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Andrey Nering 259d3e2df1 Fix more internal documentation links when viewing on GitHub
Applies fixes done on #142 on more links
2018-10-27 15:25:39 -03:00
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_sidebar.md Fix more internal documentation links when viewing on GitHub 2018-10-27 15:25:39 -03:00
.nojekyll Documentation site using docsify 2018-09-22 18:44:24 -03:00
alternative_task_runners.md Documentation improvements 2018-09-23 15:06:43 -03:00
CNAME Create CNAME 2018-09-24 21:21:23 -03:00
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installation.md Documentation improvements 2018-10-07 18:34:03 -03:00
README.md Fix more internal documentation links when viewing on GitHub 2018-10-27 15:25:39 -03:00
releasing_task.md Documentation site using docsify 2018-09-22 18:44:24 -03:00
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taskfile_versions.md Fix more internal documentation links when viewing on GitHub 2018-10-27 15:25:39 -03:00
usage.md Add documentation for including other Taskfiles 2018-10-13 18:14:42 -03:00

Task

Task is a task runner / build tool that aims to be simpler and easier to use than, for example, GNU Make.

Since it's written in Go, Task is just a single binary and has no other dependencies, which means you don't need to mess with any complicated install setups just to use a build tool.

Once installed, you just need to describe your build tasks using a simple YAML schema in a file called Taskfile.yml:

version: '2'

tasks:
  hello:
    cmds:
      - echo 'Hello World from Task!'
    silent: true

And call it by running task hello from you terminal.

The above example is just the start, you can take a look at the usage guide to check the full schema documentation and Task features.

Features

  • Easy installation: just download a single binary, add to $PATH and you're done! Or you can also install using Homebrew or Snapcraft if you want;
  • Available on CIs: by adding this simple command to install on your CI script and you're done to use Task as part of your CI pipeline;
  • Truly cross-platform: while most build tools only work well on Linux or macOS, Task also supports Windows thanks to this awesome shell interpreter for Go;
  • Great for code generation: you can easily prevent a task from running if a given set of files haven't changed since last run (based either on its timestamp or content).