In practice we didn't use the cache for anything. Always compute it on
demand.
This eliminates the 'indents' variable which had to be manually kept in
sync with the command line.
Also return the number of failed files.
I decided to *just* print the filenames (newline-separated because
NULLs are annoying here) to make it easier to deal with.
See #7251.
New fish_indent does that too, so this will make any future reformatting
diffs smaller.
Done using either of:
perl -pi -e 'undef $/; s/\n*$/\n/' share/**.fish
kak -n -f '<a-/>\n*<ret>d' share/**.fish
This indents continuations after pipes and conjunctions if they contain
a newline.
Example:
cmd1 &&
cmd2
But it avoids the "double indent" if it indented unconditionally:
cmd1 | begin
cmd2
end
More work towards improving #7252
Prior to this change, when emitting gap text (comments, newlines, etc),
fish_indent would use the indentation of the text at the end of the gap.
But this has the wrong result for this case:
begin
command
# comment
end
as the comment would get the indent of the 'end'. Instead use the indent
computed for the gap text itself.
Addresses one case of #7252.
fish's internal completion logic is much smarter than the globbing in this
function, so let's just reuse "complete -C", and filter directories and
files with the given suffix.
Thanks to @Kratacoa for reporting on Gitter.
Using "complete -C" works well no prefix is given. Since in this repository
only the openocd completions pass a prefix, I left the prefix-case as is.
It could probably be improved and simplified as well. The prefix argument was
introduced to avoid cd's side effects inside a completion. Using cd is tempting
though because it would allow to use the same logic as without a prefix.
It's useless - `expect` has a timeout anyway, and it defaults to 5s,
so these 0.5s sleeps just mean it'll always take at least 0.5s.
Sometimes it is useful to let things settle before *sending* text, and
it would be nice to be able to set the timeout for each expect
separately, but just adding to the timeout isn't useful.
This one sometimes fails with a zombie detected, so I'm assuming it's
too fast for reaping to happen, so we add another 100ms sleep.
Yeah, this isn't great but...eh
The ternary expression was causing the list of paths (e.g.
$fish_function_path) to be copied. Avoid that copy with an if statement.
This reduces the time spent in try_autoload from 2.4 sec to 961ms on
the seq_echo benchmark run 1024 times, about 5% improvement.
Oh, C++...
"repaint" here is a bit of a misnomer. It *doesn't* re-highlight, that
just happens on its own.
It re-runs the prompt, which can take quite a while (depending on the
configuration), and which is also useless in this context as this
isn't something the prompt will be reacting to (theoretically it
could, but I doubt the utility of displaying "PASTE" for a few milliseconds).