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author | Laurent Bercot <ska-skaware@skarnet.org> | 2020-11-24 17:56:57 +0000 |
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committer | Laurent Bercot <ska-skaware@skarnet.org> | 2020-11-24 17:56:57 +0000 |
commit | 49b387bb53e76eecd2b6cf4f89f3146fc2198bd3 (patch) | |
tree | 6dc1c9dc123a685f02ca29564fe6d58194cedfcb /doc/el_transform.html | |
parent | 6d217dbeac86c8e5a15fed4c7d3a58d81420d9b0 (diff) | |
download | execline-49b387bb53e76eecd2b6cf4f89f3146fc2198bd3.tar.xz |
Fix chomping: only make it default on line-processing binaries
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/el_transform.html')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/el_transform.html | 22 |
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/el_transform.html b/doc/el_transform.html index cb163a8..e15ec69 100644 --- a/doc/el_transform.html +++ b/doc/el_transform.html @@ -41,6 +41,10 @@ is used, which means that the default delimiters are spaces, newlines, carriage returns and tabs. </p> +<p> + (The <a href="forstdin.html">forstdin</a> command is a small exception: +by default, it only recognizes newlines as delimiters.) +</p> <a name="crunch"> <h2> Crunching </h2> @@ -53,6 +57,8 @@ three consecutive spaces, or a space and 4 tab characters, with a single space. This is called <em>crunching</em>, and it is done by giving the <tt>-C</tt> switch to the substitution command. The remaining delimiter will always be the first in the sequence. +Chomping is <em>off</em> by default, or if you give the <tt>-c</tt> +switch. </p> <p> @@ -66,8 +72,10 @@ remaining delimiter will always be the first in the sequence. <p> Sometimes you don't want the last delimiter in a value. <em>Chomping</em> deletes the last character of a value if it is a -delimiter. It can be requested by giving the <tt>-n</tt> switch to the -substitution command. Note that chomping always happens <em>after</em> +delimiter. It is requested by giving the <tt>-n</tt> switch to the +substitution command. You can turn it off by giving the <tt>-N</tt> +switch. It is off by default unless mentioned in the documentation +page of specific binaries. Note that chomping always happens <em>after</em> crunching, which means you can use crunching+chomping to ignore, for instance, a set of trailing spaces. </p> @@ -112,11 +120,11 @@ several advantages over the shell's: </p> <ul> - <li> Splitting has to be explicitly requested, by specifying the -<tt>-s</tt> option to commands that perform -<a href="el_substitute.html">substitution</a>. By default, -substitutions are performed as is, without interpreting the -characters in the value. </li> + <li> Splitting is off by default, which means that substitutions +are performed as is, without interpreting the characters in the +value. In execline, splitting has to be explicitly requested +by specifying the <tt>-s</tt> option to commands that perform +<a href="el_substitute.html">substitution</a>. </li> <li> Positional parameters are never split, so that execline scripts can handle arguments the way the user intended to. To split <tt>$1</tt>, for instance, you have to ask for it |