* Implement exclusive and inclusive ranges with .. and ..=
This commit adds right-exclusive ranges.
The original a..b inclusive syntax was changed to reflect the Rust notation.
New a..=b syntax was introduced to have the old behavior.
Currently, both a.. and b..= is valid, and it is unclear whether it's valid
to impose restrictions.
The original issue suggests .. for inclusive and ..< for exclusive ranges,
this can be implemented by making simple changes to this commit.
* Fix collect tests by changing ranges to ..=
* Fix clippy lints in exclusive range matching
* Implement exclusive ranges using `..<`
* remove unused dependencies
* moved umask to cfg(unix)
* changed Inflector to inflector, hoping it fixes the issue.
* roll back Inflector
* removed commented out deps now that everything looks good.
Previously, lite parse would stack up opening delimiters in vec, and if we
didn't close everything off, it would simply return an error with a partial form
that didn't include the missing closing delimiters. This commits adds those
delimiters so that `classify_block` can parse correctly.
The completion engine maps completion locations to spans on a line, which
indicate whther to complete a command name, flag name, argument, and so on.
Initial implementation is simplistic, with some rough edges, since it relies
heavily on the parser's interpretation. For example
du -
if asking for completions, `-` is considered a positional argument by the
parser, but the user is likely looking for a flag. These scenarios will be
addressed in a series of progressive enhancements to the engine.
* Add deserialization of Primitive::Duration; Fixes#2373
* Implement Sleep command
* Add comment saying you should name your rest field "rest"
* Fix typo
* Add documentation for sleep command
* Changed time units as outlined in issue #2353.
Also applied changes to to_str for Unit - not sure if that was what was wanted.
* Forgot the tests!
* Updated primitive.rs to match changes.
* Updated where example to match changes.
* And the html test!
* Move lite_parse tests into a submodule
* Have lite_parse return partial parses when error encountered.
Although a parse fails, we can generally still return what was successfully
parsed. This is useful, for example, when figuring out completions at some
cursor position, because we can map the cursor to something more structured
(e.g., cursor is at a flag name).
Our own custom escaping unfortunately is far too simple to cover all cases.
Instead, the parser will now do no transforms on the args passed to an external
command, letting the process spawning library deal with doing the appropriate
escaping.