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by cercatrova
1412 days ago
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> where I would have to store the source as a separate file from the executable, then compile it each time > What's your build and deploy (to ~/.local/bin I presume) strategy? You can run scripts as you would with bash, you don't have to manually build and run the executable. For example, `cargo run (inside the script source folder)` and `sh script.sh` do basically the same thing, end user wise. `nim compile --run script.nim` is similar in that the language compiler will automatically compile and run it together. > Could you share some Rust that most people would script in Bash as an example? I was creating dotfiles the other day and I didn't want to use some dotfile manager program as I had some specific steps I wanted to follow, so I started it as a bash script. Well, it got kind of annoying so I made it into a Rust script with some nice features like interactive prompts, text coloring, etc with libraries like `clap`. You can do this in bash of course, but the Rust version was more ergonomic. When I need to run the script, I just did `cargo run` and it worked great. |
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For instance, my most-used bash script takes a file as input and opens either VIM or Emacs depending on whether the file is a .md or .org (simplified example). I run it like so:
I can edit ~/.local/bin/n and update the file, and use it immediately. I actually have my whole ~/.local/bin in version control. Having to type out e.g. ...would make the whole experience far less fluent. I probably would never use it.I'm asking because I'd love to rewrite this script in e.g. Rust, but I don't see any good way to deploy it to ~/.local/bin/n.