On Wed, Apr 19, 2017 at 8:10 AM, Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Apr 19, 2017 at 02:08:20AM -0700, Jacob Keller wrote: > >> From: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@xxxxxxxxx> >> >> Many options can be negated by prefixing the option with "no-", for >> example "--3way" can be prefixed with "--no-3way" to disable it. Since >> 0f1930c58754 ("parse-options: allow positivation of options >> starting, with no-", 2012-02-25) we have also had support to negate >> options which start with "no-" by using the positive wording. >> >> This leads to the confusing (and non-documented) case that you can still >> prefix options beginning with "no-" by a second "no-" to negate them. >> That is, we allow "no-no-hardlinks" to negate the "no-hardlinks" option. >> >> This can be confusing to the user so lets just disallow the >> double-negative forms. If the long_name begins with "no-" then we simply >> don't allow the regular negation format, and only allow the option to be >> negated by the positive form. >> >> Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@xxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> I started going about implementing an OPT_NEGBOOL as suggested by Peff, >> but realized this might just be simpler, and we already support the >> positive format for the negation, so we don't lose expressiveness. We >> *might* want to tie this to an option flag instead so that it only kicks >> in if the option specifically requests it. Thoughts? > > Yeah, if we are going to do anything, this is the right thing to do. > > I am on the fence on whether it actually needs addressing or not. Sure, > --no-no-foo looks silly, but if the only way it happens is that the user > typed it, it doesn't seem so bad to me to respect it. I am tempted to > say we should support arbitrary levels of "no-" parsing as an easter > egg, but that is probably silly. :) > > So I am fine with this patch, or without it. > > -Peff This is why it's an RFC. I don't really feel that it's too much of a problem. As for the reason why I thought it might want a flag itself is because of concerns raised earlier that we might have something liek OPT_BOOL( ... "no-stage" ...) OPT_INT(... "stage" ....) or something already which might be broken and the only proper way to disable no-stage is no-no-stage? Is this actually a concern? I thought this was a comment raised by you earlier as an objection to a change unless we specifically flagged them as OPT_NEGBOOL() Thanks, Jake