Alignment and fill options only apply to numbers.
Rework the implementation to mainly branch on the format string rather
than the type information. This is more straightforward to maintain and
more straightforward for comptime evaluation.
Enums support being printed as decimal, hexadecimal, octal, and binary.
`formatInteger` is another possible format method that is
unconditionally called when the value type is struct and one of the
integer-printing format specifiers are used.
for structs, enums, and unions.
auto untagged unions are no longer printed as pointers; instead they are
printed as "{ ... }".
extern and packed untagged unions have each field printed, similar to
what gdb does.
also fix bugs in delimiter based reading
added adapter to AnyWriter and GenericWriter to help bridge the gap
between old and new API
make std.testing.expectFmt work at compile-time
std.fmt no longer has a dependency on std.unicode. Formatted printing
was never properly unicode-aware. Now it no longer pretends to be.
Breakage/deprecations:
* std.fs.File.reader -> std.fs.File.deprecatedReader
* std.fs.File.writer -> std.fs.File.deprecatedWriter
* std.io.GenericReader -> std.io.Reader
* std.io.GenericWriter -> std.io.Writer
* std.io.AnyReader -> std.io.Reader
* std.io.AnyWriter -> std.io.Writer
* std.fmt.format -> std.fmt.deprecatedFormat
* std.fmt.fmtSliceEscapeLower -> std.ascii.hexEscape
* std.fmt.fmtSliceEscapeUpper -> std.ascii.hexEscape
* std.fmt.fmtSliceHexLower -> {x}
* std.fmt.fmtSliceHexUpper -> {X}
* std.fmt.fmtIntSizeDec -> {B}
* std.fmt.fmtIntSizeBin -> {Bi}
* std.fmt.fmtDuration -> {D}
* std.fmt.fmtDurationSigned -> {D}
* {} -> {f} when there is a format method
* format method signature
- anytype -> *std.io.Writer
- inferred error set -> error{WriteFailed}
- options -> (deleted)
* std.fmt.Formatted
- now takes context type explicitly
- no fmt string
This PR consistently maps .ACCES into AccessDenied and .PERM into
PermissionDenied. AccessDenied is returned if the file mode bit
(user/group/other rwx bits) disallow access (errno was `EACCES`).
PermissionDenied is returned if something else denies access (errno was
`EPERM`) (immutable bit, SELinux, capabilities, etc). This somewhat
subtle distinction is a POSIX thing.
Most of the change is updating std.posix Error Sets to contain both
errors, and then propagating the pair up through caller Error Sets.
Fixes#16782
* use `tmp.dir.realpathAlloc()` to get full path into tmpDir instances
* use `testing.allocator` where that simplifies things (vs. manual ArenaAllocator for 1 or 2 allocs)
* Trust `TmpDir.cleanup()` to clean up contained files and sub-trees
* Remove some unnecessary absolute paths (enabling WASI to run the tests)
* Drop some no-longer necessary `[_][]const u8` casts
* Add scopes to reduce `var` usage in favor of `const`
This was done by regex substitution with `sed`. I then manually went
over the entire diff and fixed any incorrect changes.
This diff also changes a lot of `callconv(.C)` to `callconv(.c)`, since
my regex happened to also trigger here. I opted to leave these changes
in, since they *are* a correct migration, even if they're not the one I
was trying to do!
The previous implementation of buffered_reader always reads from the
unbuffered reader into the internal buffer, and then dumps the data onto
the destination. This is inefficient, as sometimes it's possible to read
directly into the destination. The previous strategy generates more
memory copies and unbuffered reads than necessary.
The compiler actually doesn't need any functional changes for this: Sema
does reification based on the tag indices of `std.builtin.Type` already!
So, no zig1.wasm update is necessary.
This change is necessary to disallow name clashes between fields and
decls on a type, which is a prerequisite of #9938.
On Windows, the console mode flag `ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING` determines whether or not ANSI escape codes are parsed/acted on. On the newer Windows Terminal, this flag is set by default, but on the older Windows Console, it is not set by default, but *can* be enabled (since Windows 10 RS1 from June 2016).
The new `File.getOrEnableAnsiEscapeSupport` function will get the current status of ANSI escape code support, but will also attempt to enable `ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING` on Windows if necessary which will provide better/more consistent results for things like `std.Progress` and `std.io.tty`.
This type of change was not done previously due to a mistaken assumption (on my part) that the console mode would persist after the run of a program. However, it turns out that the console mode is always reset to the default for each program run in a console session.
Instead of introducing YES_COLOR, a completely new standard, into the mix
it might make more sense to instead tag along with the CLICOLOR_FORCE env var,
which dates back to at least 2000 with FreeBSD 4.1.1 and which is
supported by tools like CMake.
<https://bixense.com/clicolors/>
Follow up to #19079, which made test names fully qualified.
This fixes tests that now-redundant information in their test names. For example here's a fully qualified test name before the changes in this commit:
"priority_queue.test.std.PriorityQueue: shrinkAndFree"
and the same test's name after the changes in this commit:
"priority_queue.test.shrinkAndFree"