Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022-09-02 | Rename in.substitution variable to in.mode | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -1/+1 | |
The original name is still recognized for backwards compatibility. | |||||
2020-02-07 | Drop copyright notice from source code | Karen Arutyunov | 1 | -1/+0 | |
2019-01-16 | Update copyright year | Karen Arutyunov | 1 | -1/+1 | |
2018-09-04 | Rename .test/test{} to .testscript/testscript{} | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -1/+1 | |
2018-07-17 | Add --after <ref-file> option for testscript touch builtin | Karen Arutyunov | 1 | -3/+1 | |
2018-07-17 | Add temporary sleep to in test to verify debugging hypothesis | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -0/+3 | |
2018-07-17 | Handle executables (permissions, extensions) in in::rule | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -0/+17 | |
2018-07-16 | Implement in module | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -0/+96 | |
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 |