This project aims to explore the potentials of the Unix shell. It is a work in progress; things will change without warning. The issues list contains many things I'm working on.
Elvish looks like this:
Up-to-date binaries for 64-bit Linux and Mac OS X. Install with sudo tar vxfz elvish-*.tar.gz -C /usr/bin. See also Building Elvish.
Put your startup script in ~/.elvish/rc.elv.
Elvish mimics bash and zsh in a lot of places. The following shows some key differences and highlights, as well as some common tasks:
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Press Up to search through history. It uses what you have typed to do prefix match. To cancel, press Escape.
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Press Tab to start completion. Press Ctrl-N to start navigation mode. Likewise, pressing Escape gets you back to the default mode.
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Define aliases like
fn ls { external:ls --color $@ } -
Elvish remembers which directories you have visisted. Use
dirsto show the history.jump xjumps to the highest-scored directory containingx. -
Lists look like
[a b c], and maps look like[&key1=value1 &key2=value2]. Unlike other shells, lists never expands to multiple words, unless you explicitly splice it by prefixing the variable name with$@:~> li=[1 2 3] ~> for x in $li; do echo $x; done [1 2 3] ~> for x in $@li; do echo $x; done 1 2 3
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You can manipulate search paths through the special list
$paths:~> echo $paths [/bin /sbin] ~> paths=[/opt/bin $@paths /usr/bin] ~> echo $paths [/opt/bin /bin /sbin /usr/bin] ~> echo $env:PATH /opt/bin:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin
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You can manipulate the keybinding through the map
$le:binding. For example, this binds Ctrl-L to clearing the terminal:le:binding[insert][Ctrl-L]={ clear > /dev/tty }. The first index is the mode and the second is the key. (Yes, the braces enclose a lambda.)Use
put $le:bindingto get a nice (albeit long) view of the current keybinding. -
Environment variables live in a separate
env:namespace and must be explicitly qualified:~> put $env:HOME ▶ /home/xiaq ~> env:PATH=$env:PATH":/bin"
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There is no interpolation inside double quotes (yet). Use implicit string concatenation:
~> name=xiaq ~> echo "My name is "$name"." My name is xiaq.
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Elementary floating-point arithmetics as well as comparisons are builtin. Unfortunately, you have to use prefix notation:
~> + 1 2 ▶ 3 ~> div `mul 2 3` 4 # div for /, mul for * ▶ 1.5 ~> div (mul 2 3) 4 # parentheses are equivalent to backquotes, but look nicer in arithmetics ▶ 1.5 ~> gt 1 2 # gt for > false ~> lt 1 2 # lt for <; silence means "true"
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Functions are defined with
fn. You can name arguments:~> fn square [x]{ mul $x $x } ~> square 4 ▶ 16
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Output of some builtin commands start with a funny "▶". It is not part of the output itself, but shows that such commands output a stream of values instead of bytes. As such, their internal structures as well as boundaries between valued are preserved. This allows us to manipulate structured data in the shell; more on this later.
Tab completion:
Navigation mode:
Go >= 1.5 is required. Linux is fully supported. It is likely to work on BSDs and Mac OS X. Windows is not supported yet.
The main binary can be installed using go get github.com/elves/elvish. There is also an auxiliary program called elvish-stub; install it with make stub. Elvish is funtional without the stub, but job control features depend on it.
If you are lazy and use bash for zsh now, here is something you can copy-paste into your terminal:
export GOPATH=$HOME/go
export PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/bin
mkdir -p $GOPATH
go get github.com/elves/elvish
make -C $GOPATH/src/github.com/elves/elvish stub
for f in ~/.bashrc ~/.zshrc; do
echo -e 'export GOPATH=$HOME/go\nexport PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/bin' >> $f
doneHow To Write Go Code explains how $GOPATH works.
In roguelikes, items made by the elves have a reputation of high quality. These are usually called elven items, but I chose elvish for an obvious reason.
The adjective for elvish is also "elvish", not "elvishy" and definitely not "elvishish".
| Package | Coverage |
|---|---|
| edit | |
| eval | |
| glob | |
| parse | |
| run | |
| store | |
| stub | |
| sys | |
| util |


