# $NetBSD: varmod-subst.mk,v 1.14 2023/12/18 11:13:51 rillig Exp $ # # Tests for the :S,from,to, variable modifier. all: mod-subst all: mod-subst-delimiter all: mod-subst-chain all: mod-subst-dollar WORDS= sequences of letters # The empty pattern never matches anything, except if it is anchored at the # beginning or the end of the word. .if ${WORDS:S,,,} != ${WORDS} . error .endif # The :S modifier flag '1' is applied exactly once. .if ${WORDS:S,e,*,1} != "s*quences of letters" . error .endif # The :S modifier flag '1' is applied to the first occurrence, no matter if # the occurrence is in the first word or not. .if ${WORDS:S,f,*,1} != "sequences o* letters" . error .endif # The :S modifier replaces every first match per word. .if ${WORDS:S,e,*,} != "s*quences of l*tters" . error .endif # The :S modifier flag 'g' replaces every occurrence. .if ${WORDS:S,e,*,g} != "s*qu*nc*s of l*tt*rs" . error .endif # The '^' in the search pattern anchors the pattern at the beginning of each # word, thereby matching a prefix. .if ${WORDS:S,^sequ,occurr,} != "occurrences of letters" . error .endif # The :S modifier with a '^' anchor replaces the whole word if that word is # exactly the pattern. .if ${WORDS:S,^of,with,} != "sequences with letters" . error .endif # The :S modifier does not match if the pattern is longer than the word. .if ${WORDS:S,^office,does not match,} != ${WORDS} . warning .endif # The '$' in the search pattern anchors the pattern at the end of each word, # thereby matching a suffix. .if ${WORDS:S,f$,r,} != "sequences or letters" . error .endif # The :S modifier with a '$' anchor replaces at most one occurrence per word. .if ${WORDS:S,s$,,} != "sequence of letter" . error .endif # The :S modifier with a '$' anchor replaces the whole word if that word is # exactly the pattern. .if ${WORDS:S,of$,,} != "sequences letters" . error .endif # The :S modifier with a '$' anchor and a pattern that is longer than a word # cannot match that word. .if ${WORDS:S,eof$,,} != ${WORDS} . warning .endif # The :S modifier with the '^' and '$' anchors matches an exact word. .if ${WORDS:S,^of$,,} != "sequences letters" . error .endif # The :S modifier with the '^' and '$' anchors does not match a word that # starts with the pattern but is longer than the pattern. .if ${WORDS:S,^o$,,} != ${WORDS} . error .endif # The :S modifier with the '^' and '$' anchors does not match a word that ends # with the pattern but is longer than the pattern. .if ${WORDS:S,^f$,,} != ${WORDS} . error .endif # The :S modifier with the '^' and '$' anchors does not match a word if the # pattern ends with the word but is longer than the word. .if ${WORDS:S,^eof$,,} != ${WORDS} . error .endif # The :S modifier with the '^' and '$' anchors does not match a word if the # pattern starts with the word but is longer than the word. .if ${WORDS:S,^office$,,} != ${WORDS} . error .endif # Except for the '^' and '$' anchors, the pattern does not contain any special # characters, so the '*' from the pattern would only match a literal '*' in a # word. .if ${WORDS:S,*,replacement,} != ${WORDS} . error .endif # Except for the '^' and '$' anchors, the pattern does not contain any special # characters, so the '.' from the pattern would only match a literal '.' in a # word. .if ${WORDS:S,.,replacement,} != ${WORDS} . error .endif # The '&' in the replacement is a placeholder for the text matched by the # pattern. .if ${:Uvalue:S,^val,&,} != "value" . error .endif .if ${:Uvalue:S,ue$,&,} != "value" . error .endif .if ${:Uvalue:S,^val,&-&-&,} != "val-val-value" . error .endif .if ${:Uvalue:S,ue$,&-&-&,} != "value-ue-ue" . error .endif # When a word is replaced with nothing, the remaining words are separated by a # single space, not two. .if ${1 2 3:L:S,2,,} != "1 3" . error .endif # In an empty expression, the ':S' modifier matches a single time, but only if # the search string is empty and anchored at either the beginning or the end # of the word. .if ${:U:S,,out-of-nothing,} != "" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,^,out-of-nothing,} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,$,out-of-nothing,} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,^$,out-of-nothing,} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,,out-of-nothing,g} != "" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,^,out-of-nothing,g} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,$,out-of-nothing,g} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,^$,out-of-nothing,g} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,,out-of-nothing,W} != "" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,^,out-of-nothing,W} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,$,out-of-nothing,W} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif .if ${:U:S,^$,out-of-nothing,W} != "out-of-nothing" . error .endif mod-subst: @echo $@: @echo :${:Ua b b c:S,a b,,:Q}: @echo :${:Ua b b c:S,a b,,1:Q}: @echo :${:Ua b b c:S,a b,,W:Q}: @echo :${:Ua b b c:S,b,,g:Q}: @echo :${:U1 2 3 1 2 3:S,1 2,___,Wg:S,_,x,:Q}: @echo ${:U12345:S,,sep,g:Q} # The :S and :C modifiers accept an arbitrary character as the delimiter, # including characters that are otherwise used as escape characters or # interpreted in a special way. This can be used to confuse humans. mod-subst-delimiter: @echo $@: @echo ${:U1 2 3:S 2 two :Q} horizontal tabulator @echo ${:U1 2 3:S 2 two :Q} space @echo ${:U1 2 3:S!2!two!:Q} exclamation mark @echo ${:U1 2 3:S"2"two":Q} quotation mark # In shell command lines, the hash does not need to be escaped. # It needs to be escaped in variable assignment lines though. @echo ${:U1 2 3:S#2#two#:Q} number sign @echo ${:U1 2 3:S$2$two$:Q} dollar sign @echo ${:U1 2 3:S%2%two%:Q} percent sign @echo ${:U1 2 3:S&2&two&:Q} ampersand @echo ${:U1 2 3:S'2'two':Q} apostrophe @echo ${:U1 2 3:S(2(two(:Q} left parenthesis @echo ${:U1 2 3:S)2)two):Q} right parenthesis @echo ${:U1 2 3:S*2*two*:Q} asterisk @echo ${:U1 2 3:S+2+two+:Q} plus sign @echo ${:U1 2 3:S,2,two,:Q} comma @echo ${:U1 2 3:S-2-two-:Q} hyphen-minus @echo ${:U1 2 3:S.2.two.:Q} full stop @echo ${:U1 2 3:S/2/two/:Q} solidus @echo ${:U1 2 3:S121two1:Q} digit @echo ${:U1 2 3:S:2:two::Q} colon @echo ${:U1 2 3:S;2;two;:Q} semicolon @echo ${:U1 2 3:S<22>two>:Q} greater-than sign @echo ${:U1 2 3:S?2?two?:Q} question mark @echo ${:U1 2 3:S@2@two@:Q} commercial at @echo ${:U1 2 3:SA2AtwoA:Q} capital letter @echo ${:U1 2 3:S[2[two[:Q} left square bracket @echo ${:U1 2 3:S\2\two\:Q} reverse solidus @echo ${:U1 2 3:S]2]two]:Q} right square bracket @echo ${:U1 2 3:S^2^two^:Q} circumflex accent @echo ${:U1 2 3:S_2_two_:Q} low line @echo ${:U1 2 3:S`2`two`:Q} grave accent @echo ${:U1 2 3:Sa2atwoa:Q} small letter @echo ${:U1 2 3:S{2{two{:Q} left curly bracket @echo ${:U1 2 3:S|2|two|:Q} vertical line @echo ${:U1 2 3:S}2}two}:Q} right curly bracket @echo ${:U1 2 3:S~2~two~:Q} tilde # The :S and :C modifiers can be chained without a separating ':'. # This is not documented in the manual page. # It works because ApplyModifier_Subst scans for the known modifiers g1W # and then just returns to ApplyModifiers. There, the colon is optionally # skipped (see the *st.next == ':' at the end of the loop). # # Most other modifiers cannot be chained since their parsers skip until # the next ':' or '}' or ')'. mod-subst-chain: @echo $@: @echo ${:Ua b c:S,a,A,S,b,B,}. # There is no 'i' modifier for the :S or :C modifiers. # The error message is "make: Unknown modifier 'i'", which is # kind of correct, although it is mixing the terms for variable # modifiers with the matching modifiers. @echo ${:Uvalue:S,a,x,i}. # No matter how many dollar signs there are, they all get merged # into a single dollar by the :S modifier. # # As of 2020-08-09, this is because ParseModifierPart sees a '$' and # calls Var_Parse to expand the variable. In all other places, the "$$" # is handled outside of Var_Parse. Var_Parse therefore considers "$$" # one of the "really stupid names", skips the first dollar, and parsing # continues with the next character. This repeats for the other dollar # signs, except the one before the delimiter. That one is handled by # the code that optionally interprets the '$' as the end-anchor in the # first part of the :S modifier. That code doesn't call Var_Parse but # simply copies the dollar to the result. mod-subst-dollar: @echo $@:${:U1:S,^,$,:Q}: @echo $@:${:U2:S,^,$$,:Q}: @echo $@:${:U3:S,^,$$$,:Q}: @echo $@:${:U4:S,^,$$$$,:Q}: @echo $@:${:U5:S,^,$$$$$,:Q}: @echo $@:${:U6:S,^,$$$$$$,:Q}: @echo $@:${:U7:S,^,$$$$$$$,:Q}: @echo $@:${:U8:S,^,$$$$$$$$,:Q}: @echo $@:${:U40:S,^,$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$,:Q}: # This generates no dollar at all: @echo $@:${:UU8:S,^,${:U$$$$$$$$},:Q}: # Here is an alternative way to generate dollar signs. # It's unexpectedly complicated though. @echo $@:${:U:range=5:ts\x24:C,[0-9],,g:Q}: # In modifiers, dollars are escaped using the backslash, not using another # dollar sign. Therefore, creating a dollar sign is pretty simple: @echo $@:${:Ugood3:S,^,\$\$\$,:Q}