13

I mean usable in one-liners. For example this:

raku -e 'dir(".")==>say()'

prints all files and directories in the current directory. How do I update it so it works recursively (without libraries and/or user-defined routines)? Or is it not possible?

I saw the :recursive flag mentioned somewhere, but that doesn't work:

> raku -e 'dir(".", :recursive)==>say()'
Cannot resolve caller dir(Str:D, :recursive); none of these signatures matches:
    (IO(Any) $path, Mu :$test!)
    (IO(Any) $path)
    (Mu :$test!)
    ()
  in block <unit> at -e line 1

It could be useful in environments with missing shell tools (on Windows) or with different versions/forks of common tools.

3 Answers 3

14

Documentation for &?BLOCK actually gives its example for your use case, so here is a way:

for '.' {
    .Str.say when !.IO.d;
    .IO.dir()».&?BLOCK when .IO.d # let's recurse a little! 
}
  • it starts from the current directory '.'
  • if it's not a directory (!.IO.d), then stringify and print
  • else, it's a directory; so get the .dir of that and repeat this procedure recursively (thanks to &?BLOCK) over all contents (thanks to >>) of this directory

This can be rearranged and modified a little to get

!.IO.d ?? .put !! .IO.dir».&?BLOCK for "."
  • the 2 when checks are unified into a ternary since they are collectively exhaustive and mutually exclusive
  • .Str.say is actually .Str.gist.put but put would be already stringifying and the gist of a string is itself, so .Str.say is reducible to .put
  • no need for parantheses after dir to disambiguate it from anything, so we erase that as well
  • we switch to the statement modifier version of the for loop since we have a single statement going on
  • here no curlies are present but there is still a block attached to the for loop (comprising of that single statement), so &?BLOCK still works
6
  • Thanks for providing an explanation! On another note, does SO already support syntax highlighting for Raku? It seems to be the case now.
    – uzluisf
    Jun 7 at 16:24
  • 2
    hi @uzluisf, thanks for the response and the edits. i've used "lang-raku" in a hope to color the code for a couple of times now and it seemed to work, yet with your query i looked at the HTML of this page and see "hljs language-ruby"... so unfortunately no support yet it seems. (not listed in here but this exists; not sure how easy it is to take some action there for the support.) Jun 7 at 16:42
  • 1
    You're welcome, @Mustafa Aydın! That makes sense, I've seen lang-perl being used to get around that since both Raku and Perl share quite a bit of syntax. It's interesting that lang-raku gets turned into syntax highlighting for Ruby
    – uzluisf
    Jun 7 at 20:34
  • 1
    Maybe cherry pick from {.d ?? .dir».&?BLOCK !! $_}('.'.IO)? I DRY'd the .IO. Eliminated double negative (! and !!). Yielded $_ instead of running .put. (» semantics mean .put may (actually technically should) list files in random order. That may not be OK. Yielded values are kept ordered). I topicalized with (...) rather than for which was a poor choice in the doc example imo. Also, for your code to work with ==>say(), it needs to be an expression, not a statement. You may as well invoke the block rather than use a for which would then need to be wrapped in parens.
    – raiph
    Jun 8 at 12:19
  • 1
    so as a 1-liner raku -e '{.d ?? .dir».&?BLOCK !! .put}(".".IO)' ? maybe
    – librasteve
    Jun 9 at 21:03
11

There is no quick solution in Raku core.

There are several solutions in the Raku ecosystem. Personally, I prefer paths. But then I'm the author of that module, and thus biased :-)

EDIT:

$ zef install paths
$ raku -Mpaths -e '.say for paths'
4
  • 3
    so that's raku -e 'use paths; .say for paths(:recurse)'
    – librasteve
    Jun 7 at 18:19
  • is paths module in the standard rakudo distribution?
    – librasteve
    Jun 7 at 18:20
  • 1
    @librasteve or maybe: raku -Mpaths -e '.say for paths(:recurse);' Jun 7 at 19:24
  • Well, it works. But is not without external dependencies. I can't just say "use this one-liner in Raku", I have to also write a script or description how to install the library (and how to install zef, because you can have rakudo without it...). Why isn't this functionality part of Raku standard library? I thought focus of Raku was (at least in part) on scripting. Its often very terse syntax is ideal for powerful one-liners.
    – menfon
    Jun 8 at 10:14
9

Adapting the answer from the Raku Docs:

~$ raku -e 'my @stack = ".".IO;
            my $all-files = gather while @stack {
              with @stack.pop {
                when :d { @stack.append: .dir };
                .take
              };
            };
            $all-files.join("\n").put;'

Of course, with Raku you don't have to worry about mashing that answer onto one physical line:

~$ raku -e 'my @stack = ".".IO; my $all-files = gather while @stack { with @stack.pop { when :d { @stack.append: .dir }; .take }; }; $all-files.join("\n").put;'

Note, in the one-liner each closing-} curlie is followed by a semicolon. Raku makes them optional if followed immediately by a newline (at least that's how I understand it). See link below.

https://docs.raku.org/language/syntax#Separating_Statements_with_Semicolons

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.