Elixir is known for being a language made for building distributed applications that scale, are massively concurrent, and have self-healing properties. All of these adjectives paint Elixir in a grandiose light. And for good reasons!

But is Elixir also a language that can be used for the more mundane tasks of this world like scripting? I think the answer is a definite yes.

To see this, let’s take a look at all the ways we can write scripts using Elixir. We’ll build using the same example, going from simple to more complex solutions.

Our script will simply create a new markdown file with today’s date so we can write our To Do list. The structure of the directories will be YYYY/MM/DD.md , so we will nest each day under a month and each month under a year.

# Get today's date date = Date . utc_today () year = Integer . to_string ( date . year ) month = Integer . to_string ( date . month ) day = Integer . to_string ( date . day ) # Generate the month's full path with YYYY/MM format month_path = File . cwd! () |> Path . join ( year ) |> Path . join ( month ) # Create the month and year directories File . mkdir_p ( month_path ) # Generate the filename with today's date filename = Path . join ( month_path , day ) <> ".md" # Check existence so we don't override a file unless File . exists? ( filename ) do # include sample header header = """ --- date: #{Date.to_string(date)} --- To Do ===== - What do you need to accomplish today? """ # write to the file File . open ( filename , [ :write ], fn file -> IO . write ( file , header ) end ) end # Print out confirmation message final_message = """ > Created #{Path.relative_to_cwd(filename)} """ IO . puts ( final_message )

Excellent! That is the full extent of our script. Let’s now see how we can run it.

The first and perhaps simplest way to run an elixir script is just to run elixir name_of_file.exs from the shell. So let’s do that.

Save the above code in a file named todo.exs Run elixir todo.exs You should see the following message (with the date you’re running this script instead of the date I ran it):

$ elixir todo.exs > Created 2018/9/28.md

If we inspect the file that it created, we can confirm that the template is there,

--- date : 2018-09-28 --- To Do ===== - What do you need to accomplish today?

A second way to run the script is to make it into an executable. This is perhaps an extension of the one above, but I include it as a separate step because I think it could prove useful in some projects.

Follow these steps:

Move todo.exs under a bin/ directory (not required but nice) Mark it as executable with chmod: chmod +x bin/todo.exs Add a shebang #! /usr/bin/env elixir at the top of your file Rename it to bin/todo

And run bin/todo !

If you’re unfamiliar with using chmod and shebang to turn a file into an executable, take a look at the notes in this let’s build a CLI video.

Our todo.exs and bin/todo scripts are examples of standalone scripts. They are useful when you want to run a task that is self-contained. bin/todo has the benefit that the user of the script need not know that the script is running Elixir (though it still needs to have Elixir installed). It’s just a script like any other one you may find in your bin/ folder.

Now if you’re working with Elixir, it is very likely you are already working in a mix project. If that is the case, mix allows you to run arbitrary scripts via mix run [name of file] .

To test this, let’s go ahead and create a new project called tasker and run our script there.

Follow these steps:

mix new tasker , cd into the tasker directory, make a scripts/ directory, copy the todo.exs file from the first section into scripts/todo.exs

Now run mix run scripts/todo.exs !

The benefit of running this script via mix (as opposed to the previous two options) is that the script is part of your project, so it has access to all the code you have defined in the project.

Let’s bring that point home by extracting most of the logic to a TodoBuilder module:

# lib/todo_builder.ex defmodule TodoBuilder do def run ( date ) do year = Integer . to_string ( date . year ) month = Integer . to_string ( date . month ) day = Integer . to_string ( date . day ) month_path = File . cwd! () |> Path . join ( year ) |> Path . join ( month ) File . mkdir_p ( month_path ) filename = Path . join ( month_path , day ) <> ".md" unless File . exists? ( filename ) do header = """ --- date: #{Date.to_string(date)} --- To Do ===== - What do you need to accomplish today? """ File . open ( filename , [ :write ], fn file -> IO . write ( file , header ) end ) end { :ok , filename } end end

# scripts/todo.exs { :ok, filename } = Date.utc_today () |> TodoBuilder.run () final_message = """ > Created #{Path.relative_to_cwd(filename)} """ IO.puts ( final_message )

If you’re interested in seeing this “in the wild”, Phoenix seeds data in their applications by running mix run priv/repo/seeds.exs .

Having it as a script that can run with our project code is nice. But sometimes we want to make it a more explicit part of our project. Turning our script into a mix task can do just that. This is especially true if we expect external parties to use our project since mix tasks have the extra benefit of documentation!

Let’s change our script into a mix task. In the tasker project,

Create a lib/mix/tasks/ directory Create a todo.ex task Move the code we have in scripts/todo.exs into that file Add use Mix.Task at the top of the module Add a @shortdoc and @moduledoc with descriptions of what the task does

# lib/mix/tasks/todo.ex defmodule Mix . Tasks . Todo do use Mix . Task @shortdoc "Creates a new todo file with today's date" @moduledoc """ Creates a new todo file with today's date ## Example mix todo """ def run ( _args ) do { :ok , filename } = Date . utc_today () |> TodoBuilder . run () final_message = """ > Created #{Path.relative_to_cwd(filename)} """ Mix . shell () . info ( final_message ) end end

Now run mix todo and voila!

But that’s not all. Note the use of @shortdoc and @moduledoc . The documentation that we added in those two module attributes makes our script especially friendly to other users.

If you check mix help , you’ll see that our task is listed right after mix test , and it uses @shortdoc for its documentation.

Now check out mix help todo . It uses your @moduledoc for documentation!

If you’re interested on how this gets used in the wild, take a look at how Phoenix and Ecto use mix tasks for commonly performed actions and for their generators. Things such as mix phx.new , mix phx.server , and mix ecto.migrate are all mix tasks!

Wow, it’s been a long road but we’re finally down to the last way we can script in Elixir (that I know of).

One of the built-in mix tasks that comes with mix is mix escript.build. It packages your project and dependencies into a binary that is executable. It even embeds Elixir as part of the script, so it can be used so long as a machine has Erlang/OTP without requiring Elixir to be present.

Let’s get to it. We have to first update our mix.exs file to define an entry point for the escript.build task,

# mix.exs def project do [ app: :tasker , # other options # # add this line below escript: escript () ] end # add the entry point defp escript do [ main_module: Tasker . TodoCLI ] end

Now let’s create Tasker.TodoCLI and put our code there,

# lib/tasker/todo_cli.ex defmodule Tasker . TodoCLI do def main ( _args ) do { :ok , filename } = Date . utc_today () |> TodoBuilder . run () final_message = """ > Created #{Path.relative_to_cwd(filename)} """ IO . puts ( final_message ) end end

Now we can simply run mix escript.build to build the executable. And you should see that you have a new executable called tasker in the main directory. Run it with ./tasker and see the magic happen!

Much like a mix task, an escript has the ability to use the rest of your project’s codebase. But it has that ability because the project and its dependencies are compiled and packaged in. That means you can use it outside of your mix project. And since Elixir is embedded, all you need is to have Erlang/OTP installed. So it makes our little script into an executable that is easily shareable with others!

To test that, feel free to move the ./tasker script out of your mix project into another directory and run it. You’ll see it does its work just fine!

We covered a lot of ground, and we saw that Elixir has great tooling for creating scripts. But I would be remiss if I didn’t include a mention of the OptionParser module. It’s a little module that helps parse command line options from something like this,

--flag true --option arg1

into a keyword list like this,

[ flag: true , option: "arg1" ]

So if you’re writing Elixir scripts, it’s sure to come in handy!