On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 6:57 AM, Junio C Hamano <[email protected]> wrote:
> Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <[email protected]> writes:
>
>> + echo 2e >expect &&
>> + # In PCRE \d in [\d] is like saying "0-9", and matches the 2
>> + # in 2e...
>> + git -C num_commits log -1 --pretty="tformat:%s" -F -E --perl-regexp
>> --grep="[\d]" >actual &&
>> + test_cmp expect actual &&
>> + echo 1d >expect &&
>> + # ...in POSIX basic & extended it is the same as [d],
>> + # i.e. "d", which matches 1d, but not and does not match 2e.
>
> s/not and//; I think.
Will fix.
>> + git -C num_commits log -1 --pretty="tformat:%s" -F -E --grep="[\d]"
>> >actual &&
>> test_cmp expect actual
>> '
>>
>> @@ -280,6 +301,77 @@ test_expect_success 'log with grep.patternType
>> configuration and command line' '
>> test_cmp expect actual
>> '
>>
>> +test_expect_success 'log with various grep.patternType configurations &
>> command-lines' '
>> + git init pattern-type &&
>> + (
>> + cd pattern-type &&
>> + test_commit 1 file A &&
>> +
>> + # The tagname is overridden here because creating a
>> + # tag called "(1|2)" as test_commit would otherwise
>> + # implicitly do would fail on e.g. MINGW.
>
> Thanks.
>
>> + # POSIX extended needs to have | escaped to match it
>> + # literally, whereas under basic this is the same as
>> + # (|2), i.e. it would also match "1". This test checks
>> + # for extended by asserting that it is not matching
>> + # what basic would match.
>> + git -c grep.patternType=extended log --pretty=tformat:%s \
>> + --grep="\|2" >actual.extended &&
>
> Makes sense.
>
>> + if test_have_prereq PCRE
>> + then
>> + # Only PCRE would match [\d]\| with only
>> + # "(1|2)" due to [\d]. POSIX basic would match
>> + # both it and "1", and POSIX extended would
>> + # match neither.
>
> OK. BRE would match because the other side of "\|" is empty to
> match anything?
Yes. I'll clarify this. It's not just a POSIX basic feature. The same
is true of extended and perl. E.g.:
git grep [-E|-P] 'foo|bar'
Both match the same as:
git grep [-E|-P] '(foo|bar)'
>> + git -c grep.patternType=perl log --pretty=tformat:%s \
>> + --grep="[\d]\|" >actual.perl &&
>> + test_cmp expect.perl actual.perl
>> + fi &&
>