Crates.io | ruut |
lib.rs | ruut |
version | 0.8.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-02-22 07:58:16.581858 |
updated_at | 2023-05-01 07:17:06.282872 |
description | Make easy-to-type and easy-to-grab folder structures easy to read |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/hibachrach/ruut |
max_upload_size | |
id | 211432 |
size | 57,182 |
I deal with folder structures a lot for work at DocSend. I also love the
output of tree(1)
for talking about folder structures.
Unfortunately, most of the time I'm not talking about folder structures on my
file-system, so in order to get the pretty output with tree(1)
, I would have
to create the directories and/or files on my computer, which seems a bit
ridiculous.
That's why I created ruut
. It takes a fairly easy-to-type expression like
this:
Parent (Child 1, Child 2 (Grandchild 1, Grandchild 2), Child 3)
and turns it into something pretty like
Parent
├── Child 1
├── Child 2
│ ├── Grandchild 1
│ └── Grandchild 2
└── Child 3
It's also good for pretty-printing serialized representations of trees (see the
format
options below).
NOTE: If you're looking to just render things with that tree style shown above from a Rust program, take a look at render_as_tree.
ruut
can either take the "structure" as an argument or from stdin:
$ ruut 'Parent (Child 1, Child 2 (Grandchild 1, Grandchild 2), Child 3)'
# Equivalent to
$ echo 'Parent (Child 1, Child 2 (Grandchild 1, Grandchild 2), Child 3)' | ruut
Grab the newest published version from the Releases section of this repo.
cargo
rust
with rustup
cargo install ruut
All of the examples in this section produce this as an output:
Parent
├── Child 1
├── Child 2
│ ├── Grandchild 1
│ └── Grandchild 2
└── Child 3
└── Grandchild 3
-f parens
, default)Parent (Child 1, Child 2 (Grandchild 1, Grandchild 2), Child 3 (Grandchild 3))
This is intended to be easy to type. Note that whitespace in the middle of a folder name is preserved.
Here's a more formal description of the syntax:
<name of folder> [(<name of subfolder 1> [(<name of subsubfolder1>[, <name of
subsubfolder2>[, ...]])][, <name of subfolder 2> [, ...]])]
Surrounding <
,>
means
you fill in those values yourself. Surrounding [
,]
means that part is
optional.
-f json
){
"Parent": {
"Child 1": null,
"Child 2": {
"Grandchild 1": null,
"Grandchild 2": {},
},
"Child 3": {
"Grandchild 3": "doesn't matter",
}
}
}
Only key names are really relevant here. Note that entities other than objects and empty objects are ignored.
Note that all JSON5 syntax is accepted. JSON5 is a superset of JSON with support for different types of quotes, comments, etc., so you can much more easily copy from an actual JavaScript environment. See the JSON5 website for more details.
-f jsonprop
){
"name": "Parent",
"children": [
{
"name": "Child 1"
},
{
"name": "Child 2",
"children": [
{
"name": "Grandchild 1"
},
{
"name": "Grandchild 2",
"children": []
}
]
},
{
"name": "Child 3",
"children": [
{
"name": "Grandchild 3",
"children": null
}
]
}
]
}
This is often useful if you're pulling structured trees from some external
source instead of writing them by hand. Note that children
can also be an
object--in such a case, the properties of that object are iterated over and key
names are ignored:
{
"name": "Parent",
"children": {
"whatever_1": {
"name": "Child 1"
},
"whatever_2": {
"name": "Child 2",
"children": {
"pls_ignore": {
"name": "Grandchild 1"
},
"test_post": {
"name": "Grandchild 2",
"children": {}
}
}
},
"whatever_3": {
"name": "Child 3",
"children": {
"it_me": {
"name": "Grandchild 3",
"children": null
}
}
}
}
}
Note that all JSON5 syntax is accepted. JSON5 is a superset of JSON with support for different types of quotes, comments, etc., so you can much more easily copy from an actual JavaScript environment. See the JSON5 website for more details.
By default, this format looks for the properties name
for what to print for
each item and children
for what items are immediate descendants. To change
this, you can use the --template
and --children
options, respectively.
Missing values are filled in with the text <missing>
--this can be overridden
with the --raise-on-missing
flag.
-t/--template <template_str>
This option allows you to grab any properties from each JSON node using a simple
curly brace template syntax. E.g. for a node with the properties id
= 3
,
type
= "Folder"
, you could write a template string of Id: {id}, Type: {type}
which would result in Id: 3, Type: Folder
.
-c/--children <children_prop>
This option allows you to specify the name of the property that contains the
children JSON nodes, which is children
by default.
-r/--raise-on-missing
This flag will cause ruut
to immediately error out if any of the placeholders
in the template are missing.
This project respects semantic versioning.