Moving around your system

Early shells allow you to move around your filesystem and run commands, and modern shells like Nu allow you to do the same. Let’s take a look at some of the common commands you might use when interacting with your system.

Viewing directory contents

  1. > ls

As we’ve seen in other chapters, ls is a command for viewing the contents of a path. Nu will return the contents as a table that we can use.

The ls command also takes an optional argument, to change what you’d like to view. For example, we can list the files that end in “.md”

  1. > ls *.md
  2. ───┬────────────────────┬──────┬─────────┬────────────
  3. # │ name │ type │ size │ modified
  4. ───┼────────────────────┼──────┼─────────┼────────────
  5. 0 CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md File 3.4 KB 5 days ago
  6. 1 CONTRIBUTING.md File 886 B 5 days ago
  7. 2 README.md File 15.0 KB 5 days ago
  8. 3 TODO.md File 1.6 KB 5 days ago
  9. ───┴────────────────────┴──────┴─────────┴────────────

The asterisk (*) in the above optional argument “*.md” is sometimes called a wildcard or a glob. It lets us match anything. You could read the glob “*.md” as “match any filename, so long as it ends with ‘.md’ “

Nu also uses modern globs as well, which allow you access to deeper directories.

  1. ls **/*.md
  2. ────┬───────────────────────────────────────────┬──────┬─────────┬────────────
  3. # │ name │ type │ size │ modified
  4. ────┼───────────────────────────────────────────┼──────┼─────────┼────────────
  5. 0 │ .github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/bug_report.md │ File │ 592 B │ 5 days ago
  6. 1 │ .github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/feature_request.md │ File │ 595 B │ 5 days ago
  7. 2 │ CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md │ File │ 3.4 KB │ 5 days ago
  8. 3 │ CONTRIBUTING.md │ File │ 886 B │ 5 days ago
  9. 4 │ README.md │ File │ 15.0 KB │ 5 days ago
  10. 5 │ TODO.md │ File │ 1.6 KB │ 5 days ago
  11. 6 │ crates/nu-source/README.md │ File │ 1.7 KB │ 5 days ago
  12. 7 │ docker/packaging/README.md │ File │ 1.5 KB │ 5 days ago
  13. 8 │ docs/commands/README.md │ File │ 929 B │ 5 days ago
  14. 9 │ docs/commands/alias.md │ File │ 1.7 KB │ 5 days ago
  15. 10 │ docs/commands/append.md │ File │ 1.4 KB │ 5 days ago

Here, we’re looking for any file that ends with “.md”, and the two asterisks further say “in any directory starting from here”.

Changing the current directory

  1. > cd new_directory

To change from the current directory to a new one, we use the cd command. Just as in other shells, we can use either the name of the directory, or if we want to go up a directory we can use the .. shortcut.

Changing the current working directory can also be done if cd is omitted and a path by itself is given:

  1. > ./new_directory

Note: changing the directory with cd changes the PWD environment variable. This means that a change of a directory is kept to the current block. Once you exit the block, you’ll return to the previous directory. You can learn more about working with this in the environment chapter.

Filesystem commands

Nu also provides some basic filesystem commands that work cross-platform.

We can move an item from one place to another using the mv command:

  1. > mv item location

We can copy an item from one location to another:

  1. > cp item location

We can remove an item:

  1. > rm item

The three commands also can use the glob capabilities we saw earlier with ls.

Finally, we can create a new directory using the mkdir command:

  1. > mkdir new_directory