Pipeable JavaScript - another utility like sed/awk/wc... but with JS! Quickly filter, map and reduce from the command line. Features a streaming API. Inspired by pipeable ruby.
pjs is a cli tool that can accept input on stdin, or read from a list of files. Its filter, map and reduce options take expressions to be run, in that order, and applies them to the supplied input. The expressions themselves can contain identifiers used by keys in String.prototype, which will automatically be bound to the given line. This lets you save a bit of typing with your one-liners, while still giving you access to all your JS string functions! Check out some of the examples below to see how they translate.
# Return all lines longer than 5 chars
# => lines.filter(function(line) { return line.length > 5; });
ls -1 | pjs -f 'length > 5'
# Count characters in each line
# => lines.map(function(line) { return line.length; });
ls -1 | pjs -m 'length'
# Uppercase and pad each line
# => lines.map(function(line) { return ' ' + line.toUpperCase()"; });
ls -1 | pjs -m '" " + toUpperCase()'
# Return lines longer than 5 chars, and remove any digits
# => lines
# .filter(function(line) { return line.length > 5; })
# .map(function(line) { return line.replace(/\d/g, ''); });
ls -1 | pjs -f 'length > 5' -m 'replace(/\d/g, "")'
The current line and value can also be accessed via the $
variable, and the
tool supports json output.
(echo 'foo' && echo 'foobar') | pjs -jm '{name: $, length: length}'
[
{"name":"foo","length":3},
{"name":"foobar","length":6}
]
pjs also includes lodash functions, which can be accessed via the _
object,
and chained using $$
echo 'hello' | pjs -m '_.upperFirst($)'
# Hello
echo 'please-titleize-this-sentence' | \
pjs -m '$$.lowerCase().split(" ").map(_.upperFirst).join(" ")'
# Please Titleize This Sentence
as well as Ramda and point-free style
echo 'please-titleize-this-sentence' | \
pjs -m "R.compose(R.replace(/(^|\s)\w/g, R.toUpper), R.replace(/-/g, ' '))"
# Please Titleize This Sentence
It can be installed via npm
using:
npm install -g pipeable-js
Usage: pjs [options] [files ...]
Functions and expressions are invoked in the following order:
filter, map, reduce
All functions are passed the line ($) and index (i)
Built-in reduce functions: length, min, max, sum, avg, concat
Custom reduce expressions accept: prev, curr, i, array
Includes lodash (_), and can be chained using $$
Supports Ramda (R) and point-free style
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
-i, --ignore ignore empty lines
-j, --json output as json
-f, --filter <exp> filter by a boolean expression
-m, --map <exp> map values using the expression
-r, --reduce <func|exp> reduce using a function or expression
# Print all odd lines
# awk 'NR % 2 == 1' file
pjs -f 'i % 2 == 0' file
# Print all lines greater than 80 chars in length
# awk 'length($0) > 80' file
pjs -f 'length > 80' file
# Remove all digits
# tr -d 0-9 < file
pjs -m "replace(/\d/g, '')" file
# Get second item of each line in csv
# awk -F "," '{print $2}' file
pjs -m 'split(",")[1]' file
# Count lines in file
# wc -l file
# awk 'END { print NR }' file
pjs -r length file
# Sum all decimal numbers in a file
# awk '{ sum += $1 } END { print sum }' file
# perl -nle '$sum += $_ } END { print $sum' file
pjs -r 'Number(prev) + Number(curr)' file
pjs -r '(+prev) + (+curr)' file
pjs -r sum file
# Concatenate all lines in multiple files
# awk '{printf $0;}' file1 file2
# cat file1 file2 | tr -d '\n'
pjs -r concat file1 file2
# Print the length of the longest line
# awk '{ if (length($0) > max) max = length($0) } END { print max }' file
pjs -m 'length' -r max file
Features | pjs | pythonpy | pru |
---|---|---|---|
Language | JavaScript | Python | Ruby |
Streaming | Yes | Limited [1] | Yes |
Implementation | Streams | Iterables | Generators |
Easy JSON output | Yes | No | No |
WebscaleTM | YES | No | No |
[1] Can't perform "tail -f logfile | py -x x"