Mercurial > hg
changeset 42098:5753e5949b51
py3: add b'' prefixes to new doctests in match.py
# skip-blame as just b'' prefixes
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6221
author | Pulkit Goyal <pulkit@yandex-team.ru> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 10 Apr 2019 03:10:53 +0530 |
parents | f7fdb24d4178 |
children | bccb322f1496 |
files | mercurial/match.py |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 37 insertions(+), 37 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/mercurial/match.py Wed Apr 10 03:02:31 2019 +0530 +++ b/mercurial/match.py Wed Apr 10 03:10:53 2019 +0530 @@ -150,49 +150,49 @@ '<something>' - a pattern of the specified default type Usually a patternmatcher is returned: - >>> match('foo', '.', ['re:.*\.c$', 'path:foo/a', '*.py']) + >>> match(b'foo', b'.', [b're:.*\.c$', b'path:foo/a', b'*.py']) <patternmatcher patterns='.*\\.c$|foo/a(?:/|$)|[^/]*\\.py$'> Combining 'patterns' with 'include' (resp. 'exclude') gives an intersectionmatcher (resp. a differencematcher): - >>> type(match('foo', '.', ['re:.*\.c$'], include=['path:lib'])) + >>> type(match(b'foo', b'.', [b're:.*\.c$'], include=[b'path:lib'])) <class 'mercurial.match.intersectionmatcher'> - >>> type(match('foo', '.', ['re:.*\.c$'], exclude=['path:build'])) + >>> type(match(b'foo', b'.', [b're:.*\.c$'], exclude=[b'path:build'])) <class 'mercurial.match.differencematcher'> Notice that, if 'patterns' is empty, an alwaysmatcher is returned: - >>> match('foo', '.', []) + >>> match(b'foo', b'.', []) <alwaysmatcher> The 'default' argument determines which kind of pattern is assumed if a pattern has no prefix: - >>> match('foo', '.', ['.*\.c$'], default='re') + >>> match(b'foo', b'.', [b'.*\.c$'], default=b're') <patternmatcher patterns='.*\\.c$'> - >>> match('foo', '.', ['main.py'], default='relpath') + >>> match(b'foo', b'.', [b'main.py'], default=b'relpath') <patternmatcher patterns='main\\.py(?:/|$)'> - >>> match('foo', '.', ['main.py'], default='re') + >>> match(b'foo', b'.', [b'main.py'], default=b're') <patternmatcher patterns='main.py'> The primary use of matchers is to check whether a value (usually a file name) matches againset one of the patterns given at initialization. There are two ways of doing this check. - >>> m = match('foo', '', ['re:.*\.c$', 'relpath:a']) + >>> m = match(b'foo', b'', [b're:.*\.c$', b'relpath:a']) 1. Calling the matcher with a file name returns True if any pattern matches that file name: - >>> m('a') + >>> m(b'a') True - >>> m('main.c') + >>> m(b'main.c') True - >>> m('test.py') + >>> m(b'test.py') False 2. Using the exact() method only returns True if the file name matches one of the exact patterns (i.e. not re: or glob: patterns): - >>> m.exact('a') + >>> m.exact(b'a') True - >>> m.exact('main.c') + >>> m.exact(b'main.c') False """ normalize = _donormalize @@ -484,32 +484,32 @@ """Matches a set of (kind, pat, source) against a 'root' directory. >>> kindpats = [ - ... ('re', '.*\.c$', ''), - ... ('path', 'foo/a', ''), - ... ('relpath', 'b', ''), - ... ('glob', '*.h', ''), + ... (b're', b'.*\.c$', b''), + ... (b'path', b'foo/a', b''), + ... (b'relpath', b'b', b''), + ... (b'glob', b'*.h', b''), ... ] - >>> m = patternmatcher('foo', kindpats) - >>> m('main.c') # matches re:.*\.c$ + >>> m = patternmatcher(b'foo', kindpats) + >>> m(b'main.c') # matches re:.*\.c$ True - >>> m('b.txt') + >>> m(b'b.txt') False - >>> m('foo/a') # matches path:foo/a + >>> m(b'foo/a') # matches path:foo/a True - >>> m('a') # does not match path:b, since 'root' is 'foo' + >>> m(b'a') # does not match path:b, since 'root' is 'foo' False - >>> m('b') # matches relpath:b, since 'root' is 'foo' + >>> m(b'b') # matches relpath:b, since 'root' is 'foo' True - >>> m('lib.h') # matches glob:*.h + >>> m(b'lib.h') # matches glob:*.h True >>> m.files() ['.', 'foo/a', 'b', '.'] - >>> m.exact('foo/a') + >>> m.exact(b'foo/a') True - >>> m.exact('b') + >>> m.exact(b'b') True - >>> m.exact('lib.h') # exact matches are for (rel)path kinds + >>> m.exact(b'lib.h') # exact matches are for (rel)path kinds False """ @@ -651,10 +651,10 @@ r'''Matches the input files exactly. They are interpreted as paths, not patterns (so no kind-prefixes). - >>> m = exactmatcher(['a.txt', 're:.*\.c$']) - >>> m('a.txt') + >>> m = exactmatcher([b'a.txt', b're:.*\.c$']) + >>> m(b'a.txt') True - >>> m('b.txt') + >>> m(b'b.txt') False Input files that would be matched are exactly those returned by .files() @@ -662,9 +662,9 @@ ['a.txt', 're:.*\\.c$'] So pattern 're:.*\.c$' is not considered as a regex, but as a file name - >>> m('main.c') + >>> m(b'main.c') False - >>> m('re:.*\.c$') + >>> m(b're:.*\.c$') True ''' @@ -1075,14 +1075,14 @@ def patkind(pattern, default=None): '''If pattern is 'kind:pat' with a known kind, return kind. - >>> patkind('re:.*\.c$') + >>> patkind(b're:.*\.c$') 're' - >>> patkind('glob:*.c') + >>> patkind(b'glob:*.c') 'glob' - >>> patkind('relpath:test.py') + >>> patkind(b'relpath:test.py') 'relpath' - >>> patkind('main.py') - >>> patkind('main.py', default='re') + >>> patkind(b'main.py') + >>> patkind(b'main.py', default=b're') 're' ''' return _patsplit(pattern, default)[0]