Rename @{has,matches}-literal to ...text

Reasons:
1. It's shorter.
2. `@matches-literal` seems to contradict itself: a regex is
   intrinsically not a literal match, while it is still a textual match.
This commit is contained in:
Noah Lev 2022-08-09 21:52:04 -07:00
parent 2787eb05d5
commit 01408fc627

View File

@ -41,15 +41,15 @@ There are a number of supported commands:
`PATH` is relative to the output directory. It can be given as `-`
which repeats the most recently used `PATH`.
* `@has-literal PATH PATTERN` and `@matches-literal PATH PATTERN` checks
* `@hastext PATH PATTERN` and `@matchestext PATH PATTERN` checks
for the occurrence of the given pattern `PATTERN` in the specified file.
Only one occurrence of the pattern is enough.
For `@has-literal`, `PATTERN` is a whitespace-normalized (every consecutive
For `@hastext`, `PATTERN` is a whitespace-normalized (every consecutive
whitespace being replaced by one single space character) string.
The entire file is also whitespace-normalized including newlines.
For `@matches-literal`, `PATTERN` is a Python-supported regular expression.
For `@matchestext`, `PATTERN` is a Python-supported regular expression.
The file remains intact but the regexp is matched without the `MULTILINE`
and `IGNORECASE` options. You can still use a prefix `(?m)` or `(?i)`
to override them, and `\A` and `\Z` for definitely matching
@ -542,19 +542,19 @@ ERR_COUNT = 0
def check_command(c, cache):
try:
cerr = ""
if c.cmd in ['has', 'has-literal', 'matches', 'matches-literal']: # string test
if c.cmd in ['has', 'hastext', 'matches', 'matchestext']: # string test
regexp = c.cmd.startswith('matches')
if len(c.args) == 1 and not regexp and 'literal' not in c.cmd: # @has <path> = file existence
if len(c.args) == 1 and not regexp and 'text' not in c.cmd: # @has <path> = file existence
try:
cache.get_file(c.args[0])
ret = True
except FailedCheck as err:
cerr = str(err)
ret = False
elif len(c.args) == 2 and 'literal' in c.cmd: # @has-literal/matches-literal <path> <pat> = string test
elif len(c.args) == 2 and 'text' in c.cmd: # @hastext/matchestext <path> <pat> = string test
cerr = "`PATTERN` did not match"
ret = check_string(cache.get_file(c.args[0]), c.args[1], regexp)
elif len(c.args) == 3 and 'literal' not in c.cmd: # @has/matches <path> <pat> <match> = XML tree test
elif len(c.args) == 3 and 'text' not in c.cmd: # @has/matches <path> <pat> <match> = XML tree test
cerr = "`XPATH PATTERN` did not match"
ret = get_nb_matching_elements(cache, c, regexp, True) != 0
else: