From 9c3aeef99a64c44e5a37170c9440c591f223bb4a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jun T Date: Tue, 12 May 2015 15:39:18 +0900 Subject: unposted: include doc tweek to expn.yo from 35071 expn.yo is now essentially the same as commit 6269db8 --- ChangeLog | 4 ++-- Doc/Zsh/expn.yo | 12 ++++++------ 2 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog index cb073f93d..491fab825 100644 --- a/ChangeLog +++ b/ChangeLog @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ 2015-05-12 Jun-ichi Takimoto - * 35086: Doc/Zsh/expn.yo: reapply 35067 which has been - mistakenly reverted by 35075 + * 35086: Doc/Zsh/expn.yo: reapply 35067 (with 35071) which + has been mistakenly reverted by 35075 2015-05-12 Daniel Hahler diff --git a/Doc/Zsh/expn.yo b/Doc/Zsh/expn.yo index 6bb0b4ada..afd6b1ff9 100644 --- a/Doc/Zsh/expn.yo +++ b/Doc/Zsh/expn.yo @@ -1023,15 +1023,15 @@ Quoting using one of the tt(q) family of flags does not work for this purpose since quotes are not stripped from non-pattern characters by tt(GLOB_SUBST). In other words, -example(foo='a\ b' -[[ 'a b' = ${~foo} ]]) +example(pattern=${(q)str} +[[ $str = ${~pattern} ]]) -fails, whereas +works if tt($str) is tt('a*b') but not if it is tt('a b'), whereas -example(foo='a\*b' -[[ 'a*b' = ${~foo} ]]) +example(pattern=${(b)str} +[[ $str = ${~pattern} ]]) -succeeds. The tt(b) flag ensures the correct quoting. +is always true for any possible value of tt($str). ) item(tt(Q))( Remove one level of quotes from the resulting words. -- cgit v1.2.3