Files
lambda/internal/config/destination.go
M.V. Hutz 0eff85f8fa feat: add output flag (#13)
## Description

The lambda CLI previously only wrote output to stdout using shell redirection.
This PR adds support for writing results to files using the `-o` flag.
This is implemented using a new `Destination` interface that mirrors the existing `Source` pattern.

Changes:
- Added `Destination` interface with `StdoutDestination` and `FileDestination` implementations.
- Added `-o` flag to CLI argument parser for output file specification.
- Updated `Config` to use `Destination` instead of direct output handling.
- Refactored main to use `Destination.Write()` for result output.
- Updated Makefile targets (`run`, `profile`, `explain`) to use `-o` flag instead of shell redirection.

### Decisions

The `-o` flag defaults to stdout when not specified or when set to `-`.
This maintains backward compatibility while providing explicit file output capability.

## Benefits

- Cleaner command-line interface without shell redirection.
- Symmetric design with `Source` interface for input.
- More portable across different shells and environments.
- Explicit output handling improves code clarity.

## Checklist

- [x] Code follows conventional commit format.
- [x] Branch follows naming convention (`<type>/<description>`).
- [ ] Tests pass (if applicable).
- [ ] Documentation updated (if applicable).

Reviewed-on: #13
Co-authored-by: M.V. Hutz <git@maximhutz.me>
Co-committed-by: M.V. Hutz <git@maximhutz.me>
2026-01-11 22:14:48 +00:00

28 lines
523 B
Go

package config
import (
"fmt"
"os"
)
// A method of writing output to the user.
type Destination interface {
// Write data to this destination.
Write(data string) error
}
// A destination writing to stdout.
type StdoutDestination struct{}
func (d StdoutDestination) Write(data string) error {
fmt.Println(data)
return nil
}
// A destination writing to a file.
type FileDestination struct{ Path string }
func (d FileDestination) Write(data string) error {
return os.WriteFile(d.Path, []byte(data+"\n"), 0644)
}