Gumba likes to live between your shell pipes. When writing scripts is too much hassle and writing shell function is too much magic you use Gumba.
Make sure you have Node.js & npm installed. You can install Gumba using npm command:
sudo npm install -g gumbaAlso if you are going to using to use it frequently and I hope so, add a shorthand to your shell init file:
alias u='gumba'With gumba you can use coffescript language powered by underscore & underscore.string inside your command line. Think of Gumba as a kind of awk or sed.
Look at following examples:
before Gumba:
echo ' IdentityFile "file_path"' | cut -d ' ' -f4 | tr -d '"'after Gumba:
echo ' IdentityFile "file_path"' | gumba 'clean().words().last().trim("\"")'Both return file_path. So basically cut -d ' ' -f4 | tr -d becomes
u 'clean().words().last().trim("\"")'. Although first is not so bad,
the second still feels cleaner and easier to remember. This is a real
world example, after which I decided to make Gumba.
Another real world example comes from the question on StackOverflow — How to trim whitespace?
before Gumba:
echo ' test test test ' | sed -e 's/^ *//g' -e 's/ *$//g'Seriously?
after Gumba:
echo ' test test test ' | gumba 'trim()'Gumba uses just coffeescript so you can make regex replaces easily using standard javascript functions:
echo "['bulbasaur' 'chermander' 'pikachu'];" |
gumba "trim('[];')\ # -> 'bulbasaur' 'chermander' 'pikachu'
.replace(/'.*?'/g, (match) -> match.trim('\'').humanize())\ # -> Bulbasaur Chermander Pikachu
.words().toSentence()" # -> Bulbasaur, Chermander and PikachuGumba extends standard javascript object prototype with underscore &
underscore.string functions. For example on String object you can
use either underscore.string, underscore object or default javascript
methods:
"Hello World"
.toUpperCase() # standard javascript
.capitalize() # underscore.string
.isString() # underscoreTo have a look on underscore methods reference go here, for underscore.string — here
Also Gumba provides take function which provides you ability to use
javascript in more flexible way using line object as it's argument:
echo hi | gumba 'take (line) -> "#{line.toUpperCase()}!"' # -> HI!Every time you pipe to gumba it evaluates function passed as argument passed to to each line
of piped stream:
echo "Hello World" | gumba 'toUpperCase().take (line) -> "#{line}!"'converts to javascript
"HelloWorld"
.toUpperCase()
.take(function(line){
return line + "!";
})I am thinking about creating another tool, which will be more for
filtering lines, it will be like grep. At first I thought it's not
needed, but now I actually feel it will helpful too. So after that, it
will be Map/reduce suit for command-line kung-fu and API will change.
Follow the updates.
Fork, Pull, Post Issues!
I would love to get any help in project cultivation.
