Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> [Thu, 19 Aug 2010 11:51:30 -0500] rev 11990
merge with stable
Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com> [Wed, 18 Aug 2010 18:56:44 -0400] rev 11989
aliases: provide more flexible ways to work with shell alias arguments
This patch changes the functionality of shell aliases to add more powerful
options for working with shell alias arguments.
First: the alias name + arguments to a shell alias are set as an HG_ARGS
environment variable, delimited by spaces. This matches the behavior of hooks.
Second: any occurrences of "$@" (without quotes) are replaced with the
arguments, separated by spaces. This happens *before* the alias gets to the shell.
Third: any positive numeric variables ("$1", "$2", etc) are replaced with the
appropriate argument, indexed from 1. "$0" is replaced with the name of the
alias. Any "extra" numeric variables are replaced with an empty string. This
happens *before* the alias gets to the shell.
These changes allow for more flexible shell aliases:
[alias]
echo = !echo $@
count = !hg log -r "$@" --template='.' | wc -c | sed -e 's/ //g'
qqueuemv = !mv "`hg root`/.hg/patches-$1" "`hg root`/.hg/patches-$2"
In action:
$ hg echo foo
foo
$ hg count 'branch(default)'
901
$ hg count 'branch(stable) and keyword(fixes)'
102
$ hg qqueuemv myfeature somefeature
Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com> [Wed, 18 Aug 2010 18:18:26 -0400] rev 11988
util: add an interpolate() function to for replacing multiple values
util.interpolate can be used to replace multiple items in a string all at once
(and optionally apply a function to the replacement), without worrying about
recursing:
>>> import util
>>> s = '$foo, $spam'
>>> util.interpolate(r'\$', { 'foo': 'bar', 'spam': 'eggs' }, s)
'bar, eggs'
>>> util.interpolate(r'\$', { 'foo': 'spam', 'spam': 'foo' }, s)
'spam, foo'
>>> util.interpolate(r'\$', { 'foo': 'spam', 'spam': 'foo' }, s, lambda s: s.upper())
'SPAM, FOO'
The patch also changes filemerge.py to use this new function.
Brodie Rao <brodie@bitheap.org> [Wed, 18 Aug 2010 10:53:52 -0400] rev 11987
convert: use encoding.encoding instead of locale.getpreferredencoding()
The latter may not return useful results in certain OS X environments.