If possible, try to use the zsh/parameter module to get
information about a shell words.
This avoids subshells and is a huge speed improvement
on systems such as cygwin.
Note 1:
$commands does not know about PATH_DIRS. So in case
PATH_DIRS is set, 'type -w' is still used if nothing
else matches.
Note 2:
zsh/parameter can't distinguish between 'command' and
'hashed'. Adjusted the test for that case to XFAIL.
The ideal solution would be if whence had an option to
put the result in REPLY instead of printing it to stdout.
* upstream/pr/308:
'main': Fix issue #302, "Process substitution misparsed as redirection".
'main': Factor out common code. No functional change.
'main': Add a regression test for issue #302, "Process substitution misparsed as redirection".
Consider indexing long buffers (say 300 chars). E.g. following line:
integer offset=${${buf[start_pos+1,len]}[(i)$needle]}
will gradually go into large indices for first index [a,] and be kept
at large index for second index [,b]. Instead, we can remove already
processed characters from buf:
proc_buf="${proc_buf[offset + $#arg + 1,-1]}"
$offset and $#arg are small, first index will not be large. $proc_buf
will be smaller and smaller and the second index [,-1] will run shorter
and shorter.
_zsh_highlight_add_highlight appends to region_highlight $1 $2 and the
next non-null parameter. If there is no non-null parameter, do nothing,
This is so that highlighters can add a style with fallbacks if the most
specific style is not defined. If none of the applicable styles are
defined, do the right thing and don't add an invalid entry to
region_highlight.
The pattern highlighter doesn't use this function as it'd need too large
of an API change.
zsh older than workers/28418 (zsh revision 23bdfc7fd2a012d5205ed22d18eb39e41c8fbc95)
doesn't support the «${name:offset:length}» syntax. Therefore, use the older
«$name[start,end]» syntax instead.
Followup to 3cb58fd7d7, "Optimization: -1 is
extra computation of string length internally".
Fixeszsh-users/zsh-syntax-highlighting#279.
./parse.zsh "zplugin.zsh" > out_norm.txt 106,17s user 7,84s system 98% cpu 1:55,85 total
./parse.zsh "zplugin.zsh" > out_opt.txt 51,91s user 7,44s system 99% cpu 59,912 total
% wc -l zplugin.zsh
3188 zplugin.zsh
The important part of this change is removing the second conjunct from the
condition; the remainder of the change gives one example of when that matters.