Just realized something about bash. It has no notion of return values.
Functions have an exit code, but that's it.
Which puts it in a different category than other interactive command based languages like Tcl.
Just realized that after implementing a C# wrapper for a Python API. It starts a Python process and uses the stdin/stdout channels to make API calls
funny thing I realized is that the return value of those calls are invisible unless you print them to stdout. So you have to generate code that performs an API call and prints the result. Send that string to stdin. Then read the result from stdout. But then you need to know how many lines of output the API call produced. So the generated code also needs a print statement that marks the end of the output.
So, basically, I think I created a monstrosity.
I works. But I'd rather forget about t.
Oh, right, and I forgot to mention the fact that each generated code string contains try/catch code so it can prefix the output with OK/FAIL. (The FAIL prefixes the exception message.)
Dammit. I should just have used SWIG.