Unsung Heroes of the Command Line

Since the command line is my primary way of interacting with my computer, I often will take steps to optimize my usage of it. Most command line users know the basics: ls , cd , grep , etc - these are instrumental building blocks in using the command line. However, there are often more specialized programs out there that can really save you some time, and I'd like to share a few notable examples of these kinds of specialized programs that have made my life easier over the last year or two. If you don't know them, hopefully you'll find them useful; if you do know them, hopefully it will just indicate that we both have good taste in our tools. =)

mojo

Over the past few years, I find myself doing more and more work with data online. Calling out to various web services or fetching content from a URL has become an essential part of being a developer. When it comes down to simply fetching the data, I reach for curl . However, if I have to do some slicing and dicing, I look to my good friend mojo .

mojo is a command line utility shipped with the Mojolicious project - it's a kind of web toolkit for Perl programmers. You don't need to be skilled in Perl to make use of mojo , however. mojo get allows you to fetch the contents at a URL, select particular elements via CSS3 selectors, and then transform the result using various methods. For example, let's say I want to get the src attribute of each img element on a page. This is how I could invoke mojo get to get the job done:

$ mojo get http://example.com img attr src

The img part is of course the element selector; the arguments following it are a method name (any method in Mojo::DOM may be used) plus any arguments for the method. I've found mojo get to be invaluable in scraping a document and extracting some content from it for use further down the command line.

jq

Continuing along the online data trend, I find myself working with JSON pretty often too. Instead of writing a script to extract data from a JSON, you can use jq. It's a handy program that describes itself as "sed for JSON data", and I feel like it lives up to this idea. Just invoking the . operator (which selects the current object) will pretty-print a chunk of JSON:

$ cat chunk-of.json | jq .

You can select a particular key in a document by adding it after the . operator:

$ cat chunk-of.json | jq .result

jq's selector syntax is pretty easy to understand and to recall - I can reliably remember how to do the basics each time I use it. For other instances, the documentation is always available for consultation!

uniprops & unichars

I try to write software to be Unicode-aware, which often means something like checking for the Letter property rather than simply looking for a-z and A-Z . To help me in this effort, I make use of two scripts from the Unicode::Tussle CPAN distribution: uniprops and unichars .

To use uniprops , you can give a character or codepoint, and it will tell you about all of the Unicode properties that character exhibits. For example:

$ uniprops а U+0430 ‹а› \N{CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER A} \w \pL \p{LC} \p{L_} \p{L&} \p{Ll} All Alnum X_POSIX_Alnum Alpha X_POSIX_Alpha Alphabetic Any Assigned InCyrillic Cyrillic Is_Cyrillic ID_Continue Is_IDC Cased Cased_Letter LC Changes_When_Casemapped CWCM Changes_When_Titlecased CWT Changes_When_Uppercased CWU Cyrl Ll L Gr_Base Grapheme_Base Graph X_POSIX_Graph GrBase IDC ID_Start IDS Letter L_ Lowercase_Letter Lower X_POSIX_Lower Lowercase Print X_POSIX_Print Unicode Word X_POSIX_Word XID_Continue XIDC XID_Start XIDS

unichars approaches the property problem from the opposite angle; instead of telling you which properties a character has, it gives you a list of which Unicode characters have a particular property:

$ unichars '\p{Cyrillic} Ѐ U+0400 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER IE WITH GRAVE Ё U+0401 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER IO Ђ U+0402 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DJE Ѓ U+0403 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER GJE Є U+0404 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER UKRAINIAN IE Ѕ U+0405 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DZE І U+0406 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER BYELORUSSIAN-UKRAINIAN I Ї U+0407 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER YI Ј U+0408 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER JE Љ U+0409 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER LJE

combine

If you've done text processing on the command line, there's a good chance you're familiar with comm(1) . It's a program that you give two text files along with an option switch that indicates different set operations to perform on the lines in those files. For example, comm -13 A B prints lines unique to B, and comm -12 A B prints lines in both A and B. From my examples, you get a good idea of how difficult comm can be to use; I would always have to consult the man page or sit and think the invocation I would need to make to get the results I needed. Frustrated, I cried out to the Internet:

comm(1) has the weirdest way of specifying what you want, but it's so useful =/ — Rob Hoelz (@hoelzro) December 30, 2015

Fortunately, a fellow programmer heard my plea:

@hoelzro COMBINE(1) is way more straightforward if you want to compare sets of lines.

apt-get install moreutils — Vladislav Naumov (@vnaum) December 30, 2015

Ever since that fateful day, I have not used comm once. combine does exactly what I need, and does so using a syntax that's so straightforward. My examples from above change to combine B not A and combine A and B , respectively.

Discovering More Tools

combine is part of the moreutils package, available on many platforms; I recommend looking at other tools in the package to see if you find something else that solves a problem you have, or better yet, a problem you didn't know you had!

If jq apppeals to you, but you work with other kinds of structured data, you may find this repository on GitHub interesting:

https://github.com/dbohdan/structured-text-tools

Are you there any specialized tools you feel make your life a lot easier? If so, please let me know!

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