Provided by: elvish_0.18.0-4_amd64 bug

Introduction

       This  document  describes the Elvish programming language.  It is both a specification and
       an advanced tutorial.  The parts of this document marked with either notes or  called  out
       as  examples  are  non-normative,  and  only  serve to help you understand the more formal
       descriptions.

       Examples in this document might use constructs that have not yet been introduced, so  some
       familiarity  with  the  language  is  assumed.   If  you are new to Elvish, start with the
       learning materials.

Source code encoding

       Elvish source code must be Unicode text encoded in UTF-8.

       In    this    document,    character    is    a    synonym    of     Unicode     codepoint
       (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_point) or its UTF-8 encoding.

Lexical elements

   Whitespace
       In this document, an inline whitespace is any of the following:

       • A space (U+0020);

       • A tab (U+0009);

       • A  comment:  starting  with  #  and  ending before (but not including) the next carriage
         return, newline or end of file;

       • A line continuation: a ^ followed by a newline ("\n"), or a carriage return and  newline
         ("\r\n").

       A whitespace is any of the following:

       • An inline whitespace;

       • A carriage return (U+000D);

       • A newline (U+000A).

   Metacharacters
       The following metacharacters serve to introduce or delimit syntax constructs:

       • $: introduces variable use

       • * and ?: forms wildcards

       • ( and ): encloses output captures

       • [ and ]: encloses list or map literals

       • { and }: encloses lambda literals or braced lists

       • < and >: introduces IO redirections

       • ;: separates pipelines in a code chunk

       • |: separates forms in a pipeline; encloses function signature

       • &:  marks  background pipelines; introduces key-value pairs in map literals, options, or
         function signatures

       The following characters are parsed as metacharacters under certain conditions:

       • ~: introduces tilde expansion if appearing at the beginning of a compound expression

       • =: terminates map keys, option keys, or the variable name in temporary assignments

   Single-quoted string
       A single-quoted string consists of zero or more characters enclosed in single quotes  (').
       All enclosed characters represent themselves, except the single quote.

       Two  consecutive  single  quotes  are handled as a special case: they represent one single
       quote, instead of terminating a single-quoted string and starting another.

       Examples: '*\' evaluates to *\, and 'it''s' evaluates to it's.

   Double-quoted string
       A double-quoted string consists of zero or more characters enclosed in double quotes  (").
       All  enclosed  characters  represent  themselves, except backslashes (\), which introduces
       escape sequences.  Double quotes are not  allowed  inside  double-quoted  strings,  except
       after backslashes.

       The     following     escape     sequences    are    supported    (the    “U+”    notation
       (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode#Architecture_and_terminology)  represents   Unicode
       codepoints in hexadecimal):

       • The following escape sequences represent some special characters:

         • \a is U+0007 BEL (bell).

         • \b is U+0008 BS (backspace).

         • \t is U+0009 HT (horizontal tabulation).

         • \n is U+000A LF (line feed), the standard line termination character on Unix.

         • \v is U+000B VT (vertical tabulation).

         • \f is U+000C FF (form feed).

         • \r is U+000D CR (carriage return).

         • \" is U+0022, the double quote " itself.

         • \\ is U+005C, the backslash \ itself.

       • The following escape sequences encode any byte using their numeric values:

         • \ followed by exactly three octal digits.

         • \x followed by exactly two hexadecimal digits.

         Examples: The character “A” (U+0041) is encoded using a single byte in UTF-8 (0x41), can
         be written as \x41 or \101.  The character “ß” (U+00DF) is encoded using  two  bytes  in
         UTF-8 (0xc3 and 0x9f), and can be written as \xc3\x9f or \303\237 (not as \xdf or \337).
         These notations can be used to write arbitrary byte sequences  that  are  not  necessary
         valid UTF-8 sequences.

         Note: \0, while supported by C, is invalid in Elvish; write \000 instead.

       • The following escape sequences encode any Unicode codepoint using their numeric values:

         • \u followed by exactly four hexadecimal digits.

         • \U followed by exactly eight hexadecimal digits.

         Examples:  The  character  “A”  (U+0041)  can  be  written as \u0041 or \U00000041.  The
         character “ß” (U+00DF) can be written as \u00df or \U000000df.

       • The following escape sequences encode ASCII  control  characters  with  the  traditional
         caret notation (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caret_notation):

         • \^  followed  by a single character between U+0040 and U+005F represents the codepoint
           that is 0x40 lower than it.  For example, \^I is the tab character: 0x49 (I) - 0x40  =
           0x09 (TAB).

         • \^? represents DEL (U+007F).

         • \c followed by character X is equivalent to \^ followed by X.

       An unsupported escape sequence results in a parse error.

       Note:   Unlike  most  other  shells,  double-quoted  strings  in  Elvish  do  not  support
       interpolation.  For instance, "$name" simply evaluates to a string containing  $name.   To
       get a similar effect, simply concatenate strings: instead of "my name is $name", write "my
       name is "$name.  Under the hood this is a compounding operation.

   Bareword
       A string can be written without quoting – a bareword, if it only includes  the  characters
       from the following set:

       • ASCII letters (a-z and A-Z) and numbers (0-9);

       • The symbols !%+,-./:@\_;

       • Non-ASCII    codepoints    that   are   printable,   as   defined   by   unicode.IsPrint
         (https://godoc.org/unicode#IsPrint) in Go’s standard library.

       Examples: a.txt, long-bareword, elf@elv.sh, /usr/local/bin, 你好世界.

       Moreover, ~ and = are allowed to appear without  quoting  when  they  are  not  parsed  as
       metacharacters.

       Note:  since  the backslash (\) is a valid bareword character in Elvish, it cannot be used
       to escape metacharacter.  Use quotes instead: for example, to echo a star, write echo  "*"
       or echo '*', not echo \*.  The last command will try to output filenames starting with \.

Value types

   String
       A string is a (possibly empty) sequence of bytes.

       Single-quoted string literals, double-quoted string literals and barewords all evaluate to
       string values.   Unless  otherwise  noted,  different  syntaxes  of  string  literals  are
       equivalent in the code.  For instance, xyz, 'xyz' and "xyz" are different syntaxes for the
       same string with content xyz.

       Strings that contain UTF-8 encoded text can be indexed with a byte index where a codepoint
       starts,  which  results  in  the  codepoint  that starts there.  The index can be given as
       either a typed number, or a string that parses to a number.  Examples:

       • In the string elv, every codepoint is encoded with only one byte, so 0,  1,  2  are  all
         valid indices:

                ~> put elv[0]
                ▶ e
                ~> put elv[1]
                ▶ l
                ~> put elv[2]
                ▶ v

       • In  the  string  世界,  each codepoint is encoded with three bytes.  The first codepoint
         occupies byte 0 through 2, and the second  occupies  byte  3  through  5.   Hence  valid
         indices are 0 and 3:

                ~> put 世界[0]
                ▶ 世
                ~> put 世界[3]
                ▶ 界

       Such  strings  may  also  be  indexed  with  a  slice (see documentation of list for slice
       syntax).  The range determined by the slice is also interpreted as byte indices,  and  the
       range must begin and end at codepoint boundaries.

       The  behavior  of indexing a string that does not contain valid UTF-8-encoded Unicode text
       is unspecified.

       Note: String indexing will likely change.

   Number
       Elvish supports several types of numbers.  There is no literal syntax,  but  they  can  be
       constructed by passing their string representation to the num builtin command:

       • Integers  are written in decimal (e.g.  10), hexadecimal (e.g.  0xA), octal (e.g.  0o12)
         or binary (e.g.  0b1010).

         NOTE: Integers with leading zeros are now parsed as octal (e.g.   010  is  the  same  as
         0o10, or 8), but this is subject to change (#1372 (https://b.elv.sh/1371)).

       • Rationals are written as two exact integers joined by /, e.g.  1/2 or 0x10/100 (16/100).

       • Floating-point numbers are written with a decimal point (e.g.  10.0) or using scientific
         notation (e.g.  1e1 or 1.0e1).  There are also three additional  special  floating-point
         values: +Inf, -Inf and NaN.

       Digits  may  be  separated  by underscores, which are ignored; this permits separating the
       digits into groups to  improve  readability.   For  example,  1000000  and  1_000_000  are
       equivalent, so are 1.234_56e3 and 1.23456e3, or 1_2_3 and 123.

       The string representation is case-insensitive.

   Strings and numbers
       Strings and numbers are distinct types; for example, 2 and (num 2) are distinct values.

       However,  by  convention, all language constructs that expect numbers (e.g.  list indices)
       also accept strings that can be converted to numbers.  This means that most of  the  time,
       you  can just use the string representation of numbers, instead of explicitly constructing
       number values.  Builtin numeric commands follow the same convention.

       When the word number appears unqualified in other sections  of  this  document,  it  means
       either an explicitly number-typed value (typed number), or its string representation.

       When  a  typed  number  is  converted  to  a  string (e.g.  with to-string), the result is
       guaranteed to convert back to the original number.  In other words, eq $x (num  (to-string
       $x)) always outputs $true if $x is a typed number.

   Exactness
       Integers and rationals are exact numbers; their precision is only limited by the available
       memory, and many (but not all) operations on them are guaranteed to produce mathematically
       correct results.

       Floating-point  numbers  are  IEEE  754  (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_754)  double-
       precision.  Since operations on floating-point numbers in general are not guaranteed to be
       precise, they are always considered inexact.

       This  distinction  is  important  for  some  builtin  commands;  see  exactness-preserving
       commands.

   List
       A list is a value containing a sequence of values.   Values  in  a  list  are  called  its
       elements.  Each element has an index, starting from zero.

       List  literals  are  surrounded  by  square  brackets  [  ],  with  elements  separated by
       whitespace.  Examples:

              ~> put [lorem ipsum]
              ▶ [lorem ipsum]
              ~> put [lorem
                      ipsum
                      foo
                      bar]
              ▶ [lorem ipsum foo bar]

       Note: In Elvish, commas have no special meanings and are  valid  bareword  characters,  so
       don’t use them to separate elements:

              ~> var li = [a, b]
              ~> put $li
              ▶ [a, b]
              ~> put $li[0]
              ▶ a,

       A  list  can be indexed with the index of an element to obtain the element, which can take
       one of two forms:

       • A non-negative integer, an offset counting from the beginning of the list.  For example,
         $li[0] is the first element of $li.

       • A negative integer, an offset counting from the back of the list.  For instance, $li[-1]
         is the last element $li.

       In both cases, the index can be given either as a typed number or a number-like string.

       A list can also be indexed with a slice to obtain a sublist, which can  take  one  of  two
       forms:

       • A  slice $a..$b, where both $a and $b are integers.  The result is sublist of $li[$a] up
         to, but not including, $li[$b].  For instance, $li[4..7] equals [$li[4] $li[5]  $li[6]],
         while $li[1..-1] contains all elements from $li except the first and last one.

         Both  integers  may  be omitted; $a defaults to 0 while $b defaults to the length of the
         list.  For instance, $li[..2] is equivalent to  $li[0..2],  $li[2..]  is  equivalent  to
         $li[2..(count  $li)],  and $li[..] makes a copy of $li.  The last form is rarely useful,
         as lists are immutable.

         Note that the slice needs to be a single string, so there cannot be  any  spaces  within
         the  slice.   For  instance,  $li[2..10]  cannot  be  written as $li[2.. 10]; the latter
         contains two indices and is equivalent to $li[2..] $li[10] (see Indexing).

       • A slice $a..=$b, which is similar to $a..$b, but includes $li[$b].

       Examples:

              ~> var li = [lorem ipsum foo bar]
              ~> put $li[0]
              ▶ lorem
              ~> put $li[-1]
              ▶ bar
              ~> put $li[0..2]
              ▶ [lorem ipsum]

   Map
       A map is a value containing unordered key-value pairs.

       Map literals are surrounded by square brackets; a key/value  pair  is  written  &key=value
       (reminiscent   to  HTTP  query  parameters),  and  pairs  are  separated  by  whitespaces.
       Whitespaces are allowed after =, but not before =.  Examples:

              ~> put [&foo=bar &lorem=ipsum]
              ▶ [&foo=bar &lorem=ipsum]
              ~> put [&a=   10
                      &b=   23
                      &sum= (+ 10 23)]
              ▶ [&a=10 &b=23 &sum=33]

       The literal of an empty map is [&].

       Specifying a key without = or a value following it is equivalent to  specifying  $true  as
       the  value.  Specifying a key with = but no value following it is equivalent to specifying
       the empty string as the value.  Example:

              ~> echo [&a &b=]
              [&a=$true &b='']

       A map can be indexed by any of its keys.  Unlike strings and lists, there  is  no  support
       for slices, and .. and ..= have no special meanings.  Examples:

              ~> var map = [&a=lorem &b=ipsum &a..b=haha]
              ~> echo $map[a]
              lorem
              ~> echo $map[a..b]
              haha

       You  can  test  if  a  key  is present using has-key and enumerate the keys using the keys
       builtins.

       Note: Since & is a metacharacter, key-value pairs  do  not  have  to  follow  whitespaces;
       [&a=lorem&b=ipsum]  is  equivalent to [&a=lorem &b=ipsum], just less readable.  This might
       change in future.

   Pseudo-map
       A pseudo-map is not a single concrete data type.  It refers to concrete types that  behave
       like maps with some restrictions.

       A  pseudo-map  has  a  fixed set of keys whose values can be accessed by indexing like you
       would for a regular map.  Similarly, you can use commands like keys and  has-key  on  such
       objects.

       Unlike  a  normal  map,  it  is  currently not possible to create a modified version of an
       existing pseudo-map: it is not possible to create a  pseudo-map  with  new  keys,  without
       existing keys, or with a different value for a given key.

       The  pseudo-map mechanism is often used for introspection.  For example, exceptions, user-
       defined functions, and $buildinfo are pseudo-maps.

   Nil
       The value $nil serves as the  initial  value  of  variables  that  are  declared  but  not
       assigned.

   Boolean
       There are two boolean values, $true and $false.

       When  converting  non-boolean  values  to the boolean type, $nil and exceptions convert to
       $false; such values and $false itself are booleanly  false.   All  the  other  non-boolean
       values convert to $true; such values and $true itself are booleanly true.

   Exception
       An exception carries information about errors during the execution of code.

       There  is  no  literal  syntax  for  exceptions.  See the discussion of exception and flow
       commands for more information about this data type.

       An exception is a pseudo-map with a reason field, which is  in  turn  a  pseudo-map.   The
       reason  pseudo-map  has  has  a  type  field identifying how the exception was raised, and
       further fields depending on the type:

       • If the type field is fail, the exception was raised by the fail command.

         In this case, the content field contains the argument to fail.

       • If the type field is flow, the exception was raised by one of the flow commands.

         In this case, the name field contains the name of the flow command.

       • If the type field is pipeline, the exception was a result of multiple  commands  in  the
         same pipeline raising exceptions.

         In this case, the exceptions field contains the exceptions from the individual commands.

       • If  the type field starts with external-cmd/, the exception was caused by one of several
         conditions of an external command.  In this case, the following fields are available:

         • The cmd-name field contains the name of the command.

         • The pid field contains the PID of the command.

       • If the type field is external-cmd/exited, the external command exited  with  a  non-zero
         status code.  In this case, the exit-status field contains the exit status.

       • If the type field is external-cmd/signaled, the external command was killed by a signal.
         In this case, the following extra fields are available:

         • The signal-name field contains the name of the signal.

         • The signal-number field contains the numerical value of the signal, as a string.

         • The core-dumped field is a boolean reflecting whether a core dump was generated.

       • If the type field is external-cmd/stopped, the external command was  stopped.   In  this
         case, the following extra fields are available:

         • The signal-name field contains the name of the signal.

         • The signal-number field contains the numerical value of the signal, as a string.

         • The trap-cause field contains the number indicating the trap cause.

       Examples:

              ~> put ?(fail foo)[reason]
              ▶ [&content=foo &type=fail]
              ~> put ?(return)[reason]
              ▶ [&name=return &type=flow]
              ~> put ?(false)[reason]
              ▶ [&cmd-name=false &exit-status=1 &pid=953421 &type=external-cmd/exited]

   File
       There  is  no literal syntax for the file type.  This type is returned by commands such as
       file:open and path:temp-file.  It can be used as the target of a redirection rather than a
       filename.

       A file object is a pseudo-map with fields fd (an int) and name (a string).  If the file is
       closed the fd will be -1.

   Function
       A function encapsulates a piece of code that can be executed in an ordinary  command,  and
       takes  its  arguments  and options.  Functions are first-class values; they can be kept in
       variables, used as arguments, output on the value  channel  and  embedded  in  other  data
       structures.  Elvish comes with a set of builtin functions, and Elvish code can also create
       user-defined functions.

       Note: Unlike most programming languages, functions in Elvish do not  have  return  values.
       Instead, they can output values, which can be captured later.

       A  function literal, or alternatively a lambda, evaluates to a user-defined function.  The
       literal syntax consists of an optional signature list,  followed  by  a  code  chunk  that
       defines the body of the function.

       Here is an example without a signature:

              ~> var f = { echo "Inside a lambda" }
              ~> put $f
              ▶ <closure 0x18a1a340>

       One  or  more  whitespace characters after { is required: Elvish relies on the presence of
       whitespace to disambiguate function literals and braced lists.

       Note: It is good style to put some whitespace before the closing } for symmetry, but  this
       is not required by the syntax.

       Functions  defined without a signature list do not accept any arguments or options.  To do
       so, write a signature list.  Here is an example:

              ~> var f = {|a b| put $b $a }
              ~> $f lorem ipsum
              ▶ ipsum
              ▶ lorem

       Like in the left hand of assignments, if you prefix  one  of  the  arguments  with  @,  it
       becomes a rest argument, and its value is a list containing all the remaining arguments:

              ~> var f = {|a @rest| put $a $rest }
              ~> $f lorem
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ []
              ~> $f lorem ipsum dolar sit
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ [ipsum dolar sit]
              ~> set f = {|a @rest b| put $a $rest $b }
              ~> $f lorem ipsum dolar sit
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ [ipsum dolar]
              ▶ sit

       You  can  also  declare options in the signature.  The syntax is &name=default (like a map
       pair), where default is the default value for the option; the value of the option will  be
       kept in a variable called name:

              ~> var f = {|&opt=default| echo "Value of $opt is "$opt }
              ~> $f
              Value of $opt is default
              ~> $f &opt=foobar
              Value of $opt is foobar

       Options must have default values: Options should be optional.

       If  you  call a function with too few arguments, too many arguments or unknown options, an
       exception is thrown:

              ~> {|a| echo $a } foo bar
              Exception: need 1 arguments, got 2
              [tty], line 1: {|a| echo $a } foo bar
              ~> {|a b| echo $a $b } foo
              Exception: need 2 arguments, got 1
              [tty], line 1: {|a b| echo $a $b } foo
              ~> {|a b @rest| echo $a $b $rest } foo
              Exception: need 2 or more arguments, got 1
              [tty], line 1: {|a b @rest| echo $a $b $rest } foo
              ~> {|&k=v| echo $k } &k2=v2
              Exception: unknown option k2
              [tty], line 1: {|&k=v| echo $k } &k2=v2

       A user-defined function is a pseudo-map.  If $f is a user-defined  function,  it  has  the
       following fields:

       • $f[arg-names] is a list containing the names of the arguments.

       • $f[rest-arg] is the index of the rest argument.  If there is no rest argument, it is -1.

       • $f[opt-names] is a list containing the names of the options.

       • $f[opt-defaults]  is  a  list  containing the default values of the options, in the same
         order as $f[opt-names].

       • $f[def] is a string containing the definition of the function, including  the  signature
         and the body.

       • $f[body]  is  a  string  containing  the  body  of  the  function, without the enclosing
         brackets.

       • $f[src] is a map-like data structure containing information about the source  code  that
         the  function  is  defined  in.   It contains the same value that the src function would
         output if called from the function.

Variable

       A variable is a named storage location for holding a value.  The following characters  can
       be used in variable names without quoting:

       • ASCII letters (a-z and A-Z) and numbers (0-9);

       • The symbols -_:~;

       • Non-ASCII    codepoints    that   are   printable,   as   defined   by   unicode.IsPrint
         (https://godoc.org/unicode#IsPrint) in Go’s standard library.

       A variable exist after it is declared using var, and its value may be mutated  by  further
       assignments.  It can be used as an expression or part of an expression.

       Note:  In  most other shells, variables can map directly to environmental variables: $PATH
       is the same as the PATH environment variable.  This is not the case in  Elvish.   Instead,
       environment  variables  are put in a dedicated E: namespace; the environment variable PATH
       is known as $E:PATH.  The $PATH variable, on the other hand, does not exist initially, and
       if  you  have  defined  it,  only  lives  in  a  certain  lexical  scope within the Elvish
       interpreter.

       You will notice that variables sometimes have a leading dollar $, and sometimes not.   The
       tradition  is that they do when they are used for their values, and do not otherwise (e.g.
       in assignment).  This is consistent with most other shells.

   Variable suffix
       There are two characters that have special meanings and extra type constraints  when  used
       as the suffix of a variable name:

       • If  a  variable  name ends with ~, it can only take callable values, which are functions
         and external commands.  Such variables are consulted when resolving  ordinary  commands.
         The default value is the builtin nop command.

       • If  a  variable  name ends with :, it can only take namespaces as values.  They are used
         for accessing namespaced variables.

   Scoping rule
       Elvish has lexical scoping.  A file or an  interactive  prompt  starts  with  a  top-level
       scope, and a function literal introduce new lexical scopes.

       When you use a variable, Elvish looks for it in the current lexical scope, then its parent
       lexical scope and so forth, until the outermost scope:

              ~> var x = 12
              ~> { echo $x } # $x is in the outer scope
              12
              ~> { y = bar; { echo $y } } # $y is in the outer scope
              bar

       If a variable is not in any of the lexical scopes, Elvish  tries  to  resolve  it  in  the
       builtin namespace, and if that also fails, fails with an error:

              ~> echo $pid # builtin
              36613
              ~> echo $nonexistent
              Compilation error: variable $nonexistent not found
                [interactive], line 1:
                  echo $nonexistent

       Note  that Elvish resolves all variables in a code chunk before starting to execute any of
       it; that is why the error message above says compilation error.  This can be more  clearly
       observed in the following example:

              ~> echo pre-error; echo $nonexistent
              Compilation error: variable $nonexistent not found
              [tty], line 1: echo pre-error; echo $nonexistent

   Closure semantics
       When  a  function  literal  refers to a variable in an outer scope, the function will keep
       that variable alive, even if that variable is the local variable of an outer function that
       that     function     has     returned.      This     is    called    closure    semantics
       (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closure_(computer_programming)),   because   the   function
       literal “closes” over the environment it is defined in.

       In the following example, the make-adder function outputs two functions, both referring to
       a local variable $n.  Closure semantics means that:

       1. Both functions can continue to refer to the $n variable after make-adder has returned.

       2. Multiple calls to the make-adder  function  generates  distinct  instances  of  the  $n
          variables.

          ~> fn make-adder {
               var n = 0
               put { put $n } { set n = (+ $n 1) }
             }
          ~> var getter adder = (make-adder)
          ~> $getter # $getter outputs $n
          ▶ 0
          ~> $adder # $adder increments $n
          ~> $getter # $getter and $setter refer to the same $n
          ▶ 1
          ~> var getter2 adder2 = (make-adder)
          ~> $getter2 # $getter2 and $getter refer to different $n
          ▶ 0
          ~> $getter
          ▶ 1

       Variables  that get “captured” in closures are called upvalues;.  When capturing upvalues,
       Elvish only captures the variables that are used.  In the following example, $m is not  an
       upvalue of $g because it is not used:

              ~> fn f { var m = 2; var n = 3; put { put $n } }
              ~> var g = (f)

       Note: This effect has impacts on the eval command.

Expressions

       Elvish  has  a  few  types  of  expressions.  Some of those are new compared to most other
       languages, but some are very similar.

       Unlike most other languages, expressions in Elvish may evaluate to any number  of  values.
       The concept of multiple values is distinct from a list of multiple elements.

   Literal
       Literals  of  strings,  lists,  maps  and  functions  all  evaluate  to one value of their
       corresponding types.  They are described in their respective sections.

   Variable use
       A variable use expression is formed  by  a  $  followed  by  the  name  of  the  variable.
       Examples:

              ~> var foo = bar
              ~> var x y = 3 4
              ~> put $foo
              ▶ bar
              ~> put $x
              ▶ 3

       If  the  variable  name  only  contains  the  following  characters  (a subset of bareword
       characters), the name can appear unquoted after $ and the variable use expression  extends
       to the longest sequence of such characters:

       • ASCII letters (a-z and A-Z) and numbers (0-9);

       • The symbols -_:~.  The colon : is special; it is normally used for separating namespaces
         or denoting namespace variables;

       • Non-ASCII   codepoints   that   are   printable,   as   defined    by    unicode.IsPrint
         (https://godoc.org/unicode#IsPrint) in Go’s standard library.

       Alternatively,    $    may   be   followed   immediately   by   a   single-quoted   string
       (https://elv.sh/ref/language.html#single-quoted-string)   or   a   double-quoted    string
       (https://elv.sh/ref/language.html#double-quoted-string),  in  which cases the value of the
       string specifies the name of the variable.  Examples:

              ~> var "\n" = foo
              ~> put $"\n"
              ▶ foo
              ~> var '!!!' = bar
              ~> put $'!!!'
              ▶ bar

       Unlike other shells and other dynamic languages, local namespaces in Elvish are statically
       checked.   This  means  that  referencing  a nonexistent variable results in a compilation
       error, which is triggered before any code is actually evaluated:

              ~> echo $x
              Compilation error: variable $x not found
              [tty], line 1: echo $x
              ~> fn f { echo $x }
              compilation error: variable $x not found
              [tty 1], line 1: fn f { echo $x }

       If a variable contains a list value,  you  can  add  @  before  the  variable  name;  this
       evaluates to all the elements within the list.  This is called exploding the variable:

              ~> var li = [lorem ipsum foo bar]
              ~> put $li
              ▶ [lorem ipsum foo bar]
              ~> put $@li
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ ipsum
              ▶ foo
              ▶ bar

       Note:  Since  variable  uses  have higher precedence than indexing, this does not work for
       exploding a list that is an element of another list.  For doing that,  and  exploding  the
       result of other expressions (such as an output capture), use the builtin all command.)

   Output capture
       An  output capture expression is formed by putting parentheses () around a code chunk.  It
       redirects the output of the chunk into an internal pipe, and evaluates to all  the  values
       that have been output.

              ~> + 1 10 100
              ▶ 111
              ~> var x = (+ 1 10 100)
              ~> put $x
              ▶ 111
              ~> put lorem ipsum
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ ipsum
              ~> var x y = (put lorem ipsum)
              ~> put $x
              ▶ lorem
              ~> put $y
              ▶ ipsum

       If  the  chunk  outputs  bytes, Elvish strips the last newline (if any), and split them by
       newlines, and consider each line to be one string value:

              ~> put (echo "a\nb")
              ▶ a
              ▶ b

       Trailing carriage returns are also stripped from each line, which effectively  makes  \r\n
       also valid line separators:

              ~> put (echo "a\r\nb")
              ▶ a
              ▶ b

       Note 1.  Only the last newline is ever removed, so empty lines are preserved; (echo "a\n")
       evaluates to two values, "a" and "".

       Note 2.  One consequence of this mechanism is that you can not  distinguish  outputs  that
       lack  a  trailing  newline  from  outputs that have one; (echo what) evaluates to the same
       value as (print what).  If such a  distinction  is  needed,  use  slurp  to  preserve  the
       original bytes output.

       If the chunk outputs both values and bytes, the values of output capture will contain both
       value outputs and lines.  However, the ordering between value output and byte output might
       not agree with the order in which they happened:

              ~> put (put a; echo b) # value order need not be the same as output order
              ▶ b
              ▶ a

       Note: If you want to capture the stdout and stderr byte streams independent of each other,
       see the example in the run-parallel documentation.

   Exception capture
       An exception capture expression is formed by putting ?() around a code chunk.  It runs the
       chunk and evaluates to the exception it throws.

              ~> fail bad
              Exception: bad
              Traceback:
                [interactive], line 1:
                  fail bad
              ~> put ?(fail bad)
              ▶ ?(fail bad)

       If there was no error, it evaluates to the special value $ok:

              ~> nop
              ~> put ?(nop)
              ▶ $ok

       Exceptions  are  booleanly  false  and  $ok  is  booleanly  true.   This  is  useful in if
       (introduced later):

              if ?(test -d ./a) {
                # ./a is a directory
              }

       Note: Exception captures do not affect the output of the  code  chunk.   You  can  combine
       output capture and exception capture:

              var output = (var error = ?(commands-that-may-fail))

   Braced list
       A  braced list consists of multiple expressions separated by whitespaces and surrounded by
       braces ({}).  There must be no space after the opening brace.  A braced list evaluates  to
       whatever the expressions inside it evaluate to.  Its most typical use is grouping multiple
       values in a compound expression.  Example:

              ~> put {a b}-{1 2}
              ▶ a-1
              ▶ a-2
              ▶ b-1
              ▶ b-2

       It can also be used to affect the order of evaluation.  Examples:

              ~> put *
              ▶ foo
              ▶ bar
              ~> put *o
              ▶ foo
              ~> put {*}o
              ▶ fooo
              ▶ baro

       Note: When used to affect the order of  evaluation,  braced  lists  are  very  similar  to
       parentheses in C-like languages.

       Note:  A  braced  list is an expression.  It is a syntactical construct and not a separate
       data structure.

       Elvish currently also supports using commas to separate items in a braced list.  This will
       likely  be  removed  in future, but it also means that literal commas must be quoted right
       now.

   Indexing
       An indexing expression is formed by appending  one  or  more  indices  inside  a  pair  of
       brackets ([]) after another expression (the indexee).  Examples:

              ~> var li = [foo bar]
              ~> put $li[0]
              ▶ foo
              ~> var li = [[foo bar] quux]
              ~> put $li[0][0]
              ▶ foo
              ~> put [[foo bar]][0][0]
              ▶ foo

       If  the  expression  being indexed evaluates to multiple values, the indexing operation is
       applied on each value.  Example:

              ~> put (put [foo bar] [lorem ipsum])[0]
              ▶ foo
              ▶ lorem
              ~> put {[foo bar] [lorem ipsum]}[0]
              ▶ foo
              ▶ lorem

       If there are multiple index expressions, or the index  expression  evaluates  to  multiple
       values, the indexee is indexed once for each of the index value.  Examples:

              ~> put elv[0 2 0..2]
              ▶ e
              ▶ v
              ▶ el
              ~> put [lorem ipsum foo bar][0 2 0..2]
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ foo
              ▶ [lorem ipsum]
              ~> put [&a=lorem &b=ipsum &a..b=haha][a a..b]
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ haha

       If  both the indexee and index evaluate to multiple values, the results generated from the
       first indexee appear first.  Example:

              ~> put {[foo bar] [lorem ipsum]}[0 1]
              ▶ foo
              ▶ bar
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ ipsum

   Compounding
       A compound expression is formed by writing several expressions together with no  space  in
       between.  A compound expression evaluates to a string concatenation of all the constituent
       expressions.  Examples:

              ~> put 'a'b"c" # compounding three string literals
              ▶ abc
              ~> var v = value
              ~> put '$v is '$v # compounding one string literal with one string variable
              ▶ '$v is value'

       When one or more of the constituent expressions evaluate to multiple values, the result is
       all possible combinations:

              ~> var li = [foo bar]
              ~> put {a b}-$li[0 1]
              ▶ a-foo
              ▶ a-bar
              ▶ b-foo
              ▶ b-bar

       The  order  of  the  combinations  is  determined  by  first taking the first value in the
       leftmost expression that generates multiple values, and then taking the second value,  and
       so on.

   Tilde expansion
       An unquoted tilde at the beginning of a compound expression triggers tilde expansion.  The
       remainder of this expression must be a string.  The part from the beginning of the  string
       up to the first / (or the end of the word if the string does not contain /), is taken as a
       user name; and they together evaluate to the home directory of that  user.   If  the  user
       name is empty, the current user is assumed.

       In the following example, the home directory of the current user is /home/xiaq, while that
       of the root user is /root:

              ~> put ~
              ▶ /home/xiaq
              ~> put ~root
              ▶ /root
              ~> put ~/xxx
              ▶ /home/xiaq/xxx
              ~> put ~root/xxx
              ▶ /root/xxx

       Note that tildes are not special when they appear elsewhere in a word:

              ~> put a~root
              ▶ a~root

       If you need them to be, use a braced list:

              ~> put a{~root}
              ▶ a/root

   Wildcard expansion
       Wildcard patterns are expressions that contain wildcards.  Wildcard patterns  evaluate  to
       all filenames they match.

       In  examples  in this section, we will assume that the current directory has the following
       structure:

              .x.conf
              a.cc
              ax.conf
              foo.cc
              d/
              |__ .x.conf
              |__ ax.conf
              |__ y.cc
              .d2/
              |__ .x.conf
              |__ ax.conf

       Elvish supports the following wildcards:

       • ? matches one arbitrary character except /.  For example, ?.cc matches a.cc;

       • * matches any number of arbitrary characters except /.  For example, *.cc  matches  a.cc
         and foo.cc;

       • **  matches  any number of arbitrary characters including /.  For example, **.cc matches
         a.cc, foo.cc and b/y.cc.

       The following behaviors are default, although they can be altered by modifiers:

       • When the entire wildcard pattern has no match, an error is thrown.

       • None of the wildcards matches . at the beginning of filenames.  For example:

         • ?x.conf does not match .x.conf;

         • d/*.conf does not match d/.x.conf;

         • **.conf does not match d/.x.conf.

       Wildcards can be modified using the same syntax as indexing.  For  instance,  in  *[match-
       hidden]  the * wildcard is modified with the match-hidden modifier.  Multiple matchers can
       be chained like *[set:abc][range:0-9].  In which case they are OR’ed together.

       There are two kinds of modifiers:

       Global modifiers apply to the whole pattern and can be placed after any wildcard:

       • nomatch-ok tells Elvish not to throw an error when there is no match  for  the  pattern.
         For  instance, in the example directory put bad* will be an error, but put bad*[nomatch-
         ok] does exactly nothing.

       • but:xxx (where xxx is any filename) excludes the filename from the final result.

       • type:xxx (where xxx is a recognized file type from  the  list  below).   Only  one  type
         modifier  is  allowed.   For  example,  to  find  the directories at any level below the
         current working directory: **[type:dir].

         • dir will match if the path is a directory.

         • regular will match if the path is a regular file.

       Although global modifiers affect the entire wildcard pattern, you can  add  it  after  any
       wildcard,  and  the  effect  is  the  same.   For example, put */*[nomatch-ok].cpp and put
       *[nomatch-ok]/*.cpp do the same thing.  On the  other  hand,  you  must  add  it  after  a
       wildcard,  instead of after the entire pattern: put */*.cpp[nomatch-ok] unfortunately does
       not do the correct thing.  (This will probably be fixed.)

       Local modifiers only apply to the wildcard it immediately follows:

       • match-hidden tells the wildcard to match . at the beginning of filenames, e.g.  *[match-
         hidden].conf matches .x.conf and ax.conf.

         Being  a  local  modifier,  it only applies to the wildcard it immediately follows.  For
         instance, *[match-hidden]/*.conf matches d/ax.conf and .d2/ax.conf, but not d/.x.conf or
         .d2/.x.conf.

       • Character matchers restrict the characters to match:

         • Character sets, like set:aeoiu;

         • Character ranges like range:a-z (including z) or range:a~z (excluding z);

         • Character classes: control, digit, graphic, letter, lower, mark, number, print, punct,
           space,   symbol,    title,    and    upper.     See    the    Is*    functions    here
           (https://godoc.org/unicode) for their definitions.

       Note the following caveats:

       • Local  matchers  chained  together  in  separate  modifiers  are  OR’ed.   For instance,
         ?[set:aeoiu][digit] matches all files with the chars aeoiu or containing a digit.

       • Local matchers combined in the same modifier, such as ?[set:aeoiu digit],  behave  in  a
         hard to explain manner.  Do not use this form as the behavior is likely to change in the
         future.

       • Dots at the beginning of filenames always require an explicit match-hidden, even if  the
         matcher  includes  ..   For example, ?[set:.a]x.conf does not match .x.conf; you have to
         ?[set:.a match-hidden]x.conf.

       • Likewise, you always need to use ** to match slashes, even if the  matcher  includes  /.
         For example *[set:abc/] is the same as *[set:abc].

   Order of evaluation
       An   expression  can  use  a  combination  of  indexing,  tilde  expansion,  wildcard  and
       compounding.  The order of evaluation is as follows:

       1. Literals, variable uses, output captures and exception captures and braced  lists  have
          the highest precedence and are evaluated first.

       2. Indexing has the next highest precedence and is then evaluated first.

       3. Expression compounding then happens.  Tildes and wildcards are kept unevaluated.

       4. If  the  expression  starts  with  a  tilde,  tilde expansion happens.  If the tilde is
          followed by a wildcard, an exception is raised.

       5. If the expression contains any wildcard, wildcard expansion happens.

       Here an example: in ~/$li[0 1]/* (where $li is  a  list  [foo  bar]),  the  expression  is
       evaluated as follows:

       1. The variable use $li evaluates to the list [foo bar].

       2. The indexing expression $li[0] evaluates to two strings foo and bar.

       3. Compounding the expression, the result is ~/foo/* and ~/bar/*.

       4. Tilde  expansion  happens;  assuming  that  the user’s home directory is /home/elf, the
          values are now /home/elf/foo/* and /home/elf/bar/*.

       5. Wildcard expansion happens, evaluating the  expression  to  all  the  filenames  within
          /home/elf/foo  and  /home/elf/bar.   If  any  directory  is  empty  or  nonexistent, an
          exception is thrown.

       To force a particular order of evaluation, group expressions using a braced list.

Command forms

       A command form is either an ordinary command or a special command.  Both types have access
       to IO ports, which can be modified via redirections.

       When Elvish parses a command form, it applies the following process to decide its type:

       • If  the  first  expression in the command form contains a single string literal, and the
         string value matches one of the special commands, it is a special command.

       • Otherwise, it is an ordinary command.

   Ordinary command
       An ordinary command form consists of a command head,  and  any  number  of  arguments  and
       options.

       The  first expression in an ordinary command is the command head.  If the head is a single
       string literal, it is subject to static resolution:

       • If a variable with name head~ (where head is the value of the  head)  exists,  the  head
         will evaluate as if it is $head~; i.e., a function invocation.

       • If  the  head contains at least one slash, it is treated as an external command with the
         value as its path relative to the current directory.

       • Otherwise, the head is considered “unknown”, and  the  behavior  is  controlled  by  the
         unknown-command pragma:

         • If the unknown-command pragma is set to external (the default), the head is treated as
           the name of an external command, to be searched in the $E:PATH during runtime.

         • If the unknown-command pragma is  set  to  disallow,  such  command  heads  trigger  a
           compilation error.

       If  the  head is not a single string literal, it is evaluated as a normal expression.  The
       expression must evaluate to one value, and the value must be one of the following:

       • A callable value: a function or external command.

       • A string containing at least one slash, in which case it is  treated  like  an  external
         command with the string value as its path.

       Examples of commands using static resolution:

              ~> put x # resolves to builtin function $put~
              ▶ x
              ~> var f~ = { put 'this is f' }
              ~> f # resolves to user-defined function $f~
              ▶ 'this is f'
              ~> whoami # resolves to external command whoami
              elf

       Examples of commands using a dynamic callable head:

              ~> $put~ x
              ▶ x
              ~> (external whoami)
              elf
              ~> { put 'this is a lambda' }
              ▶ 'this is a lambda'

       Note:  The last command resembles a code block in C-like languages in syntax, but is quite
       different under the hood: it works by defining a  function  on  the  fly  and  calling  it
       immediately.

       Examples of commands using a dynamic string head:

              ~> var x = /bin/whoami
              ~> $x
              elf
              ~> set x = whoami
              ~> $x # dynamic strings can only used when containing slash
              Exception: bad value: command must be callable or string containing slash, but is string
              [tty 10], line 1: $x

       The  definition  of  barewords is relaxed when parsing the head, and includes <, >, and *.
       These are all names of numeric builtins:

              ~> < 3 5 # less-than
              ▶ $true
              ~> > 3 5 # greater-than
              ▶ $false
              ~> * 3 5 # multiplication
              ▶ 15

       Arguments and options can be supplied to commands.  Arguments are arbitrary  words,  while
       options  have  exactly  the  same  syntax  as  key-value  pairs in map literals.  They are
       separated by inline whitespaces and may be intermixed:

              ~> echo &sep=, a b c # &seq=, is an option; a b c are arguments
              a,b,c
              ~> echo a b &sep=, c # same, with the option mixed within arguments
              a,b,c

       Note: Since options have the same syntax as key-value pairs in maps, &key is equivalent to
       &key=$true:

              ~> fn f {|&opt=$false| put $opt }
              ~> f &opt
              ▶ $true

       Note:  Since & is a metacharacter, it can be used to start an option immediately after the
       command name; echo&sep=, a b is equivalent to echo &sep=, a b, just less  readable.   This
       might change in future.

   Special command
       A  special  command  form  has  the  same  syntax  with an ordinary command, but how it is
       executed depends on the command head.  See special commands.

   Temporary assignment
       Note: Starting from 0.18.0, this syntax will be deprecated in favor  of  the  tmp  special
       command.

       You  can  prepend  any  command  form  with  temporary  assignments, which gives variables
       temporarily values during the execution of that command.

       In the following example, $x and $y are temporarily assigned 100 and 200:

              ~> var x y = 1 2
              ~> x=100 y=200 + $x $y
              ▶ 300
              ~> echo $x $y
              1 2

       In contrary to normal assignments, there should be no whitespaces around the equal sign =.
       To have multiple variables in the left-hand side, use braces:

              ~> var x y = 1 2
              ~> fn f { put 100 200 }
              ~> {x,y}=(f) + $x $y
              ▶ 300

       If  you  use  a  previously  undefined  variable in a temporary assignment, its value will
       become the empty string after the command finishes.

       Since var  and  set  are  also  commands,  they  can  also  be  prepended  with  temporary
       assignments:

              ~> var x = 1
              ~> x=100 var y = (+ 133 $x)
              ~> put $x $y
              ▶ 1
              ▶ 233

       Temporary  assignments  must  all appear at the beginning of the command form.  As soon as
       something that is not a temporary assignments is parsed, Elvish no longer parses temporary
       assignments.  For instance, in x=1 echo x=1, the second x=1 is not a temporary assignment,
       but a bareword.

       Note: Elvish’s behavior differs from bash (or zsh)  in  one  important  place.   In  bash,
       temporary assignments to variables do not affect their direct appearance in the command:

              bash-4.4$ x=1
              bash-4.4$ x=100 echo $x
              1

   IO ports
       A  command  have  access  to a number of IO ports.  Each IO port is identified by a number
       starting from 0, and combines a traditional file object, which conveys bytes, and a  value
       channel, which conveys values.

       Elvish starts with 3 IO ports at the top level with special significance for commands:

       • Port  0,  known  as  standard  input  or stdin, and is used as the default input port by
         builtin commands.

       • Port 1, known as standard output or stdout, and is used as the default  output  port  by
         builtin commands.

       • Port  2,  known  as  standard  error  or  stderr,  is  currently not special for builtin
         commands, but usually has special significance for external commands.

       Value channels are typically created by a  pipeline,  and  used  to  pass  values  between
       commands  in  the  same  pipeline.   At  the  top level, they are initialized with special
       values:

       • The value channel for port 0 never produces any values when read.

       • The value channels for port 1 and 2 are special channels that forward the values written
         to them to their file counterparts.  Each value is put on a separate line, with a prefix
         controlled by $value-out-indicator.  The default prefix is  followed by a space.

       When running an external command, the file object from each port is  used  to  create  its
       file  descriptor  table.   Value channels only work inside the Elvish process, and are not
       accessible to external commands.

       IO ports can be modified with redirections or by pipelines.

   Redirection
       A redirection modifies the IO ports a command operate with.  There are several variants.

       A file redirection opens a file and associates it with an IO port.  The syntax consists of
       an  optional  destination IO port (like 2), a redirection operator (like >) and a filename
       (like error.log):

       • The destination IO port determines which IO port to modify.  It can be given  either  as
         the  number  of the IO port, or one of stdin, stdout and stderr, which are equivalent to
         0, 1 and 2 respectively.

         The destination IO port  can  be  omitted,  in  which  case  it  is  inferred  from  the
         redirection operator.

         When  the  destination  IO  port  is  given,  it  must  precede the redirection operator
         directly, without whitespaces in between; if there  are  whitespaces,  otherwise  Elvish
         will parse it as an argument instead.

       • The  redirection  operator  determines the mode to open the file, and the destination IO
         port if it is not explicitly specified.

       • The filename names the file to open.

       Possible redirection operators and their default FDs are:

       • < for reading.  The default IO port is 0 (stdin).

       • > for writing.  The default IO port is 1 (stdout).

       • >> for appending.  The default IO port is 1 (stdout).

       • <> for reading and writing.  The default IO port is 1 (stdout).

       Examples:

              ~> echo haha > log
              ~> cat log
              haha
              ~> cat < log
              haha
              ~> ls --bad-arg 2> error
              Exception: ls exited with 2
              Traceback:
                [interactive], line 1:
                  ls --bad-arg 2> error
              ~> cat error
              /bin/ls: unrecognized option '--bad-arg'
              Try '/bin/ls --help' for more information.

       IO ports modified by file redirections do not support value channels.  To be more exact:

       • A file redirection using < sets the value channel to one that never produces any values.

       • A file redirection using >, >> or <> sets the  value  channel  to  one  that  throws  an
         exception when written to.

       Examples:

              ~> put foo > file # will truncate file if it exists
              Exception: port has no value output
              [tty 2], line 1: put foo > file
              ~> echo content > file
              ~> only-values < file
              ~> # previous command produced nothing

       Redirections  can  also be used for closing or duplicating IO ports.  Instead of writing a
       filename, use &fd (where fd is  a  number,  or  any  of  stdin,  stdout  and  stderr)  for
       duplicating,  or  &-  for closing.  In this case, the redirection operator only determines
       the default destination FD (and  is  totally  irrevelant  if  a  destination  IO  port  is
       specified).  Examples:

              ~> date >&-
              date: stdout: Bad file descriptor
              Exception: date exited with 1
              [tty 3], line 1: date >&-
              ~> put foo >&-
              Exception: port has no value output
              [tty 37], line 1: put foo >&-

       If you have multiple related redirections, they are applied in the order they appear.  For
       instance:

              ~> fn f { echo out; echo err >&2 } # echoes "out" on stdout, "err" on stderr
              ~> f >log 2>&1 # use file "log" for stdout, then use (changed) stdout for stderr
              ~> cat log
              out
              err

       Redirections may appear anywhere in the command, except at the  beginning,  (this  may  be
       restricted  in  future).   It’s  usually  good  style  to write redirections at the end of
       command forms.

Special commands

       Special commands obey the same syntax rules as normal commands, but have evaluation  rules
       that are custom to each command.  Consider the following example:

              ~> or ?(echo x) ?(echo y) ?(echo z)
              x
              ▶ $ok

       In the example, the or command first evaluates its first argument, which has the value $ok
       (a truish value) and the side effect of outputting x.  Due to the custom  evaluation  rule
       of or, the rest of the arguments are not evaluated.

       If  or  were  a  normal  command, the code above is still syntactically correct.  However,
       Elvish would then evaluate all its arguments, with the side effect of outputting x, y  and
       z, before calling or.

   Declaring variables: var {#var}
       The  var  special  command  declares  local variables.  It takes any number of unqualified
       variable names (without the leading $).  The variables will start out having  value  $nil.
       Examples:

              ~> var a
              ~> put $a
              ▶ $nil
              ~> var foo bar
              ~> put $foo $bar
              ▶ $nil
              ▶ $nil

       To set alternative initial values, add an unquoted = and the initial values.  Examples:

              ~> var a b = foo bar
              ~> put $a $b
              ▶ foo
              ▶ bar

       Similar  to  set,  at  most  one of variables may be prefixed with @ to function as a rest
       variable.

       When declaring a variable that already exists, the existing  variable  is  shadowed.   The
       shadowed  variable  may  still  be  accessed indirectly if it is referenced by a function.
       Example:

              ~> var x = old
              ~> fn f { put $x }
              ~> var x = new
              ~> put $x
              ▶ new
              ~> f
              ▶ old

   Assigning variables or elements: set {#set}
       The set special command sets the value of variables or elements.

       It takes any number of lvalues (which refer to either variables or elements), followed  by
       an  equal sign (=) and any number of expressions.  The equal sign must appear unquoted, as
       a single argument.

       An lvalue is one of the following:

       • A variable name (without $).

       • A variable name prefixed with @, for packing a variable number of values into a list and
         assigning to the variable.

         This variant is called a rest variable.  There could be at most one rest variable.

         Note: Schematically this is the reverse operation of exploding a variable when using it,
         which is why they share the @ sign.

       • A variable name followed by one or more indices in brackets ([]), for  assigning  to  an
         element.

       The  number  of  values the expressions evaluate to and lvalues must be compatible.  To be
       more exact:

       • If there is no rest variable, the number of values and lvalues must match exactly.

       • If there is a rest variable, the number of values should  be  at  least  the  number  of
         lvalues minus one.

       All  the  variables  to set must already exist; use the var special command to declare new
       variables.

       Examples:

              ~> var x y z
              ~> set x = foo
              ~> put $x
              ▶ foo
              ~> set x y = lorem ipsum
              ~> put $x $y
              ▶ lorem
              ▶ ipsum
              ~> set x @y z = a b
              ~> put $x $y $z
              ▶ a
              ▶ []
              ▶ b
              ~> set x @y z = a b c d
              ~> put $x $y $z
              ▶ a
              ▶ [b c]
              ▶ d
              ~> set y[0] = foo
              ~> put $y
              ▶ [foo c]

       If the variable name contains any character that may not appear unquoted in  variable  use
       expressions, it must be quoted even if it is otherwise a valid bareword:

              ~> var 'a/b'
              ~> set a/b = foo
              compilation error: lvalue must be valid literal variable names
              [tty 23], line 1: a/b = foo
              ~> set 'a/b' = foo
              ~> put $'a/b'
              ▶ foo

       Lists  and  maps in Elvish are immutable.  As a result, when assigning to the element of a
       variable that contains a list or map, Elvish does not mutate the underlying list  or  map.
       Instead, Elvish creates a new list or map with the mutation applied, and assigns it to the
       variable.  Example:

              ~> var li = [foo bar]
              ~> var li2 = $li
              ~> set li[0] = lorem
              ~> put $li $li2
              ▶ [lorem bar]
              ▶ [foo bar]

   Temporarily assigning variables or elements: tmp {#tmp}
       The tmp command has the same syntax as set, and also requires  all  variables  to  already
       exist (use the var special command to declare new variables).

       Unlike  var,  it  saves  the values of all variables before assigning them new values, and
       will restore them to the saved values when the current function has finished.

       The tmp command can only be used inside a function.

       Examples:

              ~> var x = foo
              ~> fn f { echo $x }
              ~> { tmp x = bar; f }
              bar
              ~> f
              foo

   Deleting variables or elements: del {#del}
       The del special command can be used to delete variables or map elements.  Operands  should
       be specified without a leading dollar sign, like the left-hand side of assignments.

       Example of deleting variable:

              ~> var x = 2
              ~> echo $x
              2
              ~> del x
              ~> echo $x
              Compilation error: variable $x not found
              [tty], line 1: echo $x

       If  the  variable name contains any character that cannot appear unquoted after $, it must
       be quoted, even if it is otherwise a valid bareword:

              ~> var 'a/b' = foo
              ~> del 'a/b'

       Deleting a variable does not affect closures  that  have  already  captured  it;  it  only
       removes the name.  Example:

              ~> var x = value
              ~> fn f { put $x }
              ~> del x
              ~> f
              ▶ value

       Example of deleting map element:

              ~> var m = [&k=v &k2=v2]
              ~> del m[k2]
              ~> put $m
              ▶ [&k=v]
              ~> var l = [[&k=v &k2=v2]]
              ~> del l[0][k2]
              ~> put $l
              ▶ [[&k=v]]

   Logics: and, or, coalesce {#and-or-coalesce}
       The and special command outputs the first booleanly false value the arguments evaluate to,
       or $true when given no value.  Examples:

              ~> and $true $false
              ▶ $false
              ~> and a b c
              ▶ c
              ~> and a $false
              ▶ $false

       The or special command outputs the first booleanly true value the arguments  evaluate  to,
       or $false when given no value.  Examples:

              ~> or $true $false
              ▶ $true
              ~> or a b c
              ▶ a
              ~> or $false a b
              ▶ a

       The coalesce special command outputs the first non-nil value the arguments evaluate to, or
       $nil when given no value.  Examples:

              ~> coalesce $nil a b
              ▶ a
              ~> coalesce $nil $nil
              ▶ $nil
              ~> coalesce $nil $nil a
              ▶ a
              ~> coalesce a b
              ▶ a

       All three commands use short-circuit evaluation, and stop evaluating arguments as soon  as
       it  sees a value satisfying the termination condition.  For example, none of the following
       throws an exception:

              ~> and $false (fail foo)
              ▶ $false
              ~> or $true (fail foo)
              ▶ $true
              ~> coalesce a (fail foo)
              ▶ a

   Condition: if {#if}
       TODO: Document the syntax notation, and add more examples.

       Syntax:

              if <condition> {
                  <body>
              } elif <condition> {
                  <body>
              } else {
                  <else-body>
              }

       The if special command goes through the conditions one by one: as soon as one evaluates to
       a  booleanly  true  value,  its corresponding body is executed.  If none of conditions are
       booleanly true and an else body is supplied, it is executed.

       The condition part is an expression, not a command like in other shells.  Example:

              fn tell-language {|fname|
                  if (has-suffix $fname .go) {
                      echo $fname" is a Go file!"
                  } elif (has-suffix $fname .c) {
                      echo $fname" is a C file!"
                  } else {
                      echo $fname" is a mysterious file!"
                  }
              }

       The condition part must be syntactically a single  expression,  but  it  can  evaluate  to
       multiple values, in which case they are and’ed:

              if (put $true $false) {
                  echo "will not be executed"
              }

       If  the  expression  evaluates to 0 values, it is considered true, consistent with how and
       works.

       Tip: a combination of if and ?() gives you a semantics close to other shells:

              if ?(test -d .git) {
                  # do something
              }

       However, for Elvish’s builtin predicates that output values instead of  throw  exceptions,
       the output capture construct () should be used.

   Conditional loop: while {#while}
       Syntax:

              while <condition> {
                  <body>
              } else {
                  <else-body>
              }

       Execute the body as long as the condition evaluates to a booleanly true value.

       The  else  body,  if  present,  is executed if the body has never been executed (i.e.  the
       condition evaluates to a booleanly false value in the very beginning).

   Iterative loop: for {#for}
       Syntax:

              for <var> <container> {
                  <body>
              } else {
                  <body>
              }

       Iterate the container (e.g.  a list).  In  each  iteration,  assign  the  variable  to  an
       element of the container and execute the body.

       The  else  body,  if  present,  is executed if the body has never been executed (i.e.  the
       iteration value has no elements).

   Exception control: try {#try}
       (If you just want to capture the exception, you can use the more concise exception capture
       construct ?() instead.)

       Syntax:

              try {
                  <try-block>
              } catch catch-varname {
                  <catch-block>
              } else {
                  <else-block>
              } finally {
                  <finally-block>
              }

       Only try and try-block are required.  This control structure behaves as follows:

       1. The try-block is always executed first.

       2. If  catch  is  present,  any exception that occurs in try-block is caught and stored in
          catch-varname, and catch-block is then executed.  Example:

                  ~> try { fail bad } catch e { put $e }
                  ▶ ?(fail bad)

           If catch is not present, exceptions thrown from try are not caught: for instance,  try
           {  fail  bad } finally { echo foo } will echo foo, but the exception is not caught and
           will be propagated further.

           Note: this keyword is spelt except in Elvish 0.17.x and before, but is  otherwise  the
           same.  Using except still works in Elvish 0.18.x but is deprecated; it will be removed
           in Elvish 0.19.0.

           Note: the word after catch names a variable,  not  a  matching  condition.   Exception
           matching  is  not  supported yet.  For instance, you may want to only match exceptions
           that were created with fail bad with except bad, but in fact this creates  a  variable
           $bad that contains whatever exception was thrown.

       3. If no exception occurs and else is present, else-block is executed.  Example:

                  ~> try { nop } else { echo well }
                  well

       4. If finally-block is present, it is executed.  Examples:

                  ~> try { fail bad } finally { echo final }
                  final
                  Exception: bad
                  Traceback:
                    [tty], line 1:
                      try { fail bad } finally { echo final }
                  ~> try { echo good } finally { echo final }
                  good
                  final

       5. If the exception was not caught (i.e.  catch is not present), it is rethrown.

       At  least  one  of catch and finally must be present, since a lone try { ... } does not do
       anything on its own, and is  almost  certainly  a  mistake.   To  swallow  exceptions,  an
       explicit catch clause must be given.

       Exceptions  thrown  in  blocks  other  than try-block are not caught.  If an exception was
       thrown and either catch-block or finally-block  throws  another  exception,  the  original
       exception is lost.  Examples:

              ~> try { fail bad } catch e { fail worse }
              Exception: worse
              Traceback:
                [tty], line 1:
                  try { fail bad } catch e { fail worse }
              ~> try { fail bad } catch e { fail worse } finally { fail worst }
              Exception: worst
              Traceback:
                [tty], line 1:
                  try { fail bad } catch e { fail worse } finally { fail worst }

   Function definition: fn {#fn}
       Syntax:

              fn <name> <lambda>

       Define  a  function with a given name.  The function behaves in the same way to the lambda
       used to define it, except that it “captures” return.  In other  words,  return  will  fall
       through  lambdas not defined with fn, and continues until it exits a function defined with
       fn:

              ~> fn f {
                   { echo a; return }
                   echo b # will not execute
                 }
              ~> f
              a
              ~> {
                   f
                   echo c # executed, because f "captures" the return
                 }
              a
              c

       TODO: Find a better way to describe this.  Hopefully the example is  illustrative  enough,
       though.

       The  lambda  may  refer  to  the  function  being  defined.   This makes it easy to define
       recursive functions:

              ~> fn f {|n| if (== $n 0) { put 1 } else { * $n (f (- $n 1)) } }
              ~> f 3
              ▶ (float64 6)

       Under the hood, fn defines a variable with the given name plus ~  (see  variable  suffix).
       Example:

              ~> fn f { echo hello from f }
              ~> var v = $f~
              ~> $v
              hello from f

   Language pragmas: pragma {#pragma}
       The  pragma  special  command  can  be used to set pragmas that affect the behavior of the
       Elvish language.  The syntax looks like:

              pragma <name> = <value>

       The name must appear literally.  The value must also appear  literally,  unless  otherwise
       specified.

       Pragmas  apply  from  the point it appears, to the end of the lexical scope it appears in,
       including subscopes.

       The following pragmas are available:

       • The unknown-command pragma affects the resolution of command heads, and can take one  of
         two values, external (the default) and disallow.  See ordinary command for details.

         Note:  pragma unknown-command = disallow enables a style where uses of external commands
         must be explicitly via the e: namespace.  You can  also  explicitly  declare  a  set  of
         external commands to use directly, like the following:

                pragma unknown-command = disallow
                var ls = $e:ls~
                var cat = $e:cat~
                # ls and cat can be used directly;
                # other external commands must be prefixed with e:

Pipeline

       A pipeline is formed by joining one or more commands together with the pipe sign (|).

       For  each  pair of adjacent commands a | b, the standard output of the left-hand command a
       (IO port 1) is connected to the standard input (IO port 0) of the  right-hand  command  b.
       Both the file and the value channel are connected, even if one of them is not used.

       Elvish  may  have  internal buffering for both the file and the value channel, so a may be
       able to write bytes or values even if b is not reading them.  The exact buffer size is not
       specified.

       Command  redirections  are  applied  before  the  connection  happens.   For instance, the
       following writes foo to a.txt instead of the output:

              ~> echo foo > a.txt | cat
              ~> cat a.txt
              foo

       A pipeline runs all of its command in parallel, and terminates when all  of  the  commands
       have terminated.

   Pipeline exception
       If one or more command in a pipeline throws an exception, the other commands will continue
       to execute as normal.  After all commands finish execution, an exception  is  thrown,  the
       value of which depends on the number of commands that have thrown an exception:

       • If only one command has thrown an exception, that exception is rethrown.

       • If  more  than  one commands have thrown exceptions, a “composite exception”, containing
         information all exceptions involved, is thrown.

       If a command threw an exception because it tried to write output when the next command has
       terminated, that exception is suppressed when it is propagated to the pipeline.

       For example, the put command throws an exception when trying to write to a closed pipe, so
       the following loop will terminate with an exception:

              ~> while $true { put foo } > &-
              Exception: port has no value output
              [tty 9], line 1: while $true { put foo } > &-

       However, if it appears in a pipeline before nop, the entire pipeline  will  not  throw  an
       exception:

              ~> while $true { put foo } | nop
              ~> # no exception thrown from previous line

       Internally,  the  put  foo  command still threw an exception, but since that exception was
       trying to write to output when nop already terminated, that exception  was  suppressed  by
       the pipeline.

       This can be more clearly observed with the following code:

              ~> var r = $false
              ~> { while $true { put foo }; set r = $true } | nop
              ~> put $r
              ▶ $false

       The same mechanism works for builtin commands that write to the byte output:

              ~> var r = $false
              ~> { while $true { echo foo }; set r = $true } | nop
              ~> put $r
              ▶ $false

       On  UNIX,  if  an  external command was terminated by SIGPIPE, and Elvish detected that it
       terminated after the next command in the pipeline, such exceptions will also be suppressed
       by the pipeline.  For example, the following pipeline does not throw an exception, despite
       the yes command being killed by SIGPIPE:

              ~> yes | head -n1
              y

   Background pipeline
       Adding an ampersand & to the end of a pipeline  will  cause  it  to  be  executed  in  the
       background.   In  this  case,  the rest of the code chunk will continue to execute without
       waiting for the pipeline to finish.  Exceptions thrown from the background pipeline do not
       affect the code chunk that contains it.

       When  a background pipeline finishes, a message is printed to the terminal if the shell is
       interactive.

Code Chunk

       A code chunk is formed by joining zero or more pipelines together,  separating  them  with
       either newlines or semicolons.

       Pipelines  in a code chunk are executed in sequence.  If any pipeline throws an exception,
       the execution of the whole code chunk stops, propagating that exception.

Exception and Flow Commands

       Exceptions have similar semantics to those in Python or Java.  They can be thrown with the
       fail command and caught with either exception capture ?() or the try special command.

       If an external command exits with a non-zero status, Elvish treats that as an exception.

       Flow  commands  –  break,  continue  and return – are ordinary builtin commands that raise
       special “flow control” exceptions.  The for, while, and peach commands capture  break  and
       continue, while fn modifies its closure to capture return.

       One interesting implication is that since flow commands are just ordinary commands you can
       build functions on top of them.  For instance, this function breaks randomly:

              fn random-break {
                if eq (randint 2) 0 {
                  break
                }
              }

       The function random-break can then be used in for-loops and while-loops.

       Note that the return flow control exception is only captured by functions defined with fn.
       It falls through ordinary lambdas:

              fn f {
                {
                  # returns f, falling through the innermost lambda
                  return
                }
              }

Namespaces and Modules

       Like  other  modern  programming  languages,  but  unlike traditional shells, Elvish has a
       namespace mechanism for preventing name collisions.

   Syntax
       Prepend namespace: to command names and variable names  to  specify  the  namespace.   The
       following code

              e:echo $E:PATH

       uses  the  echo command from the e: namespace and the PATH variable from the E: namespace.
       The colon is considered part of the namespace name.

       Namespaces may be nested; for example, calling edit:location:start first finds  the  edit:
       namespace,  and  then  the location: namespace inside it, and then call the start function
       within the nested namespace.

   Special namespaces
       The following namespaces have special meanings to the language:

       • e: refers to externals.  For instance, e:ls refers to the external command ls.

         Most of the time you can rely on static resolution rules of ordinary commands and do not
         need  to  use  this  explicitly, unless a function defined by you (or an Elvish builtin)
         shadows an external command.

       • E: refers to environment variables.  For instance, $E:USER is the  environment  variable
         USER.

         This  is  always needed, because unlike command resolution, variable resolution does not
         fall back onto environment variables.

   Modules
       Apart from the special namespaces, the most common usage of  namespaces  is  to  reference
       modules,  reusable pieces of code that are either shipped with Elvish itself or defined by
       the user.

   Importing modules with use
       Modules are imported using the use special command.  It requires a module spec and  allows
       a namespace alias:

              use $spec $alias?

       The module spec and the alias must both be a simple string literal.  Compound strings such
       as 'a'/b are not allowed.

       The module spec specifies which module to import.  The  alias,  if  given,  specifies  the
       namespace  to  import  the  module  under.   By default, the namespace is derived from the
       module spec by taking the part after the last slash.

       Module specs fall into three categories that are resolved in the following order:

       1. Relative: These are relative to the file containing the use command.

       2. User defined: These match a user defined module in a module search directory.

       3. Pre-defined: These match the name of a pre-defined module, such as math or str.

       If a module spec doesn’t match any of the above a “no such module” exception is raised.

       Examples:

              use str # imports the "str" module as "str:"
              use a/b/c # imports the "a/b/c" module as "c:"
              use a/b/c foo # imports the "a/b/c" module as "foo:"

   Pre-defined modules
       Elvish’s standard library provides the following pre-defined modules that can be  imported
       by the use command:

       • builtin

       • edit:  only available in interactive mode.  As a special case it does not need importing
         via use, but this may change in the future.

       • epm

       • math

       • path

       • platform

       • re

       • readline-binding

       • store

       • str

       • unix: only available on UNIX-like platforms (see $platform:is-unix)

   User-defined modules
       You can define your own modules in Elvish by putting them under one of the  module  search
       directories   and  giving  them  a  .elv  extension  (but  see  relative  imports  for  an
       alternative).  For instance, to define a module named a, you  can  put  the  following  in
       ~/.config/elvish/lib/a.elv (on Windows, replace ~/.config with ~\AppData\Roaming):

              ~> cat ~/.config/elvish/lib/a.elv
              echo "mod a loading"
              fn f {
                echo "f from mod a"
              }

       This module can now be imported by use a:

              ~> use a
              mod a loading
              ~> a:f
              f from mod a

       Similarly,  a  module  defined  in  ~/.config/elvish/lib/x/y/z.elv  can be imported by use
       x/y/z:

              ~> cat .config/elvish/lib/x/y/z.elv
              fn f {
                echo "f from x/y/z"
              }
              ~> use x/y/z
              ~> z:f
              f from x/y/z

       In general, a module defined in namespace will be the same as the file name  (without  the
       .elv extension).

       There  is  experimental  support  for  importing  modules  written in Go.  See the project
       repository (https://github.com/elves/elvish) for details.

   Circular dependencies
       Circular dependencies are allowed but  has  an  important  restriction.   If  a  module  a
       contains use b and module b contains use a, the top-level statements in module b will only
       be able to access variables that are defined before the use b in module a; other variables
       will be $nil.

       On the other hand, functions in module b will have access to bindings in module a after it
       is fully evaluated.

       Examples:

              ~> cat a.elv
              var before = before
              use ./b
              var after = after
              ~> cat b.elv
              use ./a
              put $a:before $a:after
              fn f { put $a:before $a:after }
              ~> use ./a
              ▶ before
              ▶ $nil
              ~> use ./b
              ~> b:f
              ▶ before
              ▶ after

       Note that this behavior can be different depending on whether the  REPL  imports  a  or  b
       first.   In  the previous example, if the REPL imports b first, it will have access to all
       the variables in a:

              ~> use ./b
              ▶ before
              ▶ after

       Note: Elvish caches imported modules.  If you are trying this locally, run a fresh  Elvish
       instance with exec first.

       When  you  do need to have circular dependencies, it is best to avoid using variables from
       the modules in top-level statements, and only use them in functions.

   Relative imports
       The module spec may begin with ./ or ../ to introduce a  relative  import.   When  use  is
       invoked  from a file this will import the file relative to the location of the file.  When
       use is invoked from an interactive prompt, this will  import  the  file  relative  to  the
       current working directory.

   Scoping of imports
       Namespace imports are lexically scoped.  For instance, if you use a module within an inner
       scope, it is not available outside that scope:

              {
                  use some-mod
                  some-mod:some-func
              }
              some-mod:some-func # not valid

       The imported modules themselves are also evaluated in a separate scope.  That  means  that
       functions  and variables defined in the module does not pollute the default namespace, and
       vice versa.  For instance, if you define ls as a wrapper function in your rc.elv:

              fn ls {|@a|
                  e:ls --color=auto $@a
              }

       That definition is not visible in module files:  ls  will  still  refer  to  the  external
       command ls, unless you shadow it in the very same module.

   Re-importing
       Modules  are  cached  after  one import.  Subsequent imports do not re-execute the module;
       they only serve the bring it into the current scope.  Moreover, the cache is keyed by  the
       path  of  the  module, not the name under which it is imported.  For instance, if you have
       the following in ~/.config/elvish/lib/a/b.elv:

              echo importing

       The following code only prints one importing:

              { use a/b }
              use a/b # only brings mod into the lexical scope

       As does the following:

              use a/b
              use a/b alias