Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> Speaking of quote_value, The quote doesn't work well with color's >> for e.g. >> git for-each-ref --shell --format="%(color:green)%(refname)" >> '''refs/heads/allow-unknown-type''' >> Seems like an simple fix, probably after GSoC I'll do this :) > > Anyway, the %(color) is really meant to be displayed on-screen, and the > quoting is really meant to feed the value to another program, so I can > hardly imagine a use-case where you would want both. > > But the current behavior seems fine to me: the color escape sequence is > quoted, which is good. For example, you can > > x=$(git for-each-ref --shell --format="nocolor%(color:green)%(refname)" | head -n 1) > sh -c "echo $x" > > it will actually display "nocolor" without color, then a green refname. > I'm not sure the quoting is really necessary, but it doesn't harm and it > makes sense since the escape sequence contains a '[' which is a shell > metacharacter. The point of --shell/--tcl/... is so that you can have --format safely write executable scripts in the specified language. Your format string might look like this: --format="short=%(refname:short) long=%(refname)" and one entry in the output in "--shell" mode would expand to short='master' long='refs/heads/master' that can be eval'ed as a script safely without having to worry about expanded atom values having characters that have special meanings in the target language. Your "nocolor" example works the same way: --format="var=%(color:green)%(refname)" --shell would scan 'var=', emit it as literal, see %(color:green) atom, show it quoted, see %(refname), show it quoted, notice that color is not terminated and pretend as if it saw %(color:reset) and show it quoted, which would result in something like: var='ESC[32m''master''ESC[m' Note that the example _knows_ that the quoting rule of the target language, namely, two 'quoted' 'strings' next to each other are simply concatenated. When using a hypothetical target language whose quoting rule is different, e.g. "type two single-quotes inside a pair of single-quote to represent a literal single-quote", then you would write something like this to produce a script in that language: --format=" var1=%(color:green); var2=%(refname); var=var1+var2; " as your format string (and it will not be used with --shell). And the atom-quoting code that knows the language specific rules would quote %(atom) properly. Perhaps the language uses `' for its string quoting, in which case one entry of the output might look like var1=`ESC[32m'; var2=`refs/heads/master'; var=var1+var2; which would be in the valid syntax of that hypothetical language. Maybe you have an atom %(headstar) that expands to an asterisk for the currently checked out branch, in order to mimick 'git branch -l'. Using that, you might use --shell --format to invent a shorter output format that does not show the asterisk but indicates the current branch only with color, like so: --format=' if test -z %(headstar) then echo %(refname:short) else echo %(color:green)%(refname:short)%(color:reset) fi ' and you would want %(headstar)'s expansion to be '*' or ''. If we introduce %(if:empty)%(then)%(else)%(end), the above may become something like this, removing the need for --shell altogether: %(if:empty)%(headstar)%(then )%(refname:short)%(else )%(color:green)%(refname:short)%(color:reset)%(end) With the current implementation, it is likely that this needs to be a single long line; we may want to extend parsing of atoms to allow a LF+whitespace before the close parenthesis to make the string more readable like the above example, but that is an unrelated tangent. But you should still be able to use "--shell" this way, assigning the whole thing to a variable: --format=' line=%(if:empty)%(headstar)%(then )%(refname:short)%(else )%(color:green)%(refname:short)%(color:reset)%(end) echo "$line" ' So I think 'quote' should apply only to the top-level atoms in the nested %(magic)...%(end) world. Expand %(if:empty)...%(end) and then apply the quoting rule specific to the target language to make the result safe to use as the RHS of the target language. None of the atoms that appear internally (e.g. %(headstar) that is being tested for emptyness) must NOT be quoted. If you have %(align:40)%(atom) and string%(end), the same logic applies. %(atom) is not a top level item (it is inside %(align)) so you would expand "%(atom) and string" without quoting, measure its display width, align to 40-cols and then if --shell or any quoting is in effect, applyl that, so that the user can do: --format=' right=%(align:40)%(refname)%(end) left=%(align:20,right)%(refname:short)%(end) echo "$left $right" ' one entry of the output from which would expand to right='refs/heads/master ' left=' master' echo "$left $right" because the rule is to quote the whole %(align)...%(end) construct only once. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html