view tests/test-import-context.t @ 46807:2c0e35f6957a

typing: mark the argument to mercurial.i18n.gettext() non-Optional Few if any of the callers are handling a `None` return, which is making pytype complain. I tried adding @overload definitions to indicate the bytes -> bytes and None -> None relationship, but pytype doesn't seem to apply that to `_()` through the function assignment. What did work was to change `_()` into its own function that called `gettext()`, but that has an extra function call overhead. Even putting that function into an `if pycompat.TYPE_CHECKING` block and leaving the existing assignments in the `else` block caused pytype to lose track of the @overloads. At that point, I simply gave up. PyCharm doesn't like that it can return None, given the new type hints, but pytype doesn't complain about this nor does it see any callers passing None. The most important thing here is to catch str being passed anyway. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10235
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Thu, 18 Mar 2021 23:41:00 -0400
parents 4c1b4805db57
children
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Test applying context diffs

  $ cat > writepatterns.py <<EOF
  > import sys
  > 
  > path = sys.argv[1]
  > lasteol = sys.argv[2] == '1'
  > patterns = sys.argv[3:]
  > 
  > fp = open(path, 'wb')
  > for i, pattern in enumerate(patterns):
  >     count = int(pattern[0:-1])
  >     char = pattern[-1].encode('utf8') + b'\n'
  >     if not lasteol and i == len(patterns) - 1:
  >         fp.write((char * count)[:-1])
  >     else:
  >         fp.write(char * count)
  > fp.close()
  > EOF
  $ cat > cat.py <<EOF
  > import sys
  > from mercurial.utils import procutil, stringutil
  > procutil.stdout.write(b'%s\n'
  >                       % stringutil.pprint(open(sys.argv[1], 'rb').read()))
  > EOF

Initialize the test repository

  $ hg init repo
  $ cd repo
  $ "$PYTHON" ../writepatterns.py a 0 5A 1B 5C 1D
  $ "$PYTHON" ../writepatterns.py b 1 1A 1B
  $ "$PYTHON" ../writepatterns.py c 1 5A
  $ "$PYTHON" ../writepatterns.py d 1 5A 1B
  $ hg add
  adding a
  adding b
  adding c
  adding d
  $ hg ci -m addfiles

Add file, missing a last end of line

  $ hg import --no-commit - <<EOF
  > *** /dev/null	2010-10-16 18:05:49.000000000 +0200
  > --- b/newnoeol	2010-10-16 18:23:26.000000000 +0200
  > ***************
  > *** 0 ****
  > --- 1,2 ----
  > + a
  > + b
  > \ No newline at end of file
  > *** a/a	Sat Oct 16 16:35:51 2010
  > --- b/a	Sat Oct 16 16:35:51 2010
  > ***************
  > *** 3,12 ****
  >   A
  >   A
  >   A
  > ! B
  >   C
  >   C
  >   C
  >   C
  >   C
  > ! D
  > \ No newline at end of file
  > --- 3,13 ----
  >   A
  >   A
  >   A
  > ! E
  >   C
  >   C
  >   C
  >   C
  >   C
  > ! F
  > ! F
  > 
  > *** a/b	2010-10-16 18:40:38.000000000 +0200
  > --- /dev/null	2010-10-16 18:05:49.000000000 +0200
  > ***************
  > *** 1,2 ****
  > - A
  > - B
  > --- 0 ----
  > *** a/c	Sat Oct 16 21:34:26 2010
  > --- b/c	Sat Oct 16 21:34:27 2010
  > ***************
  > *** 3,5 ****
  > --- 3,7 ----
  >   A
  >   A
  >   A
  > + B
  > + B
  > *** a/d	Sat Oct 16 21:47:20 2010
  > --- b/d	Sat Oct 16 21:47:22 2010
  > ***************
  > *** 2,6 ****
  >   A
  >   A
  >   A
  > - A
  > - B
  > --- 2,4 ----
  > EOF
  applying patch from stdin
  $ hg st
  M a
  M c
  M d
  A newnoeol
  R b

What's in a

  $ "$PYTHON" ../cat.py a
  'A\nA\nA\nA\nA\nE\nC\nC\nC\nC\nC\nF\nF\n'
  $ "$PYTHON" ../cat.py newnoeol
  'a\nb'
  $ "$PYTHON" ../cat.py c
  'A\nA\nA\nA\nA\nB\nB\n'
  $ "$PYTHON" ../cat.py d
  'A\nA\nA\nA\n'

  $ cd ..