diff options
author | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2022-10-14 06:50:51 +0200 |
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committer | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2022-10-14 06:50:51 +0200 |
commit | f79357e50255a8d2d459a71f0f5770f1d6702167 (patch) | |
tree | 066afb7198c8e70eef6f869b921dd16f0391ec07 | |
parent | 1f772024f31cbaaf44508a9495dd747f63e73e1f (diff) |
Proofreading changes to Testscript manual (for/while loops)
-rw-r--r-- | doc/testscript.cli | 136 |
1 files changed, 61 insertions, 75 deletions
diff --git a/doc/testscript.cli b/doc/testscript.cli index e3a9c43..770bcfc 100644 --- a/doc/testscript.cli +++ b/doc/testscript.cli @@ -1612,7 +1612,7 @@ description: +(':' <text>) \ -Note that the only purpose of having a separate (from the command flow control +Note that the only purpose of having separate (from the command flow control constructs) variable-only flow control constructs is to remove the error-prone requirement of having to specify \c{+} and \c{-} prefixes in group setup/teardown. @@ -1839,48 +1839,31 @@ variable-flow-body: *variable-like \ -A group of variables can be set in a loop, while iterating over elements of a -potentially empty list and setting the specified variable (called \i{loop -variable}) to the corresponding element on each iteration. At the end of the -iteration the loop variable contains the value of the last element, if any. - -In the first form the list results from an expression containing variable -expansions, function calls, eval contexts, and/or literal values. For example: +A group of variables can be set in a loop while iterating over elements of a +list. The iteration semantics is the same as in \c{command-for}. For example: \ -us = -ls = - -for v: $vs - us += $string.ucase($v) - ls += $string.lcase($v) +uvalues = +for v: $values + uvalues += $string.ucase($v) end \ -In the second form the list is read from \c{stdin} input. The input data can -be split into elements at newlines or whitespaces if \c{-n} or \c{-w} option, -respectively, is specified. This form supports the same set of options as the -\l{#builtins-set \c{set}} pseudo-builtin. For example: +Another example: \ -us = -ls = - +uvalues = cat values.txt | for -n v - us += $string.ucase($v) - ls += $string.lcase($v) + uvalues += $string.ucase($v) end \ -This example can actually be simplified as: +Or using the \c{stdin} redirect: \ -us = -ls = - +uvalues = for -n v <=values.txt - us += $string.ucase($v) - ls += $string.lcase($v) + uvalues += $string.ucase($v) end \ @@ -1897,16 +1880,16 @@ variable-flow-body: *variable-like \ -A group of variables can be set in a loop, while iterating until the condition -evaluates to \c{false}. The condition \c{command-line} semantics is the same -as in \c{scope-if}. For example: +A group of variables can be set in a loop while the condition evaluates to +\c{true}. The condition \c{command-line} semantics is the same as in +\c{scope-if}. For example: \ -r = +uvalues = i = [uint64] 0 - -while ($i != 2) - r += ($vs[$i]) +n = $size($values) +while ($i != $n) + uvalues += $string.ucase($values[$i]) i += 1 end \ @@ -2018,50 +2001,48 @@ command-flow-body: *(variable-line|command-like) \ -A group of commands can be executed in a loop, while iterating over elements -of a potentially empty list and setting the specified variable (called \i{loop -variable}) to the corresponding element on each iteration. At the end of the -iteration the loop variable contains the value of the last element, if any. -Note that in a compound test, commands inside \c{command-for} must not end -with \c{;}. Rather, \c{;} may follow \c{end}. +A group of commands can be executed in a loop while iterating over elements of +a list and setting the specified variable (called \i{loop variable}) to the +corresponding element on each iteration. At the end of the iteration the loop +variable contains the value of the last element, if any. Note that in a +compound test, commands inside \c{command-for} must not end with +\c{;}. Rather, \c{;} may follow \c{end}. -In the first form the list results from an expression containing variable -expansions, function calls, eval contexts, and/or literal values. For example: +The \c{for} loop has two forms: In the first form the list is specified as +arguments. Similar to the \c{for} loop in the Buildfile language, it can +contain variable expansions, function calls, evaluation contexts, and/or +literal values. For example: \ -ls = ; -for v: $vs - test1 $string.ucase($v) - ls += $string.lcase($v) +for v: $values + test1 $v end; -test2 $ls +test2 \ -In the second form the list is read from \c{stdin} input. The input data can -be split into elements at newlines or whitespaces if \c{-n} or \c{-w} option, -respectively, is specified. This form supports the same set of options as the -\l{#builtins-set \c{set}} pseudo-builtin. For example: +In the second form the list is read from the \c{stdin} input. The input data +is split into elements either at whitespaces (default) or newlines, which can +be controlled with the \c{-n|--newline} and \c{-w|--whitespace} options. +Overall, this form supports the same set of options as the \l{#builtins-set +\c{set}} pseudo-builtin. For example: \ -ls = ; cat values.txt | for -n v - test1 $string.ucase($v) - ls += $string.lcase($v) -end; -test2 $ls + test1 $v +end \ -This example can actually be simplified: +Or using the \c{stdin} redirect: \ -ls = ; for -n v <=values.txt - test1 $string.ucase($v) - ls += $string.lcase($v) -end; -test2 $ls + test1 $v +end \ +Both forms can include value attributes enclosed in \c{[]} to be applied to +each element, again similar to the \l{#builtins-set \c{set}} pseudo-builtin. + \h#syntax-command-while|Command-While| @@ -2075,22 +2056,27 @@ command-flow-body: *(variable-line|command-like) \ -A group of commands can be executed in a loop, while iterating until the -condition evaluates to \c{false}. The condition \c{command-line} semantics is -the same as in \c{scope-if}. Note that in a compound test, commands inside -\c{command-while} must not end with \c{;}. Rather, \c{;} may follow -\c{end}. For example: +A group of commands can be executed in a loop while a condition evaluates to +\c{true}. The condition \c{command-line} semantics is the same as in +\c{scope-if}. Note that in a compound test, commands inside \c{command-while} +must not end with \c{;}. Rather, \c{;} may follow \c{end}. For example: \ -r = ; i = [uint64] 0; -while ($i != 2) - v = ($vs[$i]) - test1 $v - r += $v +n = $size($values); +while ($i != $n) + test1 ($values[$i]) i += 1 end; -test2 $r +test2 +\ + +Another example: + +\ +while test -f $file + test1 $file +end \ |