Show the gist of what is going on during uninstall.
I had overlooked the uninstall target, with it mislabled as having
to do translations. Give make uninstall the full treatment here.
In addition to showing what is going on, give the user a 5^H7 second
warning before we blast away /usr/local/share/fish/ - it's not
unthinkable they might have a script or two in there.
Copied in manually - this won't be done automatically by autotools.
(we only use autoconf)
From automake NEWS:
New in 1.15:
* Improvements and refactorings in the install-sh script:
- It has been modernized, and now makes the following assumptions
*unconditionally*:
(1) a working 'dirname' program is available;
(2) the ${var:-value} shell parameters substitution works;
(3) the "set -f" and "set +f" shell commands work, and, respectively,
disable and enable shell globbing.
- The script implements stricter error checking, and now it complains
and bails out if any of the following expectations is not met:
(1) the options -d and -t are never used together;
(2) the argument passed to option -t is a directory;
(3) if there are two or more SOURCEFILE arguments, the
DESTINATION argument must be a directory.
This has gotten very out of sync with the project - autoupdate it and
integrate what autoscan found.
I checked with @zanchey - it looks like even our oldest RHEL 5 machines
have a new enough M4 to be able to handle what will be produced by
autoconf 2.68; also use a closer-to-modern version of that (2.69 was
released 2012!)
Neither m4 nor autoconf are required to build a fish release.
Update history docs.
Note - the omission of a mention of timezone was intentional. These were recorded as naive timestamps lacking timezone information in the first place.
Improves the grouping of multiline history entries
by sepearating the timestamps and history entires onto seperate lines.
Use wcsftime() Saves us a conversion, might as well.
- Comment out asciinema - people too often leave a link there.
- "Launch fish" is probably a stupid thing to have a first step.
- Combine the expected/actual result sections, maybe that was too tedious.
Another dev noticed that tests/printf.in was failing because they didn't have
the fr_FR.UTF-8 locale installed. Make that test more resilient by trying
other locales and if no suitable locale is found skipping the test.
The previous solution would not erase the previous bindings if
fish_vi_key_bindings was called with a mode argument. So if the user
switched to vi with a different initial mode, they'd keep their previous
bindings also.
Supersedes e89057b.
Some of these were defined in the shared bindings, some (like \cy yank)
were just literally duplicate in the same files.
This should _not_ change anything. In particular this does not remove
hardcoding of sequences (because terminfo might be wrong or the term
might need smkx).
Found with
```
function bind
set -l binds (builtin bind)
builtin bind $argv
set -l newbinds (builtin bind)
if set -q argv[1]; and not test "$argv[1]" = "--erase"
if test "$binds" = "$newbinds"
echo "Duplicate: " (string escape -- $argv)
end
end
end
```
The vi-bindings function would unconditionally erase all bindings,
making it impossible to call it last. This would disable the
mode-indicator (and in future also the cursor).
Make it so any argument to fish_vi_key_bindings stops it from erasing
bindings.
It would also be possible to demand an argument to erase (or to erase as
a separate step). but the usual case seems to be _switching_ to a set of bindings.
This didn't work on platforms where tput exists but can never accept
terminfo names. This includes the current versions of FreeBSD - it
used to do both, now it doesn't. So, fall back to the old termcap names
by (tput smso; or tput so). Add check for the tput program before we
even try.
Fix problem with Makefile not escaping 'echo' correctly
Support systems where 'tput' only works with termcap names
Adjust output. Shade out most run-of-the-mill output so you can't
miss warnigns and our status signposts amonst the .o files created.
The extra things `eval` does are all for code that runs
interactively. Because we just define a function, we don't need it.
This improves alias' performance by about 20-25% (0.783608s to 0.585585s
on about 500 aliases) and avoids triggering #3345.
This can be prohibitively slow on large repositories (minutes!).
While regrettable, no user is going to like waiting that long.
Work towards #3342, rerun of #3230.
Many thanks to @gladhorn for the idea!
Offering auto completion for existing commits is great, but on big
repositories, it suddenly becomes really slow, even with fast hard
disks, since each commit is read and then a line processed for it.
Instead limit to the last 500 commits (arbitrary number) which still
feels fast. Going back further in history can easily and more reasonably
done with git log etc.
* completions/p4.fish
* Updated per comments + added p4 clients
* p4 completions: integ, opened, reopen. "default" CL support.
* Perforce RCS -> SCM
* p4 reopen: list opened files
* Fixed per review, added -d for all functions
Fixed per comments in review by @faho,
Added -d for all functions,
Renamed ”subcommand" term to “command” (so there’s probably diff noise)
* p4 completions with submit list of files
* p4 completions for submit: lists open files
Implementing the --shadow-builtin flag has proven to be highly controversial.
Revert the introduction of that flag to the `function` command. If someone
shoots themselves in the foot by redefining a builtin as a function that's
their problem and not our responsibility to protect them from doing so.
Fixes#3319
It's not ideal since we can't get the real result so we just assume it's
"0". That triggers the easier path, which still might display the wrong
thing, but we have to pick something.
Possible fix for #3321.