On 2008-Dec-29, at 5:45 AM, Andrea Crotti wrote:
I would like to add a couple of things (at least), but I'm afraid I need some clarifications... I need a disassembler command, it's just import dis dis.dis(module)
or dis.dis(function) or dis.dis(object)
Maybe I need a menu to let it know what I want to disassemble..
What about something based on current word, so you could select (or type) something then invoke the command? Note that commands don't have to be shell scripts. You can use Python directly, if that's the language that'll do the work. Assuming you had a command that took either Selection or Word as input, it could do something like this:
#!/usr/bin/env python import sys import dis module = [line.rstrip() for line in sys.stdin.readlines()][0] dis.dis(module)
You could also get environment variables using Python (os.environ['TM_BLAH']) if you prefer that to using STDIN.
But it doesn't change dir at all, what am I missing?
I don't see a TM_CURRENT_DIR, but I do see TM_DIRECTORY. Could that be it? In any case, aren't you just switching to the current directory which, by definition, won't change anything?
Another nice command would be execute line/selection as python, should I use eval?
What about a command that uses Selection or Line as input and just runs
${TM_PYTHON:-python}
This is equivalent to echoing the current line and piping it to python on the command line, which seems to work. Maybe you're wanting something fancier.