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Go Tab Complete Commander (cmdtab)

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A commander for modern command-line human-computer interactions.

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Tab Complete Commander is a lightweight commander package focused on creating human-friendly terminal command-line interfaces composed of modular subcommands that can be imported as packages with portable completion and embedded, dynamic documentation.

Installation

Normally you would simply import "github.com/rwxrob/cmdtab".

Advantages

  • Build the command-line interface to your application completely independently from your core library.

  • Automatic and extendible Bash tab completion built in.

  • Modular, interchangeable, readable subcommands.

  • Easiest possible command documentation with support for emphasis with simple Markdown formatting.

  • Commands can be used standalone or as subcommands of a monolith (think BusyBox).

Terminology

A command module is an importable Go module hosted in a Git repository containing both an init function and a standalone command package with a main function allowing it to be used by itself or composed into another command as a subcommand.

When referring to standalone in this context we mean a command module that has been compiled into a single command from its command package with a main function.

Ongoing Project

Although Complete Commander is fully functional now it should still be considered beta until the final TODO items are complete. Most of them are related to better default actions and output formatting.

How It Works

The magic of Complete Commander comes from the clean separation of subcommands into their own files and composing them into an internal command index within the main executable program. This is accomplished through simple, judicious use of the init() function in each file. This approach incurs no more performance hit than would already be required for any other such solution and is 100% concurrency safe.

By the time the command-line application's main() function is called all it has to do is cmdtab.Execute("mycmd") to execute the top-level command:

  1. Detects and responds to programmable shell completion context
  2. Optionally adds the help, usage, and version builtins
  3. Delegates to any subcommands, or
  4. Runs its own top-level method

Because of the loose coupling, and top-down design a full subcommand node tree can easily be displayed and documented, indeed the builtin commands do exactly that. When care is given to maintain this loose coupling between subcommands a file can be modularly added or moved to any other executable directory creating very clean sharing and composition possibilities.

Motivation

This package scratches several "personal itches" that have come up from the needs of modern human-computer interaction clearly passing what is currently available:

  1. No commanders exist for writing simple commands with human-friendly subcommands
  2. No commanders exist that know anything about tab completion
  3. Tab completion is the simplest way to provide good help to the user
  4. Getopt-style options are ancient, ridiculously bad HCI
  5. More users are voicing their commands rather than typing them
  6. More users are using keyboard input with their thumbs
  7. Modern command-line programs need to be easily distributed
  8. Distributing executables with separate documentation complicates understanding the program
  9. Modern monolithic command approaches allow embedded documentation and better distribution
  10. Operating system package managers are overkill for distributing most command executables
  11. Documentation only needs to cover what the user is specifically interested in
  12. Documentation can be provided dynamically when embedded within the command it documents

Times Have Changed

The world has outgrown the original UNIX model for both command design and documentation, presumably due to the resource constraints of the day. These constraints forced shared library dependencies and commands were designed to be as minimal as possible doing "only one thing really well." Combining several actions into a single command (think git clone or go tool dist list) or embedding full command documentation into the executable would have been considered monstrously wasteful at that time. The result was lots of small commands dependent on specific shared libraries and a separate documentation system (man pages).

Today Go has revolutionized applications development and respectfully embraced modern use of resources. Static linking, cross-compilation, built in concurrency, reflection and documentation are all evidence of how time have changed. It follows then, that our command interface designs and documentation approaches should equally modernize.

There is now plenty of room to compose several commands and subcommands into a single monolithic executable. In fact, this has become idiomatic for Go's own tool set. Distribution and portability are more important than memory and storage size these days.

Sometimes You Just Need Tab

Usually completion context is triggered simply by tapping tab once or twice from the shell when typing in the command and its different subcommand arguments. Tab completion is supported as a standard in most all modern shells. Tab completion is often all that is needed, even usage would be overkill. A user simply wants to remember what the command name is.

Keep the Docs with the Command

Clean, standardized, extensive documentation needs to travel with the command it documents rather than being separate from it. There is no telling what operating systems will emerge nor how (and if) they will implement system documentation of any kind. Indeed, with the use of modern web and git hosting documentation the need for any system-level documentation system is sharply diminishing. Better to embed it with the command itself when needed.

Embedded documentation has the ability to dynamically sense the environment and context for its use thereby creating more useful, specific help to the user. This means that rather than dumping every single usage option into a massive man page separate from the command (think gpg), such documentation can be broken up and displayed programmatically by the command itself.

Most modern terminals support color (ANSI escapes) and UTF-8 (yes even Windows) and regularly display more than 80 columns of text.

Modern Human-Computer Interaction

Voice and human-friendly textual command-line interfaces are becoming more and more popular as more humans interact with command line interfaces in chat applications, messaging and more. This influence has permeated to system command design and deprecated the design decision to use traditional getopt-like switches and options, which cannot be voiced or tab-completed easily. (Consider how difficult it is to type or voice a simple dash into most text applications.)

Simplicity on the command-line has been an ignored requirement for some time. Why? Because only amazing technical people are using the command line? Perhaps. But that is a very bad reason. Interfaces need not be overly complex or difficult to memorize just because most users are technical.

The Complete Commander approach takes these HCI considerations very seriously placing priority on how humans use modern command-line interfaces and developing them accordingly. Human interaction is the single most important design decision for any application, including one that runs on the command line.

Design Decisions

This is a summary of the design decisions made roughly in the order they were made. It is provided in the hopes of addressing other design concerns anyone reviewing this package might have before choosing to use it.

  • To this day command options plague developers and users by different ways of dealing with single or double dashes, the equals sign, single letter options and more. Most are also not friendly to the use of UTF-8 runes in the upper ranges.

  • Even through getopt can be problematic (having had to code for it and around it for two decades and still has nightmares about gpg's interface) MapOpts is available for those who insist on using them giving the command author the choice. Parsing traditional getopt-type options and switches was originally dropped since the goals of this project are to deprecate such designs in favor of modern HCI approaches to command-line user interfaces. But, choice prevails over opinion in this case. Still, please don't use -f <file> when the tab-completable file <file> could be used instead. Even a single dash - is nearly impossible to voice-to-text command-line interface.

  • Semantic emphasis *bold*, **italic**, ***bold-italic*** are the only inline formatting options allowed. This seems prudent given the fundamental requirement for readability as well as the complication of other inline formatting and escapes. These three inline formats have been supported by all system documentation formats from the beginning and play nicely with Go's back-ticked raw-strings. Users can change the colors of these on terminals that use term(cap|info)-aware man pages and less/more (i.e. LESS_TERMCAP_?? or COMPCMD_??) without any need to provide theming in the package itself.

  • The decision to not use other Markdown for formatting was easy given the minimal three formats allowed. The decision to keep documentation 100% compatible with CommonMark was a no-brainer decision.

  • Pager application (i.e. less, more) detection seems practical since most everyone would want such when help output exceeds the page height (when such can be determined). There is a TODO to add fall-back builtin pager support.

  • Allowing more than 80 columns and never hard-wrapping lines allows the user to decide the preferred width of documentation. Lines that are hard-wrapped are unreadable when the column count drops to less than that of the hard-wrapping. With TMUX small pane widths are common. (This is one thing Go documentation seriously failed to consider.)

  • Internationalization was a big design consideration from the beginning. All code containing the English defaults is separate from the rest allowing build tools to generate language specific versions. The idea of putting all supported languages into monolithic files with locale templates was considered but quickly dismissed given the potential impact to executable size. Localized builds are a common industry practice. The English naming of the default builtin commands is at least as appropriate as these standard keywords are included in many other contexts help, version, and usage are very ubiquitous. If needed, these can be aliased easily by adding commands that encapsulate them with Call().

  • Using structs instead of interfaces makes more sense given the goals to enable quick and easy to read and write documentation embedded in the source.

  • Including a fair amount of output formatting and printing code seemed appropriate given that one of the three main goals of the project was to produce consistent command output formatting. It had been suggested to put such into another package instead but this package is so small that ultimately turned out to be overkill. Besides, the formatting used by cmdtab is highly specific to making output look good on a terminal as it relates to command documentation.

  • Rather than hard-code a dependency on Bash completion, every effort has been made to decouple completion from any specific shell completion API (despite the many references to Bash, which dominates currently). As long as any shell completion implementation sets an environment variable containing the full line to be completed package cmdtab will always be able to sense completion context and perform. This puts the completion logic safely embedded into the command that needs the completion and exposes as little dependency on shell completion methods as possible.

  • Use of aliases (d|del|delete) allows accessibility even if tab completion is not (yet) supported on a particular platform.

  • Inferring the main (top-level) command to use was considered to be the first argument (os.Args[0]) for some time but further research revealed it can never be relied upon fully. It also initially seemed clever to change the behavior of an executable simply by changing its name but this was quickly dismissed when clearer thinking prevailed concerning this and other security concerns. Therefore, the first command must be passed as an argument to cmdtab.Execute("mytopcmd"). It is simple enough, however, to compile other executables with different main commands. Indeed, only the argument to need change to do so.

  • Rather than add the complication of wrapping lines in a block and indenting the proper number of spaces for a given terminal width (which could be resized), the choice to keep all blocks beginning from the leftmost column was made. This makes the best use of screen space, is consistent with the help documentation from Go itself, and allows the output to be sized to any width without complication. Instead, emphasis has been given to the headers of the specific blocks. When indentation is truly needed raw-text (initial four spaces) can be used.

  • Full DocOpt parsing of usage was considered and dismissed. DocOpt solves a different problem with different priorities (which do no include consideration of getopt-style command lines interfaces as an anti-pattern in terms of HCI). In fact, the only thing that should every really been in a usage string are lists of subcommands or arguments called out by name with <something> both of which are automatically formatted when detected. In other words, no usage should ever include - or -- prefixed anything. Everything should be voice-able. This makes even the most complicated commands extremely easy to understand quickly.

  • Support for all-caps keywords (ex: [OPTIONS]) in usage strings was considered and dismissed because angle-bracket notation already covers that and having single suggested usage format is simpler. It is also far easier for the formatting parser to determine what should be italicized using angle-brackets.

  • Decided against any paged output of any special hidden builtin to allow combination with other shell scripts when quick customization is needed. Paged output remains for the main help, usage, and version builtins however.

  • Removed all color and formatting from the special hidden builtin output since is will mostly likely be used by shell scripts that further parse it, for example to email all the authors.

  • Emphasize(), Wrap(), and Indent() have been made public in addition to Format() for convenient use by command authors, but the values for italic, bold, and bolditalic have not been. This is to preserve the look and feel of commands that use Emphasize() and put the power to control appearance into the hands of users instead of developers.

  • At one point the internal map[string]*Command index was private to discourage tight coupling between commands. But it was decided that this inflexibility came at too great a cost to potential needs of command creators in the future who might want to inspect the Index directly themselves without necessarily doing anything to is, say to use some sort of prefix convention. Has() was kept as a convenience. This does not change the fact that subcommands should be as independent and uncoupled as possible. In the extreme case when subcommands need to communicate they should use system environment variables as would any other two commands normally.

How Does Completion Work?

Reading about [Bash Programmable Completion](https://duck.com/lite?kae=t&q=Bash Programmable Completion) is probably a good idea.

For Bash all you need to add to your ~.bashrc or ~/.bash_completion file is the following:

complete -C mycmd mycmd

This will cause the shell to run mycmd and set the COMP_LINE environment variable every time you tap the tab key once or twice. This allows Complete Commander to detect completion context and only print the words that should be possible for the last word of the command when the tab key was pressed.

The cmdtab package then sees completion context it resolves it by calling Complete(). See the package docs for more on the specific algorithm used, but generally it does the following:

  • Prints the output of any completion function found, or
  • Recursively looks up any matching Subcommand names and prints them

Machine Learning in Simple Terminal Commands?

Yep. Allowing a completion function allows incredible interesting possibilities with completion that uses full human language semantics rather than just prefixing the most likely candidates. Even a full machine learning code module could be added allowing any possible speech. Such considerations seem very absent from the HCI conversation regarding terminal command line usage.

Automatic (Builtin) Subcommands

Unless specifically disabled with OmitBuiltins (although the size to add these builtins is trivial), the following internal subcommands are added to any executable that is created using the cmdtab package:

  • help [<subcmd>]
  • usage
  • version

These subcommands are so common they have become something of an unspoken standard for modern commands.

Several other utility subcommands are also builtin for help integrating with shell environments, producing documentation in other formats, and more:


_authors       list names and authors
_bash_complete print line to add for bash completion
_builtins      list all cmd package builtins names and summaries
_cmdversion    print the cmd package version
_complete      force completion context
_copyrights    list names and copyrights
_descriptions  list names and descriptions
_examples      list names and examples
_gits          list names and git source repos
_help_json     dump help documentation as JSON
_index         list all names and summaries from cmd package index
_issues        list names and issue reporting URLs
_licenses      list names and licenses
_names         list names, main first
_summaries     list names and summaries
_usages        list names and usages
_versions      list names and versions

Help Documentation

Help documentation is inspired by the look and design of UNIX man pages so as to feel comfortable to those using such documentation for commands for decades. It contains all the details for the given command or <subcmd>. Rather than dump all the documentation into a single page, however, details of subcommands can be displayed separately.

Usage Documentation

Usage is when double-tab doesn't provide enough hints about how the command is to be used. Usage is meant to provide only minimal usage output while 'help' provides the full detailed information for the command. If an additional argument is provided the detailed help for that specific subcommand will be provided. If the subcommand does not exist it will be ignored and the main help information shown instead.

Version Documentation

Having a version subcommand in particular is well-defined as being the place to put all legal and authorship information in addition to just the version. Such is required by most all free software and open-source licenses.

TODO

Here's some stuff we know I want to add but haven't made issues or time for yet:

  • move to 1.16, root out deprecated ioutil
  • fix broken subcommands of subcommands with tab completion and usage
  • support <file> syntax formatting rendered as all caps upper without the angle brackets and underlined, or just leave if no support in terminal for underlining to make compat visually with man pages
  • recursive usage building by combining x.Usage into one line
  • better color terminal detection and support, configurable
  • _help_md - output a markdown file containing doc info
  • _help_html - output a standalone HTML5 document with doc info
  • _help_http - serves the _help_html document locally
  • internal paging when less not found (go-pager?)
  • assume use of the standard logger log, trap and beautify output

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