YSH, or the shell formally known as oil, is touted as a possible upgrade path from Bash.

This is the first in a three-part series of posts re-introducing the language.

  1. Reviewing YSH (you are here)
  2. Sketches of YSH Features
  3. YSH, Narrow Waists, and Perlis-Thompson Problems (Not yet released)
  • Gamma@programming.devOPM
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    1 year ago

    I haven’t switched to ysh. I personally use Zsh for my interactive shell, but I write my scripts in a variety of shells.

    You can start with Ysh in its Bash-compatible mode, individually enable new features with shopt. Those features include:

    • Not splitting or globbing $foo by default (this is shared by Zsh and Fish)
    • A Python-inpsired parsing mode, which should supersede arithmetic mode (induced by ( ) in tests, $[ ] for string splicing and @[ ] for array splicing)
    • Strucutred data
    • New functions which return structured data (Oil calls classic shell functions “procs”, because they behave a lot like external programs with extra side effects)
    • cd to/somewhere { echo $PWD;}