Strip trailing whitespace in files (#4575)

* Strip trailing whitespace in rs files

* Strip trailing whitespace in toml files

* Strip trailing whitespace in md files

* Strip trailing whitespace in nu files
This commit is contained in:
Joseph T. Lyons
2022-02-21 08:38:15 -05:00
committed by GitHub
parent 968427c4e9
commit 4f367a59de
33 changed files with 83 additions and 83 deletions

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@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ impl Command for ErrorMake {
description: "Create a custom error for a custom command",
example: r#"def foo [x] {
let span = (metadata $x).span;
error make {msg: "this is fishy", label: {text: "fish right here", start: $span.start, end: $span.end } }
error make {msg: "this is fishy", label: {text: "fish right here", start: $span.start, end: $span.end } }
}"#,
result: None,
}]

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@ -195,7 +195,7 @@ can use the `get` command.
ls | get name
```
This allows us to get to the list of strings that are the filenames rather
than having a full table. In some cases, this can make the names easier to
than having a full table. In some cases, this can make the names easier to
work with.
You can continue to learn more about working with cells of the table by
@ -255,7 +255,7 @@ expressions, but they're wrapped in parentheses `()`.
```
10 * (3 + 4)
```
Here we use parentheses to create a higher math precedence in the math
Here we use parentheses to create a higher math precedence in the math
expression.
```
echo (2 + 3)
@ -375,7 +375,7 @@ the shorthand path to retrieve only the cell data inside the "cwd" column.
```
(ls).name.4
```
This will retrieve the cell data in the "name" column on the 5th row (note:
This will retrieve the cell data in the "name" column on the 5th row (note:
row numbers are zero-based).
Rows and columns don't need to come in any specific order. You can get the
@ -388,8 +388,8 @@ same value using:
fn engineq_tutor() -> &'static str {
r#"
Engine-q is the upcoming engine for Nushell. Build for speed and correctness,
it also comes with a set of changes from Nushell versions prior to 0.60. To
Engine-q is the upcoming engine for Nushell. Build for speed and correctness,
it also comes with a set of changes from Nushell versions prior to 0.60. To
get ready for engine-q look for some of these changes that might impact your
current scripts:
@ -398,7 +398,7 @@ current scripts:
* Environment variables can now contain more than just strings. Structured
values are converted to strings for external commands using converters.
* `if` will now use an `else` keyword before the else block.
* We're moving from "config.toml" to "config.nu". This means startup will
* We're moving from "config.toml" to "config.nu". This means startup will
now be a script file.
* `config` and its subcommands are being replaced by a record that you can
update in the shell which contains all the settings under the variable

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@ -5,10 +5,10 @@ pub fn unsupported_input_error(span: Span) -> Value {
Value::Error {
error: ShellError::UnsupportedInput(
String::from(
"Only dates with timezones are supported. The following formats are allowed \n
* %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z -- 2020-04-12 22:10:57 +02:00 \n
* %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S%.6f %z -- 2020-04-12 22:10:57.213231 +02:00 \n
* rfc3339 -- 2020-04-12T22:10:57+02:00 \n
"Only dates with timezones are supported. The following formats are allowed \n
* %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z -- 2020-04-12 22:10:57 +02:00 \n
* %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S%.6f %z -- 2020-04-12 22:10:57.213231 +02:00 \n
* rfc3339 -- 2020-04-12T22:10:57+02:00 \n
* rfc2822 -- Tue, 1 Jul 2003 10:52:37 +0200",
),
span,

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@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ impl Command for Empty {
Value::List {
vals: vec![
Value::Record{
cols: vec!["2020/04/16".to_string(), "2020/07/10".to_string(), "2020/11/16".to_string()],
cols: vec!["2020/04/16".to_string(), "2020/07/10".to_string(), "2020/11/16".to_string()],
vals: vec![
Value::List{vals: vec![
Value::Int{val: 33, span: Span::test_data()},

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@ -77,22 +77,22 @@ impl Command for Flatten {
result: Some(Value::List{
vals: vec![
Value::Record{
cols: vec!["a".to_string(), "d".to_string(), "e".to_string()],
cols: vec!["a".to_string(), "d".to_string(), "e".to_string()],
vals: vec![Value::test_string("b"), Value::test_int(1), Value::List{vals: vec![Value::test_int(4), Value::test_int(3)], span: Span::test_data()} ],
span: Span::test_data()
},
Value::Record{
cols: vec!["a".to_string(), "d".to_string(), "e".to_string()],
cols: vec!["a".to_string(), "d".to_string(), "e".to_string()],
vals: vec![Value::test_string("b"), Value::test_int(2), Value::List{vals: vec![Value::test_int(4), Value::test_int(3)], span: Span::test_data()} ],
span: Span::test_data()
},
Value::Record{
cols: vec!["a".to_string(), "d".to_string(), "e".to_string()],
cols: vec!["a".to_string(), "d".to_string(), "e".to_string()],
vals: vec![Value::test_string("b"), Value::test_int(3), Value::List{vals: vec![Value::test_int(4), Value::test_int(3)], span: Span::test_data()} ],
span: Span::test_data()
},
Value::Record{
cols: vec!["a".to_string(), "d".to_string(), "e".to_string()],
cols: vec!["a".to_string(), "d".to_string(), "e".to_string()],
vals: vec![Value::test_string("b"), Value::test_int(4), Value::List{vals: vec![Value::test_int(4), Value::test_int(3)], span: Span::test_data()} ],
span: Span::test_data()
}