Method Expansions
There are two forms of methods within Ion: array methods, and string methods. Array methods are
methods which return arrays, and string methods are methods which return strings. The distinction
is made between the two by the sigil that is invoked when calling a method. For example, if the
method is denoted by the $
sigil, then it is a string method. Otherwise, if it is denoted by the
@
sigil, then it is an array method. Example as follows:
echo $method_name(variable)
for elem in @method_name(variable); echo $elem; end
Methods are executed at the same time as other expansions, so this leads to a performance optimization when combining methods with other methods or expansions. Ion includes a number of these methods for common use cases, but it is possible to create and/or install new methods to enhance the functionality of Ion. Just ensure that systems executing your Ion scripts that require those plugins are equipped with and have those plugins enabled. If you have ideas for useful methods that would be worth including in Ion by default, feel free to open a feature request to discuss the idea.
Methods Support Inline Expressions
So we heard that you like methods, so we put methods in your methods. Ion methods accept taking expressions as their arguments -- both for the input parameter, and any supplied arguments to control the behavior of the method.
echo $method($(cmd...) arg)
let string_var = "value in variable"
echo $method(string_var)
echo $method("actual value" arg)
Overloaded Methods
Some methods may also perform different actions when supplied a different type. The $len()
method,
for example, will report the number of graphemes within a string, or the number of elements within
an array. Ion is able to determine which of the two were provided based on the first character
in the expression. Quoted expressions, and expressions with start with $
, are strings; whereas
expressions that start with either [
or @
are treated as arrays.
echo $len("a string")
echo $len([1 2 3 4 5])
Method Arguments
Some methods may have their behavior tweaked by supplying some additional arguments. The @split()
method, for example, may be optionally supplied a pattern for splitting. At the moment, a comma
is used to specify that arguments are to follow the input, but each argument supplied after that
is space-delimited.
for elem in @split("some space-delimited values"); echo $elem; end
for elem in @split("some, comma-separated, values" ", "); echo $elem; end
String Methods
The following are the currently-supported string methods:
- basename
- extension
- filename
- join
- find
- len
- len_bytes
- parent
- repeat
- replace
- replacen
- regex_replace
- reverse
- to_lowercase
- to_uppercase
- escape
- unescape
- or
basename
Defaults to string variables. When given a path-like string as input, this will return the
basename (complete filename, extension included). IE: /parent/filename.ext
-> filename.ext
Examples
echo $basename("/parent/filename.ext")
Output
filename.ext
extension
Defaults to string variables. When given a path-like string as input, this will return the
extension of the complete filename. IE: /parent/filename.ext
-> ext
.
Examples
echo $extension("/parent/filename.ext")
Output
ext
filename
Defaults to string variables. When given a path-like string as input, this will return the
file name portion of the complete filename. IE: /parent/filename.ext
-> filename
.
Examples
echo $filename("/parent/filename.ext")
Output
filename
join
Defaults to array variables. When given an array as input, the join string method will concatenate each element in the array and return a string. If no argument is given, then those elements will be joined by a single space. Otherwise, each element will be joined with a given pattern.
Examples
let array = [1 2 3 4 5]
echo $join(array)
echo $join(array ", ")
Output
1 2 3 4 5
1, 2, 3, 4, 5
find
Defaults to string variables. When given an string, it returns the first index in which that
string appears. It returns -1
if it isn't contained.
Examples
echo $find("FOOBAR" "OB")
echo $find("FOOBAR" "ob")
Output
2
-1
len
Defaults to string variables. Counts the number of graphemes in the output. If an array expression is supplied, it will print the number of elements in the array.
Examples
echo $len("foobar")
echo $len("❤️")
echo $len([one two three four])
Output
6
1
4
len_bytes
Defaults to string variables. Similar to the len
method, but counts the number of actual bytes
in the output, not the number of graphemes.
Examples
echo $len_bytes("foobar")
echo $len_bytes("❤️")
Output
6
6
parent
Defaults to string variables. When given a path-like string as input, this will return the
parent directory's name. IE: /root/parent/filename.ext
-> /root/parent
Examples
echo $parent("/root/parent/filename.ext")
Output
/root/parent
repeat
Defaults to string variables. When supplied with a number, it will repeat the input N amount of times, where N is the supplied number.
Examples
echo $repeat("abc, " 3)
Output
abc, abc, abc,
replace
Defaults to string variables. Given a pattern to match, and a replacement to replace each match with, a new string will be returned with all matches replaced.
Examples
let input = "one two one two"
echo $replace(input, one 1)
echo $replace($replace(input one 1) two 2)
Output
1 two 1 two
1 2 1 2
replacen
Defaults to string variables. Equivalent to replace
, but will only replace the first N amount
of matches.
Examples
let input = "one two one two"
echo $replacen(input "one" "three" 1)
echo $replacen(input "two" "three" 2)
Output
three two one two
one three one three
regex_replace
Defaults to string variables. Equivalent to replace
, but the first argument will be treated
as a regex.
PS: By default, unicode support will be disabled to trim the size of Ion. Add the "unicode" flag to enable it.
Examples
echo $regex_replace("FOOBAR" "^F" "f")
echo $regex_replace("FOOBAR" "^f" "F")
Output
fOOBAR
FOOBAR
reverse
Defaults to string variables. Simply returns the same string, but with each grapheme displayed in reverse order.
Examples
echo $reverse("foobar")
Output
raboof
to_lowercase
Defaults to string variables. All given strings have their characters converted to an lowercase equivalent, if an lowercase equivalent exists.
Examples
echo $to_lowercase("FOOBAR")
Output
foobar
to_uppercase
Defaults to string variables. All given strings have their characters converted to an uppercase equivalent, if an uppercase equivalent exists.
Examples
echo $to_uppercase("foobar")
Output
FOOBAR
escape
Defaults to string variables. Escapes the content of the string.
Example
let line = " Mary had\ta little \n\t lamb\t"
echo $escape($line)
Output
Mary had\\ta little \\n\\t lamb\\t
unescape
Defaults to string variables. Unescapes the content of the string.
Example
let line = " Mary had\ta little \n\t lamb\t"
echo $unescape($line)
Output
Mary had a little
lamb
or
Defaults to string variables. Fallback to a given value if the variable is not defined
Example
echo $or($unknown_variable "Fallback")
let var = 42
echo $or($var "Not displayed")
Output
Fallback
42
Array Methods
The following are the currently-supported array methods.
lines
Defaults to string variables. The supplied string will be split into one string per line in the input argument.
Examples
for line in @lines($unescape("first\nsecond\nthird")
echo $line
end
Output
first
second
third
split
Defaults to string variables. The supplied string will be split according to a pattern specified as an argument in the method. If no pattern is supplied, then the input will be split by whitespace characters. Useful for splitting simple tabular data.
Examples
for data in @split("person, age, some data" ", ")
echo $data
end
for data in @split("person age data")
echo $data
end
Output
person
age
some data
person
age
data
split_at
Defaults to string variables. The supplied string will be split in two pieces, from the index specified in the second argument.
Examples
echo @split_at("FOOBAR" "3")
echo @split_at("FOOBAR")
echo @split_at("FOOBAR" "-1")
echo @split_at("FOOBAR" "8")
Output
FOO BAR
ion: split_at: requires an argument
ion: split_at: requires a valid number as an argument
ion: split_at: value is out of bounds
bytes
Defaults to string variables. Returns an array where the given input string is split by bytes and each byte is displayed as their actual 8-bit number.
Examples
echo @bytes("foobar")
Output
102 111 111 98 97 114
chars
Defaults to string variables. Returns an array where the given input string is split by chars.
Examples
for char in @chars("foobar")
echo $char
end
Output
f
o
o
b
a
r
graphemes
Defaults to string variables. Returns an array where the given input string is split by graphemes.
Examples
for grapheme in @graphemes("foobar")
echo $grapheme
end
Output
f
o
o
b
a
r
reverse
Defaults to array variables. Returns a reversed copy of the input array.
Examples
echo @reverse([1 2 3])
Output
3 2 1