Mostly related to usage _(L"foo"), keeping in mind the _
macro does a wcstring().c_str() already.
And a smattering of other trivial micro-optimizations certain
to not help tangibly.
This addresses a few places where -Wswitch-enum showed one or two missing
case's for enum values.
It did uncover and fix one apparent oversight:
$ function asd -p 100
echo foo
end
$ functions --handlers-type exit
Event exit
asd
It looks like this should be showing a PID before 'asd' just like
job_exit handlers show the job id. It was falling
through to default: which just printed the function name.
$ functions --handlers-type exit
Event exit
100 asd
Rather than having tokenizer_error as pointers to objects, switch it back
to just an error code value. This makes reasoning about it easier since
it's immutable values instead of mutable objects, and it avoids allocation
during startup.
This partially reverts 5b489ca30f, with
carets acting as redirections unless the stderr-nocaret flag is set.
This flag is off by default but may be enabled on the command line:
fish --features stderr-nocaret
This removes the caret as a shorthand for redirecting stderr.
Note that stderr may be redirected to a file via 2>/some/path...
and may be redirected with a pipe via 2>|.
Fixes#4394
Work around #4810 by retrieving localizations at runtime to avoid issues
possibly caused by inserting into the static unordered_map during static
initialization.
Closes#810.
Line continuations (i.e. escaped new lines) now make sense again. With
the smart pipe support (pipes continue on to next line) recently added,
this hack to have continuations ignore comments makes no sense.
This is valid code:
```fish
echo hello |
# comment here
tr -d 'l'
```
this isn't:
```fish
echo hello | \
# comment here
tr -d 'l'
```
Reverts @snnw's 318daaffb2Closes#2928. Closes#2929.
Previously, in
ls ^a bcd
(with "^" as the cursor), kill-word would delete the "a" and then go
on, remove the space and the "bcd".
With this, it will only kill the "a".
Fixes#4747.
Prior to this fix, each redirection type was a separate token_type.
Unify these under a single type TOK_REDIRECT and break the redirection
type out into a new sub-type redirection_type_t.
Prior to this the tokenizer ran "one ahead", where tokenizer_t::next()
would in fact return the last-parsed token. Switch to parsing on demand
instead of running one ahead; this is simpler and prepares for tokenizer
changes.
The previous attempt to support newlines after pipes changed the lexer to
swallow newlines after encountering a pipe. This has two problems that are
difficult to fix:
1. comments cannot be placed after the pipe
2. fish_indent won't know about the newlines, so it will erase them
Address these problems by removing the lexer behavior, and replacing it
with a new parser symbol "optional_newlines" allowing the newlines to be
reflected directly in the fish grammar.
I recently upgraded the software on my macOS server and was dismayed to
see that cppcheck reported a huge number of format string errors due to
mismatches between the format string and its arguments from calls to
`assert()`. It turns out they are due to the macOS header using `%lu`
for the line number which is obviously wrong since it is using the C
preprocessor `__LINE__` symbol which evaluates to a signed int.
I also noticed that the macOS implementation writes to stdout, rather
than stderr. It also uses `printf()` which can be a problem on some
platforms if the stream is already in wide mode which is the normal case
for fish.
So implement our own `assert()` implementation. This also eliminates
double-negative warnings that we get from some of our calls to
`assert()` on some platforms by oclint.
Also reimplement the `DIE()` macro in terms of our internal
implementation.
Rewrite `assert(0 && msg)` statements to `DIE(msg)` for clarity and to
eliminate oclint warnings about constant expressions.
Fixes#3276, albeit not in the fashion I originally envisioned.
We should never use stdio functions that use stdout implicitly. Saving a
few characters isn't worth the inconsistency. Too, using the forms such
as `fwprintf()` which take an explicit stream makes it easier to find
the places we write to stdout versus stderr.
Fixes#3728
This fixes some of the IWYU and cppcheck lint warnings. And only on
macOS (formerly OS X). Fixing these types of warnings on a broader set
of platforms should be done but this is a baby step to making `make
lint-all` have few, if any, warnings. This reduces the number of lines
in the `make lint-all` output on macOS by over 500 lines.
Where we already manage to cover an enum entirely in a switch
statement such that default: cannot be reached, help ensure
it stays that way by condemning that route.
Also adjust a 'const' I came across that is ignored.
For example, an argument 12345^ is a real argument, not a redirection
There's no reason to use ^ here instead of >, and it's annoying to git
users.
Fixes#1873
The autoconf-generated config.h contains a number of directives which
may alter the behaviour of system headers on certain platforms. Always
include it in every C++ file as the first include.
Closes#2993.
I missed restyling a few "switch" blocks to make them consistent with the rest
of the code base. This fixes that oversight. This should be the final step in
restyling the C++ code to have a consistent style. This also includes a few
trivial cleanups elsewhere.
I also missed restyling the "complete" module when working my way from a to z
so this final change includes restyling that module.
Total lint errors decreased 36%. Cppcheck errors went from 47 to 24. Oclint P2
errors went from 819 to 778. Oclint P3 errors went from 3252 to 1842.
Resolves#2902.
Remove the "make iwyu" build target. Move the functionality into the
recently introduced lint.fish script. Fix a lot, but not all, of the
include-what-you-use errors. Specifically, it fixes all of the IWYU errors
on my OS X server but only removes some of them on my Ubuntu 14.04 server.
Fixes#2957