Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: polars-ls
Version: 0.2.3
Summary: List directory contents as Polars DataFrames
Author-Email: Louis Maddox <louismmx@gmail.com>
Requires-Python: >=3.11
Requires-Dist: argh>=0.31.3
Provides-Extra: polars-lts-cpu
Requires-Dist: polars-lts-cpu>=1.21.0; extra == "polars-lts-cpu"
Provides-Extra: polars
Requires-Dist: polars>=1.21.0; extra == "polars"
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown

# pols

List directory contents as Polars DataFrames.

## Installation

The `polars-ls` package can be installed with either `polars` or `polars-lts-cpu` using the extras
by those names:

```bash
pip install polars-ls[polars]
pip install polars-ls[polars-lts-cpu]
```

If Polars is already installed, you can simply `pip install polars-ls`.

## User guidance

### Names are relative

Counter to the typical `pathlib.Path` notion of a name, the names in `ls` and hence `pols` are
more relative names: hence `.` is a valid name (if you try accessing the `.name` attribute of a
pathlib Path, it'll come back as "").

```python
>>> cwd = Path.cwd()
>>> cwd / "."
PosixPath('/home/louis/dev/pols')
>>> cwd / ".."
PosixPath('/home/louis/dev/pols/..')
>>> (cwd / ".").name
'pols'
>>> (cwd / "..").name
'..'
>>> Path(".").name
''
```

### Individual files and directories don't mix

The way `ls` works is that individual files get collected in one 'set' of results and directories
in another, and never the two shall meet. If you `ls` a few files and one or more directories,
you'll get one set of reults with all the files and one set for each of the folders. This is
because of the previous point: the names shown are relative to the directory 'root' (if you're
specifying files individually, the current working directory is the assumed directory 'root', and
of course absolute paths always show as absolute so their 'root' is shown too).

(Even if the individual files are in different folders: it's because merging files with
different roots whose relative names are being shown would be invalid)

```bash
$ ls README.md src src/pols/__init__.py 
README.md  src/pols/__init__.py

src:
pols
```

To the same effect, the results are grouped in a list of dicts, where the key is the source
(either the empty string for the individual files, or the directory root). This allows an identical
printout style to `ls`:

```bash
$ ls -A ../.py*
../.python-version

../.pytest_cache:
CACHEDIR.TAG  .gitignore  README.md  v
$ pols -A ../.py*
shape: (1, 1)
┌────────────────────┐
│ name               │
│ ---                │
│ str                │
╞════════════════════╡
│ ../.python-version │
└────────────────────┘
../.pytest_cache:
shape: (4, 1)
┌──────────────┐
│ name         │
│ ---          │
│ str          │
╞══════════════╡
│ README.md    │
│ v            │
│ .gitignore   │
│ CACHEDIR.TAG │
└──────────────┘
```

### Globs (Kleene stars) go 1 level deep

You can use `**` in `ls` and `pols` but in both cases you only actually get one level, unlike other
tools (and Python's glob).

```bash
$ ls src/pols/**.py
src/pols/cli.py  src/pols/__init__.py  src/pols/pols.py
$ ls src/pols/*/*.py
src/pols/features/a.py  src/pols/features/A.py  src/pols/features/hide.py
src/pols/features/__init__.py  src/pols/features/p.py
```

### Patterns that don't match will error non-fatally

It's allowed to not match a file, just like in `ls`:

```bash
$ ls *.yaml *.toml *.md
ls: cannot access '*.yaml': No such file or directory
 pyproject.toml   README.md

$ pols *.yaml *.toml *.md
pols: cannot access '*.yaml': No such file or directory
shape: (2, 1)
┌────────────────┐
│ name           │
│ ---            │
│ str            │
╞════════════════╡
│ pyproject.toml │
│ README.md      │
└────────────────┘
```

### `OSError`s like `FileNotFoundError` are non-fatal but can be thrown with `raise_on_access`

If you want such errors to be fatal, pass `raise_on_acecss` (`--raise-on-access` on the command line):

```bash
$ pols *.yaml *.toml *.md --raise-on-access
pols: cannot access '*.yaml': No such file or directory
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
FileNotFoundError: No such file or directory
```

Note that the file expansion and preparation is done before any printing or DataFrame operations, so
these errors won't occur mid-way through any Polars computations.

## Differences from `ls`

The design is intended to keep as closely as possible to GNU coreutils
[`ls`](https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/ls).

So far one particular divergence is that command line order does not affect `pols`
(e.g. `-aA` vs `-Aa`), but there is no real way to implement this with boolean parameters.
It could be detected for a CLI but for now I'm prioritising feature completeness over CLI
complexity (it is autogenerated from the function signature with
[argh](https://argh.readthedocs.io/en/latest/)).

Another is that `hide` is not disabled by `a`/`A` because there is no need to, and this enables
filtering hidden files minus some pattern. In `ls`, `--hide` silently fails if passed with `-a`.
