cl._partialmatch() can be pretty slow if hidden revisions are involved. This
patch cancels the slowdown introduced by the previous patch by using an
unfiltered changelog, which means shortest(node) isn't always the shortest.
The result isn't perfect, but seems okay as long as shortest(node) is short
enough to type and can be used as an identifier.
(with hidden revisions)
% hg log -R hg-committed -r0:20000 -T '{node|shortest}\n' --time > /dev/null
(.^^) time: real 1.530 secs (user 1.480+0.000 sys 0.040+0.000)
(.^) time: real 43.080 secs (user 43.060+0.000 sys 0.030+0.000)
(.) time: real 1.680 secs (user 1.650+0.000 sys 0.020+0.000)
cl.index.partialmatch() isn't a drop-in replacement for cl._partialmatch().
It has no knowledge about hidden revisions, and it raises ValueError if a node
shorter than 4 chars is given. Instead, use index.partialmatch() through
cl._partialmatch(), which has no such problems and gives the identical result
with/without --pure.
The test output was sampled with --pure without this patch, which shows the
most correct result. However, we'll need to switch to using an unfiltered
changelog because _partialmatch() of a filtered changelog can be an order of
magnitude slower.
(with hidden revisions)
% hg log -R hg-committed -r0:20000 -T '{node|shortest}\n' --time > /dev/null
(.^) time: real 1.530 secs (user 1.480+0.000 sys 0.040+0.000)
(.) time: real 43.080 secs (user 43.060+0.000 sys 0.030+0.000)
The termwidth template keyword is of limited use without some way to ensure
that margins are respected.
Provide a full set of arithmetic operators (four basic operations plus the
mod function, defined to match Python's // for division), so that you can
create termwidth based layouts that match the user's terminal size
File paths in template are repository-absolute paths. This function can be
used to convert them to filesystem paths relative to cwd. This also converts
'/' to '\\' on Windows.
We already support multiple primitive for listing files, which were
affected by the current changeset.
This patch adds files() which returns files of the current changeset
matching a given pattern or fileset query via the "set:" prefix.
This does a fall-back check for style files or directories that are
in Mercurial's template path for user convenience.
We intentionally don't use this for the built-in coal style because we don't
want the style to mysteriously break if the working directory just
happens to have a file named "paper".
Otherwise it would crash if template expression was passed.
This patch unifies the way how boolean expression is evaluated, which involves
BC. Before "if(true)" and "pad(..., 'false')" were False, which are now True
since they are boolean literal and non-empty string respectively.
"func is runsymbol" is the same hack as evalstringliteral(), which is needed
for label() to take color literals.
Before, False was True. This patch fixes the issue by processing True/False
transparently. The other values (including integer 0) are tested as strings
for backward compatibility, which means "if(latesttagdistance)" never be False.
Should we change the behavior of "if(0)" as well?
We can now specify a base map file:
__base__ = path/to/map/file
That map file will be read and used to populate unset elements of the
current map. Unlike using %include, elements in the inherited class
will be read relative to that path.
This makes it much easier to make custom local tweaks to a style.
We want to be able to accept ISO 8601 style timezones that don't
include a space separator, so we change the timezone parsing function
to accept a full date string and return both the offset and the
non-timezone portion.
A pretty common pattern in templates is adding conditional separators
like so:
{node}{if(bookmarks, " {bookmarks}")}{if(tags, " {tags}")}
With this patch, the above can be simplified to:
{separate(" ", node, bookmarks, tags)}
The function is similar to the already existing join(), but with a few
differences:
* separate() skips empty arguments
* join() expects a single list argument, while separate() expects
each item as a separate argument
* separate() takes the separator first in order to allow a variable
number of arguments after it
Now template aliases are fully supported in log and formatter templates.
As I said before, aliases are not expanded in map files. This avoids possible
corruption of our stock styles and web templates. This behavior is undocumented
since no map file nor [templates] section are documented at all. Later on,
we might want to add [aliases] section to map files if it appears to be useful.
New frommapfile() function will make it clear when template aliases will be
loaded. They should be applied to command arguments and templates in hgrc,
but not to map files. Otherwise, our stock styles and web templates
(i.e map-file templates) could be modified unintentionally.
Future patches will add "aliases" argument to __init__(), but not to
frommapfile().
The debugtemplate command is updated to show expanded tree, but still the
template engine doesn't support alias expansion. That's why the test says
"parse error" for now.
This will be a parser of template aliases, and it can also be used for
processing quoted string templates in map files. That's why this function
isn't defined in the upcoming _aliasrules class.
Before, KeyError was caught at changeset_templater._show(), which said "no
key named '%s'" as it was intended to catch the KeyError of unknown map key.
Instead, we should catch KeyError explicitly for better error indication.
For those who don't know what the template engine is (read "everyone"), it is
hidden extension feature that allows switching template syntax in map file.
See b901d7e82888 for details.
Using decorator can localize changes for adding (or removing) a
template function in source code.
This patch also removes leading ":FUNC(ARG...):" part in help document
of each function, because using templatefunc makes it useless.
This patch uses not 'func' but 'templatefunc' as a decorator name,
because the former is too generic one, even though the latter is a
little redundant in 'templater.py'.
This patch also adds loadfunction() to templater, because this
combination helps to figure out how they cooperate with each other.
Listing up loadfunction() in dispatch.extraloaders causes implicit
loading template function at loading (3rd party) extension.
This patch explicitly tests whether templatefunc decorator works as
expected, because there is no bundled extension, which defines
template function.
This change requires that "templatefunc" attribute of (3rd party)
extension is registrar.templatefunc or so.
Before this patch, the first and last characters were stripped from
ui.logtemplate and template.* if they were the same. It could lead to a
strange result as quotes are optional. See the test for example.
SyntaxError is the class representing syntax errors in Python code. We should
use a dedicated exception class for our needs. With this change, unnecessary
re-wrapping of SyntaxError can be eliminated.
This patch eliminates a nested data structure other than the parsed tree.
('template', [(op, data), ..]) -> ('template', (op, data), ..)
New expanded tree can be processed by common parser functions. This change
will help implementing template aliases.
Because a (template ..) node should have at least one child node, an empty
template (template []) is mapped to (string ''). Also a trivial string
(template [(string ..)]) node is unwrapped to (string ..) at parsing phase,
instead of compiling phase.
Now compiled template fragments are packed into a generic type, (func, data),
a string can be a valid template. This change allows us to unwrap a trivial
string node. See the next patch for details.
Before this patch, parsed and compiled templates were kept as lists. That
was inconvenient for applying transformation such as alias expansion.
This patch changes the types of the outermost objects as follows:
stage old new
-------- -------------- ------------------------------
parsed [(op, ..)] ('template', [(op, ..)])
compiled [(func, data)] (runtemplate, [(func, data)])
New templater.parse() function has the same signature as revset.parse()
and fileset.parse().
Silent failure hides bugs and makes it harder to track down the issue. It's
worse than raising exception.
In future patches, I plan to sort out template functions that require 'ui',
'ctx', 'fctx', etc. so that incompatible functions are excluded and the doc can
say in which context these functions are usable.
@templatefunc('label', requires=('ui',))
def label(context, mapping, args):
...
If your mercurial/templates/ directory is dirty, then the template system would
otherwise import duplicate templates from the .orig files and potentially try to
parse .rej files.
Since editing/reverting these templates isn't an unexpected action, and since
they're in .hgignore, it's best that the template system know to skip them."
To describe the bug this fix is addressing, one can do
``$ hg status -T "{label('red', path)}\n" --color=debug``
and observe that the label is not applied before my fix and applied with it.
Instead of the mapping hack introduced by d4686e0c15c9, this patch changes the
way how a label symbol is evaluated. This is still hackish, but should be more
predictable in that it doesn't depend on the known color effects.
This change is intended to eliminate the reference to color._effects so that
color.templatelabel() can be merged with templater.label().
Before this, "{noniterable % template}" raised an exception. This tries to
provide a better indication for the common case, where a left-hand-side
expression is a keyword.
A function argument may be an integer. In this case, it isn't necessary to
convert a value to string and back to integer.
Because an argument may be an arbitrary object (e.g. date tuple), TypeError
should be caught as well.
If a key is constructed from a template expression, it may be a generator.
In that case, a key have to be stringified.
A dictarg should never be a generator, but this patch also changes it to
call evalfuncarg() for consistency.
High-level use case: printing a list of objects with formatter
when each object in turn contains a list of properties (like
when % template symbol is used in {things % '{thing}'}
Let the top-level list contain one thing with two properties:
objs = [{
'props': [
{ 'value': 1, 'show': 1 },
{ 'value': 2 }]
}]
(please note that second property does not have 'show' key)
If a templateformatter is used to print this with template
"{props % '{if(show, value)}'}"
current implementation will print value for both properties,
which is a bug. This happens because in `templater.runmap`
function we only rewrite mapping values with existing new
values for each item. If some mapping value is missing in
the item, it will not be removed.
In this case, a template is parsed recursively with no thunk for lazy
evaluation. This patch prevents recursion by putting a dummy of the same name
into a cache that will be referenced while parsing if there's a recursion.
changeset = {files % changeset}\n
~~~~~~~~~
= [(_runrecursivesymbol, 'changeset')]