Commit Graph

21 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Johannes Altmanninger
414d9a1eb1 Reference more non-fish shell builtins that have relevant differences
When writing scripts for other shells, it can be confusing and annoying
that our `man` function shadows other manual pages, for example `exec(1p)`
from [Linux man-pages]. I almost never want to see the fish variant for such
contended cases (which obviuosly don't include fish-specific commands like
`string`, only widely-known shell builtins).

For the contented cases like `exec`, the POSIX documentation is more
substantial and useful, since it describes a (sub)set of languages widely
used for scripting.

Because of this I think we should stop overriding the system's man pages.
Nowadays we offer `exec -h` as intuitive way to show the documentation for
the fish-specific command (note that `help` is not a good replacement because
it uses a web browser).

Looking through the contended commands, it seems like for most of them,
the fish version is not substantially different from the system version.
A notable exception is `read` but I don't think it's a very important one.

So I think we should can sacrifice a bit of the native fish-scripting
experience in exchange for playing nicer with other shells. I think the
latter is more important because scripting is not our focus, the way I see it.
So maybe put our manpath at the end.

In lieu of that, let's at least have `exec.rst` reference the system variant.

[Linux man-pages]: https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/

Closes #10376
2024-04-20 13:34:08 +02:00
TAKAHASHI Shuuji
3c7b2af442 docs: Correct default value of read function in read.rst 2024-03-04 17:49:47 +01:00
Fabian Boehm
dd12f55dc2 docs/read: Specify default scope
Fixes #10061
2023-10-19 21:12:54 +02:00
Florian Meißner
b16a869907 Fix typo in read doc 2023-10-18 19:09:11 +02:00
Oliver Schrenk
631f2c073c fix typo in set -U option 2023-10-18 19:08:09 +02:00
Fabian Boehm
c6e905a1b9 docs/read: Mention the more common mode first
Printing to stdout is a thing it can do, yes, but writing to variables
is the more typical way to use it.
2023-10-12 22:35:43 +02:00
Fabian Boehm
ebb8368464 docs/read: Some reorganization
This just had *all the options* in one gigantic list, and some very
stuffy wording - "prompt-str" sounded like it was discouraged for some reason?
2023-09-13 17:18:19 +02:00
Pavel savchenko
c56f9e1981 Docs: correct small grammatical error in read.rst 2023-07-26 09:20:49 +02:00
Alexo
88ced9fb0f
docs: remove redundant '$' in read.rst (#9263)
`:envvar:` automatically prepends a `$` before the variable name provided in between the backticks.
2022-10-06 14:29:17 -05:00
Fabian Boehm
1204cf5eb6 docs/read: Improve examples a bit 2022-09-24 10:56:43 +02:00
Fabian Boehm
38b24c2325 docs: Use :doc: role when linking to commands
This makes it so we link to the very top of the document instead of a
special anchor we manually include.

So clicking e.g. :doc:`string <cmds/string>` will link you to
cmds/string.html instead of cmds/string.html#cmd-string.

I would love to have a way to say "this document from the root of the
document path", but that doesn't appear to work, I tried
`/cmds/string`.

So we'll just have to use cmds/string in normal documents and plain
`string` from other commands.
2022-09-24 10:56:43 +02:00
David Adam
3a23fdf359 docs: omnibus cleanup
Includes harmonizing the display of options and arguments, standardising
terminology, using the envvar directive more broadly, adding help options to all
commands that support them, simplifying some language, and tidying up multiple
formatting issues.

string documentation is not changed.
2022-03-12 00:21:13 +08:00
Johannes Altmanninger
2a98b7a593 docs synopsis: make all placeholder arguments uppercase
man(1) uses lowercase placeholders but we usually don't.  Additionally,
the new synopsis autoformatting only recognizes placeholders if they
are uppercase. Use uppercase for all placeholders.
2022-01-19 22:56:41 +08:00
Johannes Altmanninger
c0d1e41313 docs synopsis: add HTML highlighing and automate manpage markup
Recent synopsis changes move from literal code blocks to
[RST line blocks].  This does not translate well to HTML: it's not
rendered in monospace, so aligment is lost.  Additionally, we don't
get syntax highlighting in HTML, which adds differences to our code
samples which are highlighted.

We hard-wrap synopsis lines (like code blocks). To align continuation
lines in manpages we need [backslashes in weird places]. Combined with
the **, *, and `` markup, it's a bit hard to get the alignment right.

Fix these by moving synopsis sources back to code blocks and compute
HTML syntax highlighting and manpage markup with a custom Sphinx
extension.

The new Pygments lexer can tokenize a synopsis and assign the various
highlighting roles, which closely matches fish's syntax highlighing:
- command/keyword (dark blue)
- parameter (light blue)
- operator like and/or/not/&&/|| (cyan)
- grammar metacharacter (black)

For manpage output, we don't project the fish syntax highlighting
but follow the markup convention in GNU's man(1):

	bold text          type exactly as shown.
	italic text        replace with appropriate argument.

To make it easy to separate these two automatically, formalize that
(italic) placeholders must be uppercase; while all lowercase text is
interpreted literally (so rendered bold).
This makes manpages more consistent, see string-join(1) and and(1).

Implementation notes:
Since we want manpage formatting but Sphinx's Pygments highlighing
plugin does not support manpage output, add our custom "synopsis"
directive.  This directive parses differently when manpage output is
specified. This means that the HTML and manpage build processes must
not share a cache, because the parsed doctrees are cached.  Work around
this by using separate cache locations for build targets "sphinx-docs"
(which creates HTML) and "sphinx-manpages".  A better solution would
be to only override Sphinx's ManualPageBuilder but that would take a
bit more code (ideally we could override ManualPageWriter but Sphinx
4.3.2 doesn't really support that).

---

Alternative solution: stick with line blocks but use roles like
:command: or :option: (or custom ones). While this would make it
possible to produce HTML that is consistent with code blocks (by adding
a bit of CSS), the source would look uglier and is harder to maintain.
(Let's say we want to add custom formatting to the [|] metacharacters
in HTML.  This is much easier with the proposed patch.)

---

[RST line blocks]: https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/ref/rst/restructuredtext.html#line-blocks
[backslashes in weird places]: https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/8626#discussion_r782837750
2022-01-19 22:56:41 +08:00
Aaron Gyes
14d60ccb32 More synopsis work.
A great leap forward
2021-12-21 17:24:47 -08:00
Fabian Homborg
45714eb29d Add function scope to read as well
Fixes #8295.
2021-09-23 17:12:37 +02:00
Fabian Homborg
d2d18e2a6a docs: Remove references to read history
This hasn't been kept since #5904 in 3.1.0.
2021-02-02 09:42:57 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
4081d58577 docs: use monospace for inline code snippets more consistently 2020-10-26 19:25:41 +01:00
Charles Gould
f73ee30111 docs: Fix markup for code blocks 2020-10-10 21:49:33 +02:00
Delapouite
8320467bb0 doc: add links between the string-split and read commands 2020-03-10 18:25:40 +01:00
Aaron Gyes
85a0ca66e0 We no longer have two doc systems, move sphinx_doc_src back to doc_src 2020-02-19 17:00:35 -08:00