ipt
iPipeTo
Interactive Pipe To: The Node.js cli interactive workflow
Table of Contents
- About
- News
- Features
- Examples
- Install
- Awesome workflows
- Help
- Supported OS Terminals
- Contributing
- Alternatives
- Roadmap
- Credits
- License
About
ipt (pronounced iPipeTo) introduces the missing cli interactive workflow. It takes any kind of list as an input and uses that list to build an interactive interface to let you select an element from it.
Stop manually dragging your mouse around to copy output data from a terminal, using the ipt workflow you can pipe data from a command and select what to copy to clipboard from a convenient visual menu.
Selected data is also output to stdout allowing for easily composing various workflows - Just create your custom alias!
📰
News
- v3.2.0:
- Added
-i
option for arbitrary input prompts
- Added
- v3.1.0:
- Added
-o
option for ordered multiple choice selection
- Added
- v2.1.0:
- Added
-D
option for defining a pre-selected item in the list
- Added
- v2.0.0:
- Added
-p
option for extracting path out of selected items - Added
-M
option for customizing interface message - Added
-0
option for better null char compatibility - Added
-S
option for setting number of lines to be displayed - Added a proper programmatic API
- Added
- v1.1.0: Added autocomplete (or fuzzy finder) mode
ipt -a
😍
Features
Reads from standard input, prints to standard output
iPipeTo is inspired by the Unix Pipeline and is composable with any command line utility you already use and love.
Select multiple items
The -m
or --multiple
flag allows you to select many items out of the interactive list instead of the standard "pick one" behavior.
Fuzzysearch (autocomplete mode)
Using -a
or --autocomplete
option switchs the behavior of the interactive list to that of a fuzzysearch (or autocomplete) where options are narrowed as you type.
Extract path from result
A convenient option that helps extract file system path values out of the selected item, very useful when manipulating verbose output. Use -p
or --extract-path
options.
Input prompt
Use the -i
or --input
option in order to use ipt as a simple input prompt, default values can be set using standard input or the --default
argument.
Copy to clipboard
The -c
or --copy
option allows you to copy the selected item value to clipboard. Makes for useful workflows where you may need that value somewhere else such as out of the terminal or in a manual command to type later.
Customization
Customize your workflow by defining the separator to be used to generate the list (-s
or --separator
options), a custom message to display on the interactive interface (-M
or --message
) and much more. Make sure to take a look at the Help section to learn about all the available options.
Default selected items
Use the -D
or --default
option to determine which item(s) should be selected by default on the interactive list. The -P
or --default-separator
also allows for a custom char to be used to split these items (similar to -s
option).
Node.js based
All you need in order to run ipt is the Node.js runtime and npm, if you have those you're already all set!
🔎
Examples
The default behavior of ipt is to allow for the selection of one item from the interactive list, once selected this item will be output to stdout, you can also use -c
option to copy the result to your clipboard.
Using Unix pipes to send selected value to next command
Here we get a simple list of branchs git branch -a
, pipe into ipt
and pipe the selected item value to git checkout
to checkout into the selected branch. xargs
is needed to get the data from standard input and read it as an argument.
Using the multiple choices option
In the following example we list all the files from the folder ls
and pipe that list into ipt
only that this time we use the "multiple" flag -m
that allows for selecting multiple items from a list. The selected items get piped to trash
that deletes them.
NOTE: An ordered multiple choice menu is available when using the -o
OR --ordered
option
Using file as input data
You can also read a file as source of input data instead of reading from the standard input, here we read from a TODO
file and redirect the selected items to be written in a DONE
file.
⬇️
Install
Available on npm:
npm install -g ipt
Keep in mind that you'll need the latest Node.js LTS installed!
🌅
Awesome workflows
Showcases some useful predefined workflow scripts for using iPipeTo:
- ntl: Interactive cli menu to list/run npm tasks
- itrash: Selects files to delete from current folder
- git-iadd: Interactive staging of selected changed files
- git-ishow: Choose one git stash item to show
- npmlist: Fuzzy list everything with npm module
Found an awesome workflow idea? Send us a PR to add it here!
Help
Usage:
ipt [options] [<path>]
Options:
-0, --null Uses a null character as separator [boolean]
-a, --autocomplete Starts in autocomplete mode [boolean]
-c, --copy Copy selected item(s) to clipboard [boolean]
-d, --debug Prints to stderr any internal error [boolean]
-D, --default Select a default choices by their name [string]
-P, --default-separator Separator element for default items [string]
-e, --file-encoding Encoding for file <path>, defaults to utf8 [string]
-h, --help Shows this help message [boolean]
-i, --input Open an interactive input prompt [boolean]
-m, --multiple Allows the selection of multiple items [boolean]
-o, --ordered Selects multiple items in order [boolean]
-M, --message Replaces interface message [string]
-p, --extract-path Returns only a valid path for each item [boolean]
-s, --separator Separator to to split input into items [string]
-S, --size Amount of lines to display at once [number]
-t, --no-trim Prevents trimming of the result strings [boolean]
-u, --unquoted Force the output to be unquoted [boolean]
-v, --version Show version number [boolean]
Supported OS Terminals
iPipeTo should run just fine in any of the Inquirer.js supported terminals:
- Mac OS:
- Terminal.app
- iTerm
- Linux (Ubuntu, openSUSE, Arch Linux, etc):
- gnome-terminal (Terminal GNOME)
- konsole
- Windows*:
- cmd.exe
- Powershell
- Cygwin
Contributing
Bug fixes / code changes: Please provide tests covering your changes, update docs accordingly and keep your changes to a single commit.
Alternatives
As in any cool idea, iPipeTo is not the only available choice, here are some other cool similar tools found in the wild:
Roadmap
Are you wondering what can you do or how would you start contributing to iPipeTo's future? Take a look at our Roadmap document to find out about what's planned ahead and what currently needs help.
Credits
- The iPipeTo logo is a kind contribution from Bruno Magal
License
MIT © 2021 Ruy Adorno