/p

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

p (for project)

Most languages have nice tools like this:

> somecommand new foo
> cd foo
> somecommand test
Creating isolated environment 
Installing dependencies
Tested ok!

...but what is that somecommand? For elm it's easy, it's elm, but for rust it's cargo and for Clojure it's lein. For some languages there are more than one you need to know about or multiple separate tools that do parts of this. And do you explicitly need to tell it to download dependencies? For elm you do, but not for lein. It's a bit of a mess.

p is the tool to put that under one roof.

To accomplish this goal we must:

  • auto detect language (and project type!) in most cases and be super easily configurable in cases where we don't detect automatically
  • auto detect our os/environment so we can know how to install required tools
  • have an open architecture so implementating support for a language can be done in that language and not force everyone into writing javascript or bash or whatever
  • have an open community so we can have implementations for even very small languages made by the people who knows them
  • expose all the underlying power of the tools we are shadowing so we don't just get the least common denominator
  • have shorter commands than the original tools (by having the hybris of taking a one character command name for example!)

Configuration

Project type detectors

  • simple
  • regex
  • executable

Alises

  • Config files
  • Executables

Master plan

  • Build prototype of command dispatcher (includes config file reader, and maybe more) in python
  • When this works well and is solid with good tests (mutation tested ideally), port this base to some compiled language that is faster. Every millisecond counts!
  • In parallel to the testing of the prototype build out language support. This should be safe to do since the final command dispatcher will just use this actual code so that won't need to be rewritten.

Further Documentation