* unknown subcommand message altered to use similar language as is used
everywhere around clap. Namely, we say 'invalid' instead of 'unknown'
* 'did-you-mean' message separator changed from '. ' to '\n\t'
Related to #103
That way, it will run on travis as well, which comes with python 2
by default, and just doesn't have python 3 pre-installed.
It would probably take to much time to install, especially considering
it's super easy to have to script work in both worlds.
There now is a single method which deals with formatting the
'did-you-mean' message, supporting different styles to cater all the
various needs that have arisen thus far, with enough potential to be
easily extended in future through a little helper-enumeration whose
variants can possibly take values.
*NOTE*: We might still want to have a look at where the did-you-mean
message should be located for best effect.
Related to #103
Long arguments now have a special case when saying they are unknown, as
we will match it against all known long flags and suggest the best match
to be used instead.
TODO: refactor to just write a suffix with did-you-mean information.
Related to #103
If an argument is not understood as subcommand, but has a
high-confidence match in the list of all known subcommands, we will use
this one to print a customized error message.
Previously, it would say that a positional argument wasn't understood,
now it will say that a subcommand was unknown, and if the user meant
`high-confidence-candidate`.
If the argument doesn't sufficiently match any subcommand, the default
handling will take over and try to treat it as positional argument.
* added dependency to `strsym` crate
* new `did_you_mean` function uses `strsim::jaro_winkler(...)` to look
for good candidates.
Related to #103
* assure `make test` works on OSX as well
* simplified entire makefile, by basically removing sed invocations to
manipulate the Cargo.toml file under source control.
* *works for me* predicate
This should probably be tested on another system as well, just to be
sure it makes sense for everyone.