Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/py3kcompat.py @ 21234:b9a16ed5acec
qnew: use "editor" argument of "commit()" instead of explicit "ui.edit()"
Before this patch, "hg qnew" invokes "ui.edit()" explicitly to get
commit message edited manually.
This requires explicit "localrepository.savecommitmessage()"
invocation to save edited commit message into ".hg/last-message.txt",
because unexpected exception raising may abort command execution
before saving it in "localrepository.commit()".
This patch uses "editor" argument of "localrepository.commit()"
instead of explicit "ui.edit()" invocation for "hg qnew".
"localrepository.commit()" will invoke "desceditor()" function newly
added by this patch, and save edited commit message into
".hg/last-message.txt" automatically.
This patch passes not "editor" but "desceditor" to "commit()", because
"hg qnew" requires editor function to return edited message if not
empty, or default message otherwise.
This patch applies "rstrip()" on "defaultmsg" at comparison between
"nctx.description()" and "defaultmsg", because the former should be
stripped by "changelog.stripdesc()" and the latter may have tail white
spaces inherited from "patchfn".
author | FUJIWARA Katsunori <foozy@lares.dti.ne.jp> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 05 May 2014 21:26:40 +0900 |
parents | e7cfe3587ea4 |
children | 007d276f8c94 |
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# py3kcompat.py - compatibility definitions for running hg in py3k # # Copyright 2010 Renato Cunha <renatoc@gmail.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. import os, builtins from numbers import Number def bytesformatter(format, args): '''Custom implementation of a formatter for bytestrings. This function currently relies on the string formatter to do the formatting and always returns bytes objects. >>> bytesformatter(20, 10) 0 >>> bytesformatter('unicode %s, %s!', ('string', 'foo')) b'unicode string, foo!' >>> bytesformatter(b'test %s', 'me') b'test me' >>> bytesformatter('test %s', 'me') b'test me' >>> bytesformatter(b'test %s', b'me') b'test me' >>> bytesformatter('test %s', b'me') b'test me' >>> bytesformatter('test %d: %s', (1, b'result')) b'test 1: result' ''' # The current implementation just converts from bytes to unicode, do # what's needed and then convert the results back to bytes. # Another alternative is to use the Python C API implementation. if isinstance(format, Number): # If the fixer erroneously passes a number remainder operation to # bytesformatter, we just return the correct operation return format % args if isinstance(format, bytes): format = format.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape') if isinstance(args, bytes): args = args.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape') if isinstance(args, tuple): newargs = [] for arg in args: if isinstance(arg, bytes): arg = arg.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape') newargs.append(arg) args = tuple(newargs) ret = format % args return ret.encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape') builtins.bytesformatter = bytesformatter # Create bytes equivalents for os.environ values for key in list(os.environ.keys()): # UTF-8 is fine for us bkey = key.encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape') bvalue = os.environ[key].encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape') os.environ[bkey] = bvalue origord = builtins.ord def fakeord(char): if isinstance(char, int): return char return origord(char) builtins.ord = fakeord if __name__ == '__main__': import doctest doctest.testmod()