The argument order is different from Mercurial's indent() function. I think
indent(prefix, content) is more readable for lengthy content. However,
indent(content, prefix, ...) might be better if we want to add an optional
firstline_prefix argument.
Template functions like indent() or fill() need to manipulate labeled
output. Since indent() is line oriented, it could be implemented as a
post-processing filter. OTOH, fill()/wrap() inserts additional "\n"s. If we
do that as a post process, colorized text could be split into multiple lines,
and would mess up graph log output. By using FormatRecorder, we can apply
text formatting in between labels.
I thought we could disallow text wrapping of labeled template fragments, but
the example in #1043 suggests that we do want to wrap(whole_template_output)
rather than simple description.wrap().
In `git_fetch()`, any glob present in `globs` is an "allow" mark. Using
`&[]` to represent an "allow-all" may be misleading, as it could
indicate that no branch (only the git HEAD) should be fetched.
By using an `Option<&[&str]>`, it is clearer that `None` means that
all branches are fetched.
Using &[String] forces the caller to materalize owned strings if they
have only references, which is costly. Using &[&str] makes it cheap
if the caller owns strings as well.
This eliminates ambiguous parsing between "func()" and "expr ()".
I chose "++" as template concatenation operator in case we want to add
bit-wise negate operator. It's also easier to find/replace than "~".
Here we know each field will never be empty, but separate(" ", foo, bar)
looks slightly better than 'foo ++ " " ++ bar'. Implicit template concatenation
will be disabled soon.
To be able to make e.g. `jj log some/path` perform well on cloud-based
repos, a custom revset engine needs to be able to see the paths to
filter by. That way it is able pass those to a server-side index. This
commit helps with that by effectively converting `jj log -r foo
some/path` into `jj log -r 'foo & file(some/path)'`.
It makes the APIs much simpler if we don't have to pass in information
about the initial operation when we create the `OpHeadsStore`. It also
makes the alternative `OpHeadsStore` implementations simpler since we
move some logic into a shared location (`ReadonlyRepo::init()`).
This effectively undoes ec07104126. Maybe some further refactoring
made it possible to move it back as I'm doing in this commit?
Since there's no easy API to snapshot the stale working copy without releasing
the lock, we have to compare the tree ids after reacquiring the lock. We could
instead manually snapshot and rebase the working-copy commit, but that would
require more copy-paste codes.
Closes#1310
By taking an `OperationId` argument to `IndexStore::write_index()`, we
can remove `associate_file_with_operation()` from the trait. That
simplifies the interace a little bit. The reason I noticed this was
that I'm trying to extract a trait for `IndexStore`, and the word
"file" in it is too specific for e.g. a cloud-based implementation.
I plan to make `RepoLoader::init()` return a `Result`, which means
that `WorkspaceLoader::load()` will need to return more kinds of
errors. Making it return `WorkspaceLoadError` is a good start. By also
extracting a function for converting `WorkspaceLoadError` to
`CommandError`, we can reuse a the handling of `PathError` in
`cli_util`.
I'm about to make `RepoLoader::init()` return a `Result`, and I don't
want to have to wrap that in a new error in
`ReadonlyRepo::load_at_head()` since that's only used in tests.