exhash combines Can Bölük's very clever line number + hash editing system with the powerful and expressive syntax of the classic ex editor.
Install via pip to get both a convenient Python API, and native CLI binaries:
pip install exhashOr install just the CLI binaries via cargo:
cargo install exhashWe refer to an lnhash as a tag of the form lineno|hash|, where hash is the lower 16 bits of Rust's DefaultHasher over the line content. exhash is just like ex, except that addresses must be in lnhash format. Addresses like %, ., etc are not permitted.
The native Rust binaries are installed into your PATH via pip.
# Shows every line prefixed with its lnhash
lnhashview path/to/file.txt
# Optional line number range to show
lnhashview path/to/file.txt 10 20# Substitute on one line
exhash file.txt '12|abcd|s/foo/bar/g'
# Append multiline text (terminated by a single dot)
exhash file.txt '12|abcd|a' <<'EOF'
new line 1
new line 2
.
EOF
# Dry-run
exhash --dry-run file.txt '12|abcd|d'For a/i/c commands, provide the text block on stdin:
printf "new line 1\nnew line 2\n.\n" | exhash file.txt "2|beef|a"cat file.txt | exhash --stdin - '1|abcd|s/foo/bar/'In --stdin mode, multiline a/i/c text blocks are not available.
from exhash import exhash, exhash_result, lnhash, lnhashview, line_hashtext = "foo\nbar\n"
view = lnhashview(text) # ["1|a1b2| foo", "2|c3d4| bar"]exhash(text, cmds) takes the text and a required list of command strings (use [] for no-op). For a/i/c commands, lines after the command are the text block (no . terminator needed):
addr = lnhash(1, "foo") # "1|a1b2|"
res = exhash(text, [f"{addr}s/foo/baz/"])
print(res["lines"]) # ["baz", "bar"]
print(res["modified"]) # [1]
# Multiple commands
a1, a2 = lnhash(1, "foo"), lnhash(2, "bar")
res = exhash(text, [f"{a1}s/foo/FOO/", f"{a2}s/bar/BAR/"])
# Append multiline text (no dot terminator)
res = exhash(text, [f"{addr}a\nnew line 1\nnew line 2"])lines— list of output lineshashes— lnhash for each output linemodified— 1-based line numbers of modified/added linesdeleted— 1-based line numbers of removed lines (in original)
exhash_result([res1, res2, ...]) renders modified lines in lnhash format, matching the old repr(EditResult) style.
cargo test && pytest -q