| 1 | Notes on Word Evaluation
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| 2 | ========================
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| 3 |
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| 4 | There are a few contexts for word evaluation.
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| 5 |
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| 6 | EvalWordSequence:
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| 7 |
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| 8 | echo $s "${a[@]}"
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| 9 | declare -a a=( $s "${a[@]}" )
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| 10 |
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| 11 | EvalWordToAny
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| 12 |
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| 13 | a="$s ${a[@]}" (Although bash decays this)
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| 14 |
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| 15 | EvalWordToString
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| 16 |
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| 17 | echo foo > "$s ${a[@]}" # error because it should be a string
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| 18 |
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| 19 | Glossary
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| 20 | --------
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| 21 |
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| 22 | Unevaluated:
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| 23 | word
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| 24 | word_part
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| 25 |
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| 26 | Evaluated:
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| 27 |
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| 28 | part_value
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| 29 |
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| 30 | fragment
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| 31 |
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| 32 | fragment_groups? groups have one-on-one correspondence with words?
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| 33 | Every word should be a flat list of fragments?
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| 34 |
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| 35 | frame
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| 36 | arg
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| 37 |
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| 38 | Schema Changes
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| 39 |
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| 40 | | StringPartValue(string s, bool quoted)
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| 41 |
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| 42 | | fragment(string s, bool quoted)
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| 43 |
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| 44 | Or maybe it should just be a flat array of StringPartValue?
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| 45 |
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| 46 | Simpler Way?
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| 47 | --------
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| 48 |
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| 49 | If the goal is just to elide $empty and not $empty""
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| 50 | And you never elide ANYTHING in "${a[@]}" or "$@"
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| 51 |
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| 52 | This is just all in one word.
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| 53 |
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| 54 | Logic: if the word consists of all StringPartValue which are unquoted and
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| 55 | IFS splitting gives NOTHING, then omit the whole word? That can come first?
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| 56 |
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| 57 | I still need _Reframe : fargment groups into frames
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| 58 |
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| 59 | fragment groups are things not separated by a hard barrier. "${a[@]}" has
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| 60 | internal barriers that can never be broken (they will never be joined)
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| 61 |
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| 62 |
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| 63 | EvalWordSequence
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| 64 | ----------------
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| 65 |
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| 66 | Let's talk about the hard case first. EvalWordSequence gets a list of words
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| 67 | from the parser (and after brace expansion), and it calls _EvalSplitGlob in a
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| 68 | loop on each word.
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| 69 |
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| 70 | So the processing of each word is separate. Each word results in ZERO or more
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| 71 | argv entries. I'll call each entry an "arg" from now on.
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| 72 |
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| 73 | Each CompoundWord is composed of an array of word_part. But this is actually
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| 74 | a tree, because of cases like this:
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| 75 |
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| 76 | $ argv x${a:-"1 2" "3 4"}x
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| 77 |
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| 78 | The ${a} substitution is a word part, but it might expand into an ARRAY of
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| 79 | word_part:
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| 80 |
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| 81 | [ (DQ '1 2') (LiteralPart ' ') (DQ '3 4') ]
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| 82 |
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| 83 | ### Step 1: _EvalParts
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| 84 |
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| 85 | This evaluates part, and then flattens out the part_value.CompoundPartValue
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| 86 | instances. So we're left with a flat list of StringPartValue and
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| 87 | ArrayPartValue. (Could this be encoded in the type system?)
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| 88 |
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| 89 | The only way to get an ArrayPartValue is "$@" or "${a[@]}". These are not
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| 90 | split or globbed, so we don't have to worry about them. We just have to "pass
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| 91 | them through" unchanged.
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| 92 |
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| 93 | ### Step 2: FrameFragments
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| 94 |
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| 95 | A fragment is either a StringPartValue or once PIECE of an ArrayPartValue.
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| 96 |
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| 97 | You need to do the reframing, but preserve whether each StringPartValue is
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| 98 | quoted. ArrayPartValues are always quoted.
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| 99 |
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| 100 |
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| 101 | So now we have an array of fragments. Should be
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| 102 |
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| 103 | [ fragment(s Str, quoted Bool), ... ]
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| 104 |
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| 105 | Should we call these Frames?
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| 106 |
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| 107 |
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| 108 | ### Elide Frames if IFS has whitespace
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| 109 |
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| 110 | These are elided:
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| 111 |
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| 112 | empty=''
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| 113 | argv $empty
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| 114 | argv ${empty:-}
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| 115 |
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| 116 | These are not:
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| 117 |
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| 118 | argv "${empty}"
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| 119 | argv ${empty:-''}
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| 120 | argv ${empty:-""}
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| 121 | argv ""
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| 122 | argv $empty"" # joining two parts
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| 123 |
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| 124 |
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| 125 | ### Step 3: Maybe Glob Escape Frames
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| 126 |
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| 127 | Now go over each frame. If no fragment in the frame is quoted, it's like this:
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| 128 |
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| 129 | "$s"
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| 130 | "${a[@]}"
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| 131 |
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| 132 | We can just pass these through as
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| 133 |
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| 134 |
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| 135 |
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| 136 | any fragment in the frame is not quoted, then we
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| 137 | need to both split it and glob it.
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| 138 |
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| 139 | Splitting comes first, and globbing comes second. So we have to eescape in
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| 140 | the OPPOSITE order.
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| 141 |
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| 142 | ### Step 4: Maybe IFS Escape Frames
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| 143 |
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| 144 |
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| 145 | ### Step 5: Split Frames with IFS
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| 146 |
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| 147 | Rules: IFS is split into other. State machine is very complex!
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| 148 |
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| 149 | ### Step 6: Glob Frames with Globber
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| 150 |
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| 151 | Respect options: noglob, failglob, etc.
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| 152 |
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| 153 |
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| 154 | NOTE: globs inside strings are respected!
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| 155 |
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| 156 | a='*.py'
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| 157 | same as:
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| 158 | a=*.py # no globbing yet
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| 159 |
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| 160 | echo $a
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| 161 |
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| 162 |
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| 163 | Moral of the Story
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| 164 | ------------------
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| 165 |
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| 166 | This algorithm is horrible! It's almost impossible to reason about, and the
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| 167 | syntax is bad too. Oil will have something much simpler.
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| 168 |
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| 169 |
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| 170 |
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| 171 |
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| 172 | PROBLEMS:
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| 173 |
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| 174 | How to avoid eliding ""?
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| 175 |
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| 176 | I think if everything is quoted, then we can just
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| 177 |
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| 178 | These become fragments.
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| 179 |
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| 180 |
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| 181 |
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| 182 |
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| 183 |
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| 184 | Another Algorithm
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| 185 | -----------------
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| 186 |
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| 187 | FOR EACH WORD
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| 188 |
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| 189 | 1. Eval - word_part
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| 190 | 2. Flatten - word_part but no CompoundWordPart
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| 191 | (note: could combine these two steps if
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| 192 | _EvalWordPart(part, quoted=False) had an accumulator argument.
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| 193 |
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| 194 |
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| 195 | 3. MakeFrames(word_parts) -- handle StringPartValue and ArrayValue
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| 196 |
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| 197 | a=(1 '2 3' 4)
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| 198 | $x"${a[@]}"$y
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| 199 |
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| 200 | This has three frames.
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| 201 | The middle frame is just appended.
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| 202 | The first and last frame have to undergo splitting.
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| 203 |
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| 204 | This has one frame:
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| 205 |
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| 206 | $empty""
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| 207 |
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| 208 | One frame:
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| 209 |
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| 210 | ${empty:-}
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| 211 |
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| 212 |
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| 213 | A frame is zero or more args. It will never be joined with anything else.
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| 214 |
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| 215 |
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| 216 | # fragment is the same as StringPartvalue though.
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| 217 |
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| 218 | fragment = (string s, bool quoted)
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| 219 | frame = (fragment* frags)
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| 220 |
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| 221 |
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| 222 | 4. Elide certain frames. IFS is whitespace && everything is unquoted and
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| 223 | everything is IFS
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| 224 |
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| 225 | $a$b
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| 226 |
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| 227 | CHOICE:
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| 228 |
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| 229 | (A) 5. If everything in the frame is quoted, just join it end to end, and
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| 230 | emit it. Skip the next steps.
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| 231 |
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| 232 |
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| 233 | (B) 5. Join fragments in a frame, doing glob escaping and IFS escaping,
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| 234 | depending on "quoted" and depending on "noglob".
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| 235 |
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| 236 | 6. Split with IFS
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| 237 |
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| 238 | 7. Glob, appending to argv.
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| 239 |
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| 240 |
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| 241 |
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| 242 | POSIX on "$@":
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| 243 | ------------
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| 244 |
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| 245 | Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one. When the expansion
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| 246 | occurs within double-quotes, and where field splitting (see Field Splitting)
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| 247 | is performed, each positional parameter shall expand as a separate field,
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| 248 | with the provision that the expansion of the first parameter shall still be
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| 249 | joined with the beginning part of the original word (assuming that the
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| 250 | expanded parameter was embedded within a word), and the expansion of the last
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| 251 | parameter shall still be joined with the last part of the original word. If
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| 252 | there are no positional parameters, the expansion of '@' shall generate zero
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| 253 | fields, even when '@' is double-quoted.
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| 254 |
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| 255 |
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| 256 | POSIX on Field Splitting
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| 257 | -------------------------
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| 258 |
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| 259 | http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html#tag_18_06_05
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| 260 | https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html#Word-Splitting
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| 261 |
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| 262 | Summary:
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| 263 | 1. ' \t\n' is special. Whitespace is trimmed off the front and back.
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| 264 | 2. if IFS is '', no field splitting is performed.
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| 265 | 3. Otherwise, suppose IFS = ' ,\t'. Then IFS whitespace is space or comma.
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| 266 | a. IFS whitespace isgnored at beginning and end.
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| 267 | b. any other IFS char delimits the field, along with adjacent IFS
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| 268 | whitespace.
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| 269 | c. IFS whitespace shall delimit a field.
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| 270 |
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