#!/usr/local/bin/v // The shebang above associates the file to V on Unix-like systems, // so it can be run just by specifying the path to the file // once it's made executable using `chmod +x`. // Note that you can also use: `#!/usr/bin/env -S v crun`, if your system supports the -S flag to env // The benefit is that in this case, v could be anywhere in your path, while /usr/bin/env is guaranteed // to be present on most Unix systems in that exact place. for _ in 0 .. 3 { println('V script') } println('\nMaking dir "v_script_dir".') mkdir('v_script_dir')! println("\nEntering into v_script_dir and listing it's files.") chdir('v_script_dir')! files := ls('.') or { panic(err) } println(files) println('\nCreating foo.txt') create('foo.txt')! println('\nFiles:') again_ls := ls('.') or { panic(err) } println(again_ls) println('\nRemoving foo.txt and v_script_dir') rm('foo.txt')! chdir('../')! rmdir('v_script_dir')! print('\nDoes v_script_dir still exist? ') println(exists('v_script_dir'))