This is an excerpt, you can find the full documentation on ReadTheDocs.
To install from Pypi:
pip install py1cmdOne should use the right tool for the right task. But Learning 300 tools is counterproductive, so one needs a fallback. To be generic enough that fallback must be scriptable. So we have AWK, Perl, Sed, TCL... and their read-only languages.
Enters py1, it aims at being a "Python AWK".
Indents and dedents can be replaced with {{ and }}, line feeds can be replaced with ;. An optional for loop iterates on input lines.
Using {{ }} instead of indentation, and ; to separate statements:
py1 "a = 1+2; if a > 4: {{ print(a) }}"The wrapper script defines a convenient set of 1&2-letters variables and functions.
It can also include a for loop that iterates on input lines. To get the for loop, pass --each-line/-l.
For example, to count lines matching '$a*^':
py1 --begin "count=0" --each-line "if M('$a*^'): count += 1"
--end "P(count)"Lastly the wrapper script provide a short notation to easily import modules.
py1 --import "math/*" "P(cos(pi))"To learn more you can read the list of one letter functions and variables or just look at examples and figure out the rest.
If you find yourself writing a longer than readable one-liner, you can
transform it in regular Python code, easily refactored for later reuse.
Just add --code=full.
Interested? You can install with:
pip install py1cmdTo learn more you can read the list of one letter functions and variables or just look at examples and figure out the rest.
I wrote some advices and documented the internals here. Feel free to just contact unbrice.