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A tab completion and argument parsing library for Javascript and Typescript CLI programs.

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Tabman

Tabman is a library for JavaScript and TypeScript command line interface (CLI) programs that provides functionality for tab completion and argument parsing.

Usage

To use Tabman, first import Completions and argFunction, and then define your desired completions as an object. For example:

const myCompletions = {
  "--help": { __desc: "Some kinda help" },
  add: {
    __desc: "Some kinda add",
    "--dev": {
      __desc: "Some kinda dev",
    },
    "--prod": {
      __desc: "Some kinda prod",
    },
    "--opt": {
      __desc: "Some kinda optional",
    },
  },
  cache: ["ls", "dir", "clean"],
  global: {
    add: {},
    cache: {},
  },
};

myCompletions.global.add = myCompletions.add;
myCompletions.global.cache = myCompletions.cache;

Next, specify the type of each argument or option. While there are some automated methods for detecting certain types, it is generally better to explicitly declare them for clarity and consistency.

const typer: Record<string, argFunction> = {
  global: "boolean",
  add: "boolean",
  cache: "boolean",
};

Then, create an instance of the Completion class, passing it the completions object, the type definitions, and an optional map of aliases. If you don't have any aliases, you can simply pass an empty Map().

const someCompletions = new Completion(myCompletions, typer, new Map());

Finally, call the nextCompletions method on the Completion instance whenever you want to generate a list of possible completions. You must provide the name of the current shell and any additional completions you want to include.

const compgen = someCompletions.nextCompletions("zsh");

The nextCompletions method reads the value of the COMP_LINE environment variable and generates completions based on the current state of the command line input. You can now use any logging function you want, for simplicity use console.log.

Example Usage:

See a simple example here.

To-dos:

  • Completions for bash and pwsh, maybe nushell too.
  • An inbuilt logging function.
  • A better algorithm to automatically detect argument type.

Why "Tabman"?

No deep meaning here - just some letter-swapping fun: tab → bat → Batman = Tabman.

Contribution Guidelines:

Thank you for considering contributing to Tabman! I welcome contributions from anyone who wants to improve the project. You are also welcome to contribute by writing new features and reporting any issues you may find.

If you discover a security vulnerability, please do not disclose it publicly. Instead, please email the details to me privately at <aretrosen AT proton DOT me>. Your help in keeping Tabman secure is greatly appreciated!