fix math regression

The previous change to use `argparse` for parity with every other
builtin and function introduced a regression. Invocations that start
with a negative number can fail because the negative value looks like an
invalid flag.
This commit is contained in:
Kurtis Rader 2017-07-14 16:03:31 -07:00
parent ff4d275f22
commit 98449fec51
4 changed files with 30 additions and 7 deletions

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@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
\subsection math-synopsis Synopsis
\fish{synopsis}
math [-sN] EXPRESSION
math [-sN | --scale=N] [--] EXPRESSION
\endfish
\subsection math-description Description
@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ For a description of the syntax supported by math, see the manual for the bc pro
The following options are available:
- `-sN` Sets the scale of the result. `N` must be an integer and defaults to zero. This simply sets bc's `scale` variable to the provided value. Note that you cannot put a space between `-s` and `N`.
- `-sN` or `--scale=N` sets the scale of the result. `N` must be an integer and defaults to zero. This simply sets bc's `scale` variable to the provided value.
\subsection return-values Return Values
@ -33,4 +33,6 @@ If invalid options or no expression is provided the return `status` is two. If t
\subsection math-cautions Cautions
You should always place a `--` flag separator before the expression. 99.99% of the time you'll get the desired result without the separator. Something like `math -10.0 / 2` will fail because the negative floating point value gets treated as an invalid flag. But `math -10 / 2` will work because negative integers are special-cased.
Note that the modulo operator (`x % y`) is not well defined for floating point arithmetic. The `bc` command produces a nonsensical result rather than emit an error and fail in that case. It doesn't matter if the arguments are integers; e.g., `10 % 4`. You'll still get an incorrect result. Do not use the `-sN` flag with N greater than zero if you want sensible answers when using the modulo operator.

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@ -1,6 +1,11 @@
function math --description "Perform math calculations in bc"
set -l options 'h/help' 's/scale='
argparse -n math --min-args=1 $options -- $argv
if not set -q argv[2]
# Make sure an invocation like `math "-1 + 1"` doesn't treat the string as an option.
set argv -- $argv
end
set -l options 'h/help' 's/scale=' '#-val'
argparse -n math --stop-nonopt --min-args=1 $options -- $argv
or return
if set -q _flag_help
@ -8,7 +13,7 @@ function math --description "Perform math calculations in bc"
return 0
end
set -l scale 0 # default is integer arithmetic
set -l scale 0 # default is integer arithmetic
if set -q _flag_scale
set scale $_flag_scale
if not string match -q -r '^\d+$' "$scale"
@ -17,6 +22,13 @@ function math --description "Perform math calculations in bc"
end
end
if set -q _flag_val
# The expression began with a negative number. Put it back in the expression.
# The correct thing is for the person calling us to insert a `--` separator before the
# expression to stop parsing flags. But we'll work around that missing token here.
set argv -$_flag_val $argv
end
# Set BC_LINE_LENGTH to a ridiculously high number so it only uses one line for most results.
# We can't use 0 since some systems (including macOS) use an ancient bc that doesn't support it.
# We also can't count on this being recognized since some BSD systems don't recognize this env

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@ -5,6 +5,10 @@ math -s3 10/6
math '10 % 6'
math -s0 '10 % 6'
math '23 % 7'
math -s6 '5 / 3 * 0.3'
true
math --scale=6 '5 / 3 * 0.3'
math "1 + 1233242342353453463458972349873489273984873289472914712894791824712941"
math -1 + 1
math '-2 * -2'
math 5 \* -2
math -- -4 / 2
math -- '-4 * 2'

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@ -7,3 +7,8 @@
2
.499999
1233242342353453463458972349873489273984873289472914712894791824712942
0
4
-10
-2
-8