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-rw-r--r--doc/manual.cli18
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/manual.cli b/doc/manual.cli
index cb6c1ec..e15cfa8 100644
--- a/doc/manual.cli
+++ b/doc/manual.cli
@@ -3546,6 +3546,17 @@ Note also that the name semantics was carefully tuned to be \i{reversible} to
its syntactic representation for common non-name values, such as paths,
command line options, etc., that are usually found in \c{buildfiles}.|
+To get to individual elements of a list, an expansion can be followed by a
+subscript. Note that subscripts are only recognize inside evaluation contexts
+and there should be no space between the expansion and \c{[}. For example:
+
+\
+x = foo bar
+
+info ($x[0]) # foo
+info ($regex.split('foo bar', ' ', '')[1]) # bar
+\
+
Names are split into a list at whitespace boundaries with certain other
characters treated as syntax rather than as part of the value. Here are
a few example:
@@ -5261,13 +5272,14 @@ specification for details.|
Note that some wildcard characters may have special meaning in certain
contexts. For instance, \c{[} at the beginning of a value will be interpreted
-as the start of the attribute list while \c{?} in the eval context is part of
-the ternary operator. In such cases the wildcard character will have to be
-escaped, for example:
+as the start of the attribute list while \c{?} and \c{[} in the eval context
+are part of the ternary operator and value subscript, respectively. In such
+cases the wildcard character will need to be escaped, for example:
\
x = \[1-9]-foo.txt
y = (foo.\?xx)
+z = ($foo\[123].txt)
\
If a pattern ends with a directory separator, then it only matches