| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142 | id: 'idea--thule-alternatives'content: |  The big alternative I know of is  [TermKit](https://github.com/unconed/TermKit), which is an interesting  experiment: but, to me, it's filled with far too many special cases  and not enough nice primitives. For example, there's a special  way of outputting a list of files (e.g. output from `ls`) but this  isn't because "files" are necessarily a distinct thing, but because  there's a special type of output for `ls`-like commands (in this  case, `application/json; schema=termkit.files`, which corresponds  to a list of filenames.)  Thule builds on top of this by having a standard set of building  blocks, so that you no longer have the special-case "list of files",  but rather primitive building blocks like `list` and `file`.  Consider the output from `wc`: this also contains file references,  but it additionally contains a table mapping those to values. In  a TermKit-like setting, you'd have to come up with a new schema  (say, `application/json; schema=termkit.wordcount`) that understands  which parts of the output are files and which aren't. This is  particularly tricky for `wc`, because you want to have the  final `total` row, which does _not_ contain a file. And what if  other tools also print table-like structures? Can those be  processed with the same tools?  Thule aims to pull those low-level building blocks out, so the  output from `ls` might give you a collection like      (set (file "/tmp/foo.txt") (file "/tmp/bar.c"))  and the output from `wc` will give you      (table ((text "lines") (text "words") (text "characters") (text "file"))        ((int 10) (int 30) (int 300)  (file "/tmp/foo.txt"))        ((int 20) (int 60) (int 900)  (file "/tmp/bar.c"))        ((int 30) (int 90) (int 1200) (text "total")))  rather the structure of the collections would be a hint to the  shell on how to display them in a rich way.related:  - name: idea--thule    why: The high-level idea
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