Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines | |
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2019-01-16 | Update copyright year | Karen Arutyunov | 1 | -1/+1 | |
2018-08-07 | Add support for default extension specification, trailing dot escaping | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -2/+7 | |
For example: cxx{*}: extension = cxx cxx{foo} # foo.cxx cxx{foo.test} # foo.test (probably what we want...) cxx{foo.test...} # foo.test.cxx (... is this) cxx{foo..} # foo. cxx{foo....} # foo.. cxx{foo.....} # error (must come in escape pair) | |||||
2018-07-20 | Implement bash module | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -2/+0 | |
2018-07-16 | Implement in module | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -0/+59 | |
Given test.in containing something along these lines: foo = $foo$ Now we can do: using in file{test}: in{test.in} file{test}: foo = FOO The alternative variable substitution symbol can be specified with the in.symbol variable and lax (instead of the default strict) mode with in.substitution. For example: file{test}: in.symbol = '@' file{test}: in.substitution = lax |