perl code to Python. It's far from perfect, but even getting most of the punctuation, keywords, and function names mapped saves a lot of time.

  • prettyPrintExpr -- Takes an expression with () [] {}, and displays it in ways that should make it easy to see what's going on. It prints three forms:

  • the same string but with sub-parts colorized progressively by depth

  • the same string with layers of lines over it showing the scopes of each bracked subexpression

  • an indented outline

  • pyconflict --

  • pythonpath.py -- Pretty-print it.

  • tracePythonPackage.py -- An attempt to automatically figure out where a Python library is getting imported from. Not just the directory, but which package manager (port, brew, pip, conda) installed it.

##Informational##

  • duByUser -- Sum up disk usage under a directory, by specific users.

  • listGroups --

  • prenv (bash) -- prettier display of environment info.q

  • showKeyCodes -- Lets you press keys and see what actually gets sent.

  • showNumberInBases -- Show a number in multiple bases.

  • showScale (Perl) -- Show a line like a rule for column numbers. You can even have it overlay higher up in your terminal window, to more easily measure a line up there.

  • showShellVars --

===========================

  • allDates (bash) -- Try to retrieve and display all the dates associated with a file.

  • assign (bash) --

  • checkSync --

  • clean --

  • commandsHelp.py --

  • ecmd -- The idea is to find where a command is implemented, such as by a script along PATH, or as an alias or shell function in .bash_profile or similar, or whatever. Then, if it's not a binary, open your EDITOR on it.

  • genKey.py -- generate a random string of symbols or words. For example:

    genKey.py --length 3 --symbols words

might produce "cutpurse Archer parquet".

  • getDocumentTitle.py -- Extract the main title string from any of several file types, including HTML, TXT, POD, and PDF.

  • getPassPhrase.sh (sh) -- Use my 'randomRecords' to pick several random words from /usr/share/dict/words, for example to make a password. See [https://xkcd.com/936/] and [https://www.correcthorsebatterystaple.net/].

  • gitdiffhook (bash) -- Used by git diff to invoke regular 'diff' with options.

  • greprange -- (unpolished). Extract the lines of a file between a "from" regex and a "to" regex. See also [https://github/com/sderose/Text/body].

  • indente (Perl) -- Indent (pretty-print) a file, and open that copy in your EDITOR. Especially useful for *ML if your editor won't indent it for you. I should add a few more file types, like JSON.

  • lastCommands.py -- This is meant to retrieve the last N shell commands, and re-run them in the same order. But that's surprisingly hard to get exactly right.

  • pressure -- Convert a pressure value in any of 25 units, to the equivalent in all of those units.

  • smoke (bash) -- Tries to run all the executable in a given directory -- easy way to flush out badly broken/obsolete code.

  • stdinToEditor -- Pipe stdin in to this, which will make a temp file and then edit it.

  • stdinToFirefox -- Pipe stdin to firefox.

  • timeDiff --

  • whereFrom --

  • whichBoot -- Check whether the machine was booted via UEFI or BIOS (mainly useful in Linux).

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