document how to include= a path with a space in it
POSIX character classes allowed in globs was a surprise, but just happened to fall out of the implementation in a way that seems to behave correctly. mdwn2man has to be tweaked to render the example properly. The line I modified is the one that strips ikiwiki wikilinks out of the man page. Sponsored-by: Graham Spencer on Patreon
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@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ my $section=shift;
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print ".TH $prog $section\n";
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while (<>) {
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s{(\\?)\[\[([^\s\|\]]+)(\|[^\s\]]+)?\]\]}{$1 ? "[[$2]]" : $2}eg;
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s{(\\?)\[\[([^:\s\|\]]+)(\|[^\s\]]+)?\]\]}{$1 ? "[[$2]]" : $2}eg;
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s/\`([^\`]*)\`/\\fB$1\\fP/g;
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s/\`//g;
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s/^ *\./\\&./g;
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@ -29,3 +29,5 @@ upgrade supported from repository versions: 0 1 2 4
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The only workaround I found is to use a glob for the filepath which only works for the first space: *include='pictures/dir\*'*.
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[[!tag confirmed]]
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> [[fixed|done]] by documenting the `[[:space:]]` workaround. --[[Joey]]
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@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
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[[!comment format=mdwn
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username="joey"
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subject="""comment 4"""
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date="2023-05-15T19:40:59Z"
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content="""
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Thanks @aurtzy, that is a great observation! And a feature I was not
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actually aware of.
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So, I think that documenting this should be sufficient.
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(The `glob(7)` man page does document POSIX character classes as working in
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globs, so this is a fairly standard thing.)
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"""]]
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@ -40,6 +40,13 @@ elsewhere to allow removing it).
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files relative to the current directory, preferred content expressions
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match files relative to the top of the git repository.
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A glob is something like `foo.*` or `b?r`.
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Globs can also contain character classes,
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like `foo[Bb]ar`, as well as additional POSIX character classes like
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`[[:space:]]`. Which is useful, since a glob in a preferred content
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expression cannot contain spaces. See the `glob(7)` man page for more
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about globs.
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For example, suppose you put files into `archive` directories
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when you're done with them. Then you could configure your laptop to prefer
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to not retain those files, like this: `exclude=*/archive/*`
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@ -130,6 +137,13 @@ elsewhere to allow removing it).
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matches the glob. The values of metadata fields are matched case
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insensitively.
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A glob is something like `foo.*` or `b?r`.
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Globs can also contain character classes,
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like `foo[Bb]ar`, as well as additional POSIX character classes like
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`[[:space:]]`. Which is useful, since a glob in a preferred content
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expression cannot contain spaces. See the `glob(7)` man page for more
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about globs.
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To match a tag "done", use `metadata=tag=done`
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To match author metadata, use `metadata=author=*Smith`
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