python hooks are passed two new keyword arguments:
- opts: a dict of options; unsepcified options are set to their default
- pats: a list of arguments
shell hooks receive two new variables containing string representations
of the above data:
- $HG_OPTS
- $HG_PATS
for example, the opts and pats for 'hg -f v1.1' would be:
{'force': True, 'message': '', 'rev': '', 'user': '', 'date': '', 'local': None, 'remove': None, 'mq': None}
['v1.1']
this helps users to know what kind of option is:
- no value is required(flag option)
- value is required
- value is required, and multiple occurrences are allowed
each kinds are shown as below:
-f --force force push
-e --ssh CMD specify ssh command to use
-b --branch BRANCH [+] a specific branch you would like to push
if one or more 3rd type options are shown, explanation for '[+]' mark
is also shown as footnote.
tool.check is a list of check options, and can be used in place of
tool.checkchanged and tool.checkconflicts:
Equivalences:
tool.checkchanged = yes
tool.checkconflicts = no
tool.check = changed
tool.checkchanged = no
tool.checkconflicts = yes
tool.check = conflicts
tool.checkchanged = yes
tool.checkconflicts = yes
tool.check = changed, conflicts
Add _toollist() wrapper for ui.configlist() to implement this consistently.
checkchanged and checkconflicts are still supported, but check is
preferred for implementing new check options.
Several places that use ui.configlist, predominantly in authentication
scenarios need to interface with systems that can contain spaces in usernames
(e.g. when client certificates are usernames, or Windows usernames).
This changeset introduces a parser that supports quoting of strings, and
escape quotation marks that get decoded into a single quotation mark that
adopts the usual behavior one would expect from quoting strings. The Python
library shlex module is not used, on purpose, as that raises if it cannot
match quotation marks in the given input.
They were added way back in 2005 and haven't been updated since. They
are no longer referenced by the Makefiles at upper levels and have not
been shipped with a recent version of Mercurial.
Displaying the output from the failing call to "which" didn't prevent
make from doing stupid things later. We now only search for "rst2html"
and fallback to "rst2html.py". If neither name is found, make will
eventually abort when we try to use $(RST2HTML).
The man pages can actually be translated by building them in a
different locale. However, the man pages contain internal links to
certain sections, and when the section titles are translated, the
links change too. So it is currently not recommended to build the man
pages in anything by the "C" locale.
* it's bad to specify only foreground color:
http://www.w3.org/QA/Tips/color
* some people prefer dark background
* `color: #111' is mostly the same as `color: black',
which is the default of almost all popular browsers.
so it's preferable to delete `color: #111', rather than adding
`background-color: white'.
designed loosely based on:
http://mercurial.selenic.com/css/styles.css
with some modifications by intention:
* visited links are colored differently
* no fixed size
* works without typeface.js
we keep most styles, which is from docutils, untouched.
tested with:
* MSIE 6.0 on Windows
* Firefox 3.5 on Linux