view help/patterns.txt @ 9622:9d1a480ca6ea

gendoc: fix synopsis The synopsis is used as an inline literal when generating the manpage. There should not be any whitespace on the inside of the quotation marks in inline literals. Commands with an empty synopsis (such as tags) produces ``tags `` as synopsis, which triggers a warning.
author Martin Geisler <mg@lazybytes.net>
date Tue, 20 Oct 2009 22:42:49 +0200
parents cad36e496640
children 585d2ffe969b
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Mercurial accepts several notations for identifying one or more files
at a time.

By default, Mercurial treats filenames as shell-style extended glob
patterns.

Alternate pattern notations must be specified explicitly.

To use a plain path name without any pattern matching, start it with
"path:". These path names must completely match starting at the
current repository root.

To use an extended glob, start a name with "glob:". Globs are rooted
at the current directory; a glob such as "``*.c``" will only match
files in the current directory ending with ".c".

The supported glob syntax extensions are "``**``" to match any string
across path separators and "{a,b}" to mean "a or b".

To use a Perl/Python regular expression, start a name with "re:".
Regexp pattern matching is anchored at the root of the repository.

Plain examples::

  path:foo/bar   a name bar in a directory named foo in the root
                 of the repository
  path:path:name a file or directory named "path:name"

Glob examples::

  glob:*.c       any name ending in ".c" in the current directory
  *.c            any name ending in ".c" in the current directory
  **.c           any name ending in ".c" in any subdirectory of the
                 current directory including itself.
  foo/*.c        any name ending in ".c" in the directory foo
  foo/**.c       any name ending in ".c" in any subdirectory of foo
                 including itself.

Regexp examples::

  re:.*\.c$      any name ending in ".c", anywhere in the repository