Overview: • About Miller • Miller in 10 minutes • File formats • Miller features in the context of the Unix toolkit • Record-heterogeneity • Internationalization Using Miller: • FAQ • Sharing data with other languages • Cookbook part 1 • Cookbook part 2 • Cookbook part 3 • Data-diving examples • Manpage • Reference • Reference: Verbs • Reference: DSL • Documents by release • Installation, portability, dependencies, and testing Background: • Why? • Why C? • Why call it Miller? • How original is Miller? • Performance Repository: • Things to do • Contact information • GitHub repo |
The Unix toolkit was created in the 1970s and is a mainstay to this day. Miller is written in plain C, and its look and feel adheres closely to the classic toolkit style: if this were music, Miller would be a tribute album. Likewise, since commands are subcommands of the mlr executable, the result is a band, if you will, of command-line tools. Put these together and the namesake is another classic product of the 1970s: the Steve Miller Band. |