1 |
## oils_failures_allowed: 0
|
2 |
## compare_shells: dash bash mksh zsh ash
|
3 |
|
4 |
# printf
|
5 |
# bash-completion uses this odd printf -v construction. It seems to mostly use
|
6 |
# %s and %q though.
|
7 |
#
|
8 |
# %s should just be
|
9 |
# declare $var='val'
|
10 |
#
|
11 |
# NOTE:
|
12 |
# /usr/bin/printf %q "'" seems wrong.
|
13 |
# $ /usr/bin/printf %q "'"
|
14 |
# ''\'''
|
15 |
#
|
16 |
# I suppose it is technically correct, but it looks very ugly.
|
17 |
|
18 |
|
19 |
printf
|
20 |
## status: 2
|
21 |
## OK mksh/zsh status: 1
|
22 |
## stdout-json: ""
|
23 |
|
24 |
|
25 |
var=foo
|
26 |
printf -v $var %s 'hello there'
|
27 |
argv.py "$foo"
|
28 |
## STDOUT:
|
29 |
['hello there']
|
30 |
## END
|
31 |
## N-I mksh/zsh/ash STDOUT:
|
32 |
-v['']
|
33 |
## END
|
34 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
35 |
['']
|
36 |
## END
|
37 |
|
38 |
|
39 |
val='"quoted" with spaces and \'
|
40 |
|
41 |
# quote 'val' and store it in foo
|
42 |
printf -v foo %q "$val"
|
43 |
# then round trip back to eval
|
44 |
eval "bar=$foo"
|
45 |
|
46 |
# debugging:
|
47 |
#echo foo="$foo"
|
48 |
#echo bar="$bar"
|
49 |
#echo val="$val"
|
50 |
|
51 |
test "$bar" = "$val" && echo OK
|
52 |
## STDOUT:
|
53 |
OK
|
54 |
## END
|
55 |
## N-I mksh/zsh/ash stdout-json: "-v"
|
56 |
## N-I mksh/zsh/ash status: 1
|
57 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: ""
|
58 |
## N-I dash status: 1
|
59 |
|
60 |
|
61 |
a=(a b c)
|
62 |
printf -v 'a[1]' %s 'foo'
|
63 |
echo status=$?
|
64 |
argv.py "${a[@]}"
|
65 |
## STDOUT:
|
66 |
status=0
|
67 |
['a', 'foo', 'c']
|
68 |
## END
|
69 |
## N-I mksh/zsh STDOUT:
|
70 |
-vstatus=0
|
71 |
['a', 'b', 'c']
|
72 |
## END
|
73 |
## N-I dash/ash stdout-json: ""
|
74 |
## N-I dash/ash status: 2
|
75 |
|
76 |
|
77 |
printf -v 'a[' %s 'foo'
|
78 |
echo status=$?
|
79 |
## STDOUT:
|
80 |
status=2
|
81 |
## END
|
82 |
## N-I ash/mksh/zsh stdout: -vstatus=0
|
83 |
|
84 |
|
85 |
var=foo
|
86 |
declare $var='hello there'
|
87 |
argv.py "$foo"
|
88 |
## STDOUT:
|
89 |
['hello there']
|
90 |
## END
|
91 |
## N-I dash/mksh/ash STDOUT:
|
92 |
['']
|
93 |
## END
|
94 |
|
95 |
|
96 |
var=foo
|
97 |
val='"quoted" with spaces and \'
|
98 |
# I think this is bash 4.4 only.
|
99 |
declare $var="${val@Q}"
|
100 |
echo "$foo"
|
101 |
## STDOUT:
|
102 |
'"quoted" with spaces and \'
|
103 |
## END
|
104 |
## OK osh STDOUT:
|
105 |
$'"quoted" with spaces and \\'
|
106 |
## END
|
107 |
## N-I dash/ash stdout-json: ""
|
108 |
## N-I dash/ash status: 2
|
109 |
## N-I mksh stdout-json: "\n"
|
110 |
## N-I zsh stdout-json: ""
|
111 |
## N-I zsh status: 1
|
112 |
|
113 |
|
114 |
case $SH in mksh|zsh|dash|ash) echo not implemented; exit ;; esac
|
115 |
# OK so printf is like assigning to a var.
|
116 |
# printf -v foo %q "$bar" is like
|
117 |
# foo=${bar@Q}
|
118 |
dollar='dollar'
|
119 |
f() {
|
120 |
local mylocal=foo
|
121 |
printf -v dollar %q '$' # assign foo to a quoted dollar
|
122 |
printf -v mylocal %q 'mylocal'
|
123 |
echo dollar=$dollar
|
124 |
echo mylocal=$mylocal
|
125 |
}
|
126 |
echo dollar=$dollar
|
127 |
echo --
|
128 |
f
|
129 |
echo --
|
130 |
echo dollar=$dollar
|
131 |
echo mylocal=$mylocal
|
132 |
## STDOUT:
|
133 |
dollar=dollar
|
134 |
--
|
135 |
dollar=\$
|
136 |
mylocal=mylocal
|
137 |
--
|
138 |
dollar=\$
|
139 |
mylocal=
|
140 |
## END
|
141 |
## OK osh STDOUT:
|
142 |
dollar=dollar
|
143 |
--
|
144 |
dollar='$'
|
145 |
mylocal=mylocal
|
146 |
--
|
147 |
dollar='$'
|
148 |
mylocal=
|
149 |
## END
|
150 |
## N-I dash/ash/mksh/zsh STDOUT:
|
151 |
not implemented
|
152 |
## END
|
153 |
|
154 |
|
155 |
printf -- '-%s-%s-%s-\n' 'a b' 'x y'
|
156 |
## STDOUT:
|
157 |
-a b-x y--
|
158 |
## END
|
159 |
|
160 |
|
161 |
printf -- '-%s-%s-\n' a b c d e
|
162 |
## STDOUT:
|
163 |
-a-b-
|
164 |
-c-d-
|
165 |
-e--
|
166 |
## END
|
167 |
|
168 |
|
169 |
printf '[%5s]\n' abc
|
170 |
printf '[%-5s]\n' abc
|
171 |
## STDOUT:
|
172 |
[ abc]
|
173 |
[abc ]
|
174 |
## END
|
175 |
|
176 |
|
177 |
printf '%d\n' 42
|
178 |
printf '%i\n' 42 # synonym
|
179 |
printf '%d\n' \'a # if first character is a quote, use character code
|
180 |
printf '%d\n' \"a # double quotes work too
|
181 |
printf '[%5d]\n' 42
|
182 |
printf '[%-5d]\n' 42
|
183 |
printf '[%05d]\n' 42
|
184 |
#printf '[%-05d]\n' 42 # the leading 0 is meaningless
|
185 |
#[42 ]
|
186 |
## STDOUT:
|
187 |
42
|
188 |
42
|
189 |
97
|
190 |
97
|
191 |
[ 42]
|
192 |
[42 ]
|
193 |
[00042]
|
194 |
## END
|
195 |
|
196 |
|
197 |
printf '[%6.4d]\n' 42
|
198 |
printf '[%.4d]\n' 42
|
199 |
printf '[%6.d]\n' 42
|
200 |
echo --
|
201 |
printf '[%6.4d]\n' -42
|
202 |
printf '[%.4d]\n' -42
|
203 |
printf '[%6.d]\n' -42
|
204 |
## STDOUT:
|
205 |
[ 0042]
|
206 |
[0042]
|
207 |
[ 42]
|
208 |
--
|
209 |
[ -0042]
|
210 |
[-0042]
|
211 |
[ -42]
|
212 |
## END
|
213 |
|
214 |
|
215 |
printf '[%6.4x]\n' 42
|
216 |
printf '[%.4x]\n' 42
|
217 |
printf '[%6.x]\n' 42
|
218 |
echo --
|
219 |
printf '[%6.4X]\n' 42
|
220 |
printf '[%.4X]\n' 42
|
221 |
printf '[%6.X]\n' 42
|
222 |
echo --
|
223 |
printf '[%6.4o]\n' 42
|
224 |
printf '[%.4o]\n' 42
|
225 |
printf '[%6.o]\n' 42
|
226 |
## STDOUT:
|
227 |
[ 002a]
|
228 |
[002a]
|
229 |
[ 2a]
|
230 |
--
|
231 |
[ 002A]
|
232 |
[002A]
|
233 |
[ 2A]
|
234 |
--
|
235 |
[ 0052]
|
236 |
[0052]
|
237 |
[ 52]
|
238 |
## END
|
239 |
|
240 |
|
241 |
printf '[%06d]\n' 42
|
242 |
printf '[%06d]\n' -42 # 6 TOTAL
|
243 |
echo --
|
244 |
printf '[%6.6d]\n' 42
|
245 |
printf '[%6.6d]\n' -42 # 6 + 1 for the - sign!!!
|
246 |
## STDOUT:
|
247 |
[000042]
|
248 |
[-00042]
|
249 |
--
|
250 |
[000042]
|
251 |
[-000042]
|
252 |
## END
|
253 |
|
254 |
|
255 |
printf '[%06x]\n' 42
|
256 |
printf '[%06X]\n' 42
|
257 |
printf '[%06o]\n' 42
|
258 |
## STDOUT:
|
259 |
[00002a]
|
260 |
[00002A]
|
261 |
[000052]
|
262 |
## END
|
263 |
|
264 |
|
265 |
printf '(%6s)\n' 42
|
266 |
printf '(%6s)\n' -42
|
267 |
printf '(%06s)\n' 42
|
268 |
printf '(%06s)\n' -42
|
269 |
echo status=$?
|
270 |
## STDOUT:
|
271 |
( 42)
|
272 |
( -42)
|
273 |
( 42)
|
274 |
( -42)
|
275 |
status=0
|
276 |
## END
|
277 |
# mksh is stricter
|
278 |
## OK mksh STDOUT:
|
279 |
( 42)
|
280 |
( -42)
|
281 |
((status=1
|
282 |
## END
|
283 |
|
284 |
|
285 |
printf '[%6s]\n' foo
|
286 |
printf '[%6.4s]\n' foo
|
287 |
printf '[%-6.4s]\n' foo
|
288 |
printf '[%6s]\n' spam-eggs
|
289 |
printf '[%6.4s]\n' spam-eggs
|
290 |
printf '[%-6.4s]\n' spam-eggs
|
291 |
## STDOUT:
|
292 |
[ foo]
|
293 |
[ foo]
|
294 |
[foo ]
|
295 |
[spam-eggs]
|
296 |
[ spam]
|
297 |
[spam ]
|
298 |
## END
|
299 |
|
300 |
|
301 |
printf '[%6.0s]\n' foo
|
302 |
printf '[%0.0s]\n' foo
|
303 |
## STDOUT:
|
304 |
[ ]
|
305 |
[]
|
306 |
## END
|
307 |
## N-I mksh stdout-json: "[ ]\n["
|
308 |
## N-I mksh status: 1
|
309 |
|
310 |
|
311 |
printf '[%6.s]\n' foo
|
312 |
printf '[%0.s]\n' foo
|
313 |
## STDOUT:
|
314 |
[ ]
|
315 |
[]
|
316 |
## END
|
317 |
## BUG zsh STDOUT:
|
318 |
[ foo]
|
319 |
[foo]
|
320 |
## END
|
321 |
## N-I mksh stdout-json: "[ ]\n["
|
322 |
## N-I mksh status: 1
|
323 |
|
324 |
|
325 |
printf '[%*s]\n' 9 hello
|
326 |
printf '[%.*s]\n' 3 hello
|
327 |
printf '[%*.3s]\n' 9 hello
|
328 |
printf '[%9.*s]\n' 3 hello
|
329 |
printf '[%*.*s]\n' 9 3 hello
|
330 |
## STDOUT:
|
331 |
[ hello]
|
332 |
[hel]
|
333 |
[ hel]
|
334 |
[ hel]
|
335 |
[ hel]
|
336 |
## END
|
337 |
|
338 |
|
339 |
printf '[%u]\n' 42
|
340 |
printf '[%o]\n' 42
|
341 |
printf '[%x]\n' 42
|
342 |
printf '[%X]\n' 42
|
343 |
echo
|
344 |
|
345 |
printf '[%X]\n' \'a # if first character is a quote, use character code
|
346 |
printf '[%X]\n' \'ab # extra chars ignored
|
347 |
|
348 |
## STDOUT:
|
349 |
[42]
|
350 |
[52]
|
351 |
[2a]
|
352 |
[2A]
|
353 |
|
354 |
[61]
|
355 |
[61]
|
356 |
## END
|
357 |
|
358 |
|
359 |
|
360 |
for big in $(( 1 << 32 )) $(( (1 << 63) - 1 )); do
|
361 |
printf '[%u]\n' $big
|
362 |
printf '[%o]\n' $big
|
363 |
printf '[%x]\n' $big
|
364 |
printf '[%X]\n' $big
|
365 |
echo
|
366 |
done
|
367 |
|
368 |
## STDOUT:
|
369 |
[4294967296]
|
370 |
[40000000000]
|
371 |
[100000000]
|
372 |
[100000000]
|
373 |
|
374 |
[9223372036854775807]
|
375 |
[777777777777777777777]
|
376 |
[7fffffffffffffff]
|
377 |
[7FFFFFFFFFFFFFFF]
|
378 |
|
379 |
## END
|
380 |
|
381 |
## BUG mksh STDOUT:
|
382 |
[1]
|
383 |
[1]
|
384 |
[1]
|
385 |
[1]
|
386 |
|
387 |
[2147483647]
|
388 |
[17777777777]
|
389 |
[7fffffff]
|
390 |
[7FFFFFFF]
|
391 |
|
392 |
## END
|
393 |
|
394 |
|
395 |
printf '%d\n' ''
|
396 |
## OK osh stdout-json: ""
|
397 |
## OK osh status: 1
|
398 |
## OK ash status: 1
|
399 |
## STDOUT:
|
400 |
0
|
401 |
## END
|
402 |
|
403 |
|
404 |
|
405 |
# most shells use 0 here
|
406 |
printf '%d\n' \'
|
407 |
printf '%d\n' \"
|
408 |
|
409 |
## OK mksh status: 1
|
410 |
## STDOUT:
|
411 |
0
|
412 |
0
|
413 |
## END
|
414 |
|
415 |
|
416 |
case $SH in mksh) echo 'weird bug'; exit ;; esac
|
417 |
|
418 |
# the mu character is U+03BC
|
419 |
|
420 |
printf '%x\n' \'μ
|
421 |
printf '%u\n' \'μ
|
422 |
printf '%o\n' \'μ
|
423 |
echo
|
424 |
|
425 |
u3=三
|
426 |
# u4=😘
|
427 |
|
428 |
printf '%x\n' \'$u3
|
429 |
printf '%u\n' \'$u3
|
430 |
printf '%o\n' \'$u3
|
431 |
echo
|
432 |
|
433 |
# mksh DOES respect unicode on the new Debian bookworm.
|
434 |
# but even building the SAME SOURCE from scratch, somehow it doesn't on Ubuntu 8.
|
435 |
# TBH I should probably just upgrade the mksh version.
|
436 |
#
|
437 |
# $ ./mksh -c 'printf "%u\n" \"$1' dummy $'\u03bc'
|
438 |
# printf: warning: : character(s) following character constant have been ignored
|
439 |
# 206
|
440 |
#
|
441 |
# andy@lenny:~/wedge/oils-for-unix.org/pkg/mksh/R52c$ cat /etc/os-release
|
442 |
# NAME="Ubuntu"
|
443 |
# VERSION="18.04.5 LTS (Bionic Beaver)"
|
444 |
# ID=ubuntu
|
445 |
# ID_LIKE=debian
|
446 |
# PRETTY_NAME="Ubuntu 18.04.5 LTS"
|
447 |
# VERSION_ID="18.04"
|
448 |
# HOME_URL="https://www.ubuntu.com/"
|
449 |
# SUPPORT_URL="https://help.ubuntu.com/"
|
450 |
# BUG_REPORT_URL="https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/"
|
451 |
# PRIVACY_POLICY_URL="https://www.ubuntu.com/legal/terms-and-policies/privacy-policy"
|
452 |
# VERSION_CODENAME=bionic
|
453 |
# UBUNTU_CODENAME=bionic
|
454 |
# andy@lenny:~/wedge/oils-for-unix.org/pkg/mksh/R52c$ env|egrep 'LC|LANG'
|
455 |
# LANG=en_US.UTF-8
|
456 |
# andy@lenny:~/wedge/oils-for-unix.org/pkg/mksh/R52c$ LC_CTYPE=C.UTF-8 ./mksh -c 'printf "%u\n" \"$1' dummy $'\u03bc'
|
457 |
# printf: warning: : character(s) following character constant have been ignored
|
458 |
# 206
|
459 |
# andy@lenny:~/wedge/oils-for-unix.org/pkg/mksh/R52c$ LANG=C.UTF-8 ./mksh -c 'printf "%u\n" \"$1' dummy $'\u03bc'
|
460 |
# printf: warning: : character(s) following character constant have been ignored
|
461 |
# 206
|
462 |
# andy@lenny:~/wedge/oils-for-unix.org/pkg/mksh/R52c$ LC_ALL=C.UTF-8 ./mksh -c 'printf "%u\n" \"$1' dummy $'\u03bc'
|
463 |
# printf: warning: : character(s) following character constant have been ignored
|
464 |
# 206
|
465 |
# andy@lenny:~/wedge/oils-for-unix.org/pkg/mksh/R52c$ LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 ./mksh -c 'printf "%u\n" \"$1' dummy $'\u03bc'
|
466 |
# printf: warning: : character(s) following character constant have been ignored
|
467 |
# 206
|
468 |
# andy@lenny:~/wedge/oils-for-unix.org/pkg/mksh/R52c$ LC_ALL=en_US.utf-8 ./mksh -c 'printf "%u\n" \"$1' dummy $'\u03bc'
|
469 |
# printf: warning: : character(s) following character constant have been ignored
|
470 |
# 206
|
471 |
|
472 |
|
473 |
## STDOUT:
|
474 |
3bc
|
475 |
956
|
476 |
1674
|
477 |
|
478 |
4e09
|
479 |
19977
|
480 |
47011
|
481 |
|
482 |
## END
|
483 |
## BUG dash/ash STDOUT:
|
484 |
ce
|
485 |
206
|
486 |
316
|
487 |
|
488 |
e4
|
489 |
228
|
490 |
344
|
491 |
|
492 |
## END
|
493 |
|
494 |
## BUG mksh STDOUT:
|
495 |
weird bug
|
496 |
## END
|
497 |
|
498 |
|
499 |
|
500 |
echo bytes1
|
501 |
not_utf8=$(python2 -c 'print("\xce\xce")')
|
502 |
|
503 |
printf '%x\n' \'$not_utf8
|
504 |
printf '%u\n' \'$not_utf8
|
505 |
printf '%o\n' \'$not_utf8
|
506 |
echo
|
507 |
|
508 |
echo bytes2
|
509 |
not_utf8=$(python2 -c 'print("\xbc\xbc")')
|
510 |
printf '%x\n' \'$not_utf8
|
511 |
printf '%u\n' \'$not_utf8
|
512 |
printf '%o\n' \'$not_utf8
|
513 |
echo
|
514 |
|
515 |
# Copied from data_lang/utf8_test.cc
|
516 |
|
517 |
echo overlong2
|
518 |
overlong2=$(python2 -c 'print("\xC1\x81")')
|
519 |
printf '%x\n' \'$overlong2
|
520 |
printf '%u\n' \'$overlong2
|
521 |
printf '%o\n' \'$overlong2
|
522 |
echo
|
523 |
|
524 |
echo overlong3
|
525 |
overlong3=$(python2 -c 'print("\xE0\x81\x81")')
|
526 |
printf '%x\n' \'$overlong3
|
527 |
printf '%u\n' \'$overlong3
|
528 |
printf '%o\n' \'$overlong3
|
529 |
echo
|
530 |
|
531 |
## STDOUT:
|
532 |
bytes1
|
533 |
ce
|
534 |
206
|
535 |
316
|
536 |
|
537 |
bytes2
|
538 |
bc
|
539 |
188
|
540 |
274
|
541 |
|
542 |
overlong2
|
543 |
c1
|
544 |
193
|
545 |
301
|
546 |
|
547 |
overlong3
|
548 |
e0
|
549 |
224
|
550 |
340
|
551 |
|
552 |
## END
|
553 |
|
554 |
|
555 |
|
556 |
case $SH in mksh) echo 'weird bug'; exit ;; esac
|
557 |
|
558 |
echo too large
|
559 |
too_large=$(python2 -c 'print("\xF4\x91\x84\x91")')
|
560 |
printf '%x\n' \'$too_large
|
561 |
printf '%u\n' \'$too_large
|
562 |
printf '%o\n' \'$too_large
|
563 |
echo
|
564 |
|
565 |
## STDOUT:
|
566 |
too large
|
567 |
111111
|
568 |
1118481
|
569 |
4210421
|
570 |
|
571 |
## END
|
572 |
|
573 |
## BUG dash/ash STDOUT:
|
574 |
too large
|
575 |
f4
|
576 |
244
|
577 |
364
|
578 |
|
579 |
## END
|
580 |
|
581 |
## BUG mksh STDOUT:
|
582 |
weird bug
|
583 |
## END
|
584 |
|
585 |
# osh rejects code points that are too large for a DIFFERENT reason
|
586 |
|
587 |
## OK osh STDOUT:
|
588 |
too large
|
589 |
f4
|
590 |
244
|
591 |
364
|
592 |
|
593 |
## END
|
594 |
|
595 |
|
596 |
|
597 |
printf '[%u]\n' -42
|
598 |
printf '[%o]\n' -42
|
599 |
printf '[%x]\n' -42
|
600 |
printf '[%X]\n' -42
|
601 |
## STDOUT:
|
602 |
[18446744073709551574]
|
603 |
[1777777777777777777726]
|
604 |
[ffffffffffffffd6]
|
605 |
[FFFFFFFFFFFFFFD6]
|
606 |
## END
|
607 |
|
608 |
# osh DISALLOWS this because the output depends on the machine architecture.
|
609 |
## N-I osh stdout-json: ""
|
610 |
## N-I osh status: 1
|
611 |
|
612 |
|
613 |
printf '[%f]\n' 3.14159
|
614 |
printf '[%.2f]\n' 3.14159
|
615 |
printf '[%8.2f]\n' 3.14159
|
616 |
printf '[%-8.2f]\n' 3.14159
|
617 |
printf '[%-f]\n' 3.14159
|
618 |
printf '[%-f]\n' 3.14
|
619 |
## STDOUT:
|
620 |
[3.141590]
|
621 |
[3.14]
|
622 |
[ 3.14]
|
623 |
[3.14 ]
|
624 |
[3.141590]
|
625 |
[3.140000]
|
626 |
## END
|
627 |
## N-I osh stdout-json: ""
|
628 |
## N-I osh status: 2
|
629 |
|
630 |
|
631 |
printf '[%8.4f]\n' 3.14
|
632 |
printf '[%08.4f]\n' 3.14
|
633 |
printf '[%8.04f]\n' 3.14 # meaning less 0
|
634 |
printf '[%08.04f]\n' 3.14
|
635 |
echo ---
|
636 |
# these all boil down to the same thing. The -, 8, and 4 are respected, but
|
637 |
# none of the 0 are.
|
638 |
printf '[%-8.4f]\n' 3.14
|
639 |
printf '[%-08.4f]\n' 3.14
|
640 |
printf '[%-8.04f]\n' 3.14
|
641 |
printf '[%-08.04f]\n' 3.14
|
642 |
## STDOUT:
|
643 |
[ 3.1400]
|
644 |
[003.1400]
|
645 |
[ 3.1400]
|
646 |
[003.1400]
|
647 |
---
|
648 |
[3.1400 ]
|
649 |
[3.1400 ]
|
650 |
[3.1400 ]
|
651 |
[3.1400 ]
|
652 |
## END
|
653 |
## N-I osh STDOUT:
|
654 |
---
|
655 |
## END
|
656 |
## N-I osh status: 2
|
657 |
|
658 |
|
659 |
printf '[%e]\n' 3.14
|
660 |
printf '[%E]\n' 3.14
|
661 |
printf '[%f]\n' 3.14
|
662 |
# bash is the only one that implements %F? Is it a synonym?
|
663 |
#printf '[%F]\n' 3.14
|
664 |
printf '[%g]\n' 3.14
|
665 |
printf '[%G]\n' 3.14
|
666 |
## STDOUT:
|
667 |
[3.140000e+00]
|
668 |
[3.140000E+00]
|
669 |
[3.140000]
|
670 |
[3.14]
|
671 |
[3.14]
|
672 |
## END
|
673 |
## N-I osh stdout-json: ""
|
674 |
## N-I osh status: 2
|
675 |
|
676 |
|
677 |
argv.py "$(printf 'a\tb')"
|
678 |
argv.py "$(printf '\xE2\x98\xA0')"
|
679 |
argv.py "$(printf '\044e')"
|
680 |
argv.py "$(printf '\0377')" # out of range
|
681 |
## STDOUT:
|
682 |
['a\tb']
|
683 |
['\xe2\x98\xa0']
|
684 |
['$e']
|
685 |
['\x1f7']
|
686 |
## END
|
687 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
688 |
['a\tb']
|
689 |
['\\xE2\\x98\\xA0']
|
690 |
['$e']
|
691 |
['\x1f7']
|
692 |
## END
|
693 |
|
694 |
|
695 |
argv.py "$(printf '\0377')"
|
696 |
argv.py "$(printf '\377')"
|
697 |
## STDOUT:
|
698 |
['\x1f7']
|
699 |
['\xff']
|
700 |
## END
|
701 |
|
702 |
|
703 |
argv.py "$(printf '\u2620')"
|
704 |
argv.py "$(printf '\U0000065f')"
|
705 |
## STDOUT:
|
706 |
['\xe2\x98\xa0']
|
707 |
['\xd9\x9f']
|
708 |
## END
|
709 |
## N-I dash/ash STDOUT:
|
710 |
['\\u2620']
|
711 |
['\\U0000065f']
|
712 |
## END
|
713 |
|
714 |
|
715 |
printf '[\Z]\n'
|
716 |
## STDOUT:
|
717 |
[\Z]
|
718 |
## END
|
719 |
|
720 |
|
721 |
printf '[%%]\n'
|
722 |
## STDOUT:
|
723 |
[%]
|
724 |
## END
|
725 |
|
726 |
|
727 |
printf '[%s]\n' '\044' # escapes not evaluated
|
728 |
printf '[%b]\n' '\044' # YES, escapes evaluated
|
729 |
echo status=$?
|
730 |
## STDOUT:
|
731 |
[\044]
|
732 |
[$]
|
733 |
status=0
|
734 |
## END
|
735 |
|
736 |
|
737 |
printf '[%b]\n' 'ab\ncd\cxy'
|
738 |
echo $?
|
739 |
## STDOUT:
|
740 |
[ab
|
741 |
cd0
|
742 |
## END
|
743 |
|
744 |
|
745 |
twomu=$'\u03bc\u03bc'
|
746 |
printf '[%s]\n' "$twomu"
|
747 |
printf '%c' "$twomu" | wc --bytes
|
748 |
## STDOUT:
|
749 |
[μμ]
|
750 |
1
|
751 |
## END
|
752 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
753 |
[$\u03bc\u03bc]
|
754 |
1
|
755 |
## END
|
756 |
## N-I ash STDOUT:
|
757 |
[\u03bc\u03bc]
|
758 |
1
|
759 |
## END
|
760 |
## N-I osh STDOUT:
|
761 |
[μμ]
|
762 |
0
|
763 |
## END
|
764 |
|
765 |
|
766 |
printf '%z' 42
|
767 |
echo status=$?
|
768 |
printf '%-z' 42
|
769 |
echo status=$?
|
770 |
## STDOUT:
|
771 |
status=1
|
772 |
status=1
|
773 |
## END
|
774 |
# osh emits parse errors
|
775 |
## OK dash/osh STDOUT:
|
776 |
status=2
|
777 |
status=2
|
778 |
## END
|
779 |
|
780 |
|
781 |
x='a b'
|
782 |
printf '[%q]\n' "$x"
|
783 |
## STDOUT:
|
784 |
['a b']
|
785 |
## END
|
786 |
## OK bash/zsh STDOUT:
|
787 |
[a\ b]
|
788 |
## END
|
789 |
## N-I ash/dash stdout-json: "["
|
790 |
## N-I ash status: 1
|
791 |
## N-I dash status: 2
|
792 |
|
793 |
|
794 |
# NOTE: coreutils /usr/bin/printf does NOT implement this %6q !!!
|
795 |
x='a b'
|
796 |
printf '[%6q]\n' "$x"
|
797 |
printf '[%1q]\n' "$x"
|
798 |
## STDOUT:
|
799 |
[ 'a b']
|
800 |
['a b']
|
801 |
## END
|
802 |
## OK bash/zsh STDOUT:
|
803 |
[ a\ b]
|
804 |
[a\ b]
|
805 |
## END
|
806 |
## N-I mksh/ash/dash stdout-json: "[["
|
807 |
## N-I mksh/ash status: 1
|
808 |
## N-I dash status: 2
|
809 |
|
810 |
|
811 |
printf '[%d] ' -42
|
812 |
echo status=$?
|
813 |
printf '[%i] ' -42
|
814 |
echo status=$?
|
815 |
|
816 |
# extra LEADING space too
|
817 |
printf '[%d] ' ' -42'
|
818 |
echo status=$?
|
819 |
printf '[%i] ' ' -42'
|
820 |
echo status=$?
|
821 |
|
822 |
# extra TRAILING space too
|
823 |
printf '[%d] ' ' -42 '
|
824 |
echo status=$?
|
825 |
printf '[%i] ' ' -42 '
|
826 |
echo status=$?
|
827 |
|
828 |
# extra TRAILING chars
|
829 |
printf '[%d] ' ' -42z'
|
830 |
echo status=$?
|
831 |
printf '[%i] ' ' -42z'
|
832 |
echo status=$?
|
833 |
|
834 |
exit 0 # ok
|
835 |
|
836 |
## STDOUT:
|
837 |
[-42] status=0
|
838 |
[-42] status=0
|
839 |
[-42] status=0
|
840 |
[-42] status=0
|
841 |
[-42] status=1
|
842 |
[-42] status=1
|
843 |
[-42] status=1
|
844 |
[-42] status=1
|
845 |
## END
|
846 |
# zsh is LESS STRICT
|
847 |
## OK zsh STDOUT:
|
848 |
[-42] status=0
|
849 |
[-42] status=0
|
850 |
[-42] status=0
|
851 |
[-42] status=0
|
852 |
[-42] status=0
|
853 |
[-42] status=0
|
854 |
[0] status=1
|
855 |
[0] status=1
|
856 |
## END
|
857 |
|
858 |
# osh is like zsh but has a hard failure (TODO: could be an option?)
|
859 |
## OK osh STDOUT:
|
860 |
[-42] status=0
|
861 |
[-42] status=0
|
862 |
[-42] status=0
|
863 |
[-42] status=0
|
864 |
[-42] status=0
|
865 |
[-42] status=0
|
866 |
status=1
|
867 |
status=1
|
868 |
## END
|
869 |
|
870 |
# ash is MORE STRICT
|
871 |
## OK ash STDOUT:
|
872 |
[-42] status=0
|
873 |
[-42] status=0
|
874 |
[-42] status=0
|
875 |
[-42] status=0
|
876 |
[0] status=1
|
877 |
[0] status=1
|
878 |
[0] status=1
|
879 |
[0] status=1
|
880 |
## END
|
881 |
|
882 |
|
883 |
|
884 |
# I didn't know these existed -- I only knew about - and 0 !
|
885 |
printf '[%+d]\n' 42
|
886 |
printf '[%+d]\n' -42
|
887 |
printf '[% d]\n' 42
|
888 |
printf '[% d]\n' -42
|
889 |
## STDOUT:
|
890 |
[+42]
|
891 |
[-42]
|
892 |
[ 42]
|
893 |
[-42]
|
894 |
## END
|
895 |
## N-I osh stdout-json: ""
|
896 |
## N-I osh status: 2
|
897 |
|
898 |
|
899 |
# I didn't know these existed -- I only knew about - and 0 !
|
900 |
# Note: '#' flag for integers outputs a prefix ONLY WHEN the value is non-zero
|
901 |
printf '[%#o][%#o]\n' 0 42
|
902 |
printf '[%#x][%#x]\n' 0 42
|
903 |
printf '[%#X][%#X]\n' 0 42
|
904 |
echo ---
|
905 |
# Note: '#' flag for %f, %g always outputs the decimal point.
|
906 |
printf '[%.0f][%#.0f]\n' 3 3
|
907 |
# Note: In addition, '#' flag for %g does not omit zeroes in fraction
|
908 |
printf '[%g][%#g]\n' 3 3
|
909 |
## STDOUT:
|
910 |
[0][052]
|
911 |
[0][0x2a]
|
912 |
[0][0X2A]
|
913 |
---
|
914 |
[3][3.]
|
915 |
[3][3.00000]
|
916 |
## END
|
917 |
## N-I osh STDOUT:
|
918 |
---
|
919 |
## END
|
920 |
## N-I osh status: 2
|
921 |
|
922 |
|
923 |
x=3abc
|
924 |
printf '%d\n' $x
|
925 |
echo status=$?
|
926 |
printf '%d\n' xyz
|
927 |
echo status=$?
|
928 |
## STDOUT:
|
929 |
3
|
930 |
status=1
|
931 |
0
|
932 |
status=1
|
933 |
## END
|
934 |
# zsh should exit 1 in both cases
|
935 |
## BUG zsh STDOUT:
|
936 |
0
|
937 |
status=1
|
938 |
0
|
939 |
status=0
|
940 |
## END
|
941 |
# fails but also prints 0 instead of 3abc
|
942 |
## BUG ash STDOUT:
|
943 |
0
|
944 |
status=1
|
945 |
0
|
946 |
status=1
|
947 |
## END
|
948 |
# osh doesn't print anything invalid
|
949 |
## OK osh STDOUT:
|
950 |
status=1
|
951 |
status=1
|
952 |
## END
|
953 |
|
954 |
|
955 |
# The result depends on timezone
|
956 |
export TZ=Asia/Tokyo
|
957 |
printf '%(%Y-%m-%d)T\n' 1557978599
|
958 |
export TZ=US/Eastern
|
959 |
printf '%(%Y-%m-%d)T\n' 1557978599
|
960 |
echo status=$?
|
961 |
## STDOUT:
|
962 |
2019-05-16
|
963 |
2019-05-15
|
964 |
status=0
|
965 |
## END
|
966 |
## N-I mksh/zsh/ash STDOUT:
|
967 |
status=1
|
968 |
## END
|
969 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
970 |
status=2
|
971 |
## END
|
972 |
|
973 |
|
974 |
|
975 |
# note: this test leaks! It assumes that /etc/localtime is NOT Portugal.
|
976 |
|
977 |
TZ=Portugal # NOT exported
|
978 |
localtime=$(printf '%(%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)T\n' 1557978599)
|
979 |
|
980 |
# TZ is respected
|
981 |
export TZ=Portugal
|
982 |
tz=$(printf '%(%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)T\n' 1557978599)
|
983 |
|
984 |
#echo $localtime
|
985 |
#echo $tz
|
986 |
|
987 |
if ! test "$localtime" = "$tz"; then
|
988 |
echo 'not equal'
|
989 |
fi
|
990 |
## STDOUT:
|
991 |
not equal
|
992 |
## END
|
993 |
## N-I mksh/zsh/ash/dash stdout-json: ""
|
994 |
|
995 |
|
996 |
|
997 |
# note: this test leaks! It assumes that /etc/localtime is NOT Portugal.
|
998 |
|
999 |
# TZ is respected
|
1000 |
export TZ=Portugal
|
1001 |
tz=$(printf '%(%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)T\n' 1557978599)
|
1002 |
|
1003 |
unset TZ # unset in the shell, but still in the environment
|
1004 |
|
1005 |
localtime=$(printf '%(%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)T\n' 1557978599)
|
1006 |
|
1007 |
if ! test "$localtime" = "$tz"; then
|
1008 |
echo 'not equal'
|
1009 |
fi
|
1010 |
|
1011 |
## STDOUT:
|
1012 |
not equal
|
1013 |
## END
|
1014 |
## N-I mksh/zsh/ash/dash stdout-json: ""
|
1015 |
|
1016 |
|
1017 |
# The result depends on timezone
|
1018 |
export TZ=Asia/Tokyo
|
1019 |
printf '[%10.5(%Y-%m-%d)T]\n' 1557978599
|
1020 |
export TZ=US/Eastern
|
1021 |
printf '[%10.5(%Y-%m-%d)T]\n' 1557978599
|
1022 |
echo status=$?
|
1023 |
## STDOUT:
|
1024 |
[ 2019-]
|
1025 |
[ 2019-]
|
1026 |
status=0
|
1027 |
## END
|
1028 |
## N-I dash/mksh/zsh/ash STDOUT:
|
1029 |
[[status=1
|
1030 |
## END
|
1031 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
1032 |
[[status=2
|
1033 |
## END
|
1034 |
|
1035 |
|
1036 |
printf x y
|
1037 |
printf '%s\n' z
|
1038 |
## STDOUT:
|
1039 |
xz
|
1040 |
## END
|
1041 |
|
1042 |
|
1043 |
|
1044 |
case $SH in (ash|dash|mksh|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
1045 |
|
1046 |
strftime-format() {
|
1047 |
local n=$1
|
1048 |
|
1049 |
# Prints increasingly long format strings:
|
1050 |
# %(%Y)T %(%Y)T %(%Y%Y)T ...
|
1051 |
|
1052 |
echo -n '%('
|
1053 |
for i in $(seq $n); do
|
1054 |
echo -n '%Y'
|
1055 |
done
|
1056 |
echo -n ')T'
|
1057 |
}
|
1058 |
|
1059 |
printf $(strftime-format 1) | wc --bytes
|
1060 |
printf $(strftime-format 10) | wc --bytes
|
1061 |
printf $(strftime-format 30) | wc --bytes
|
1062 |
printf $(strftime-format 31) | wc --bytes
|
1063 |
printf $(strftime-format 32) | wc --bytes
|
1064 |
|
1065 |
case $SH in
|
1066 |
(*/_bin/cxx-dbg/*)
|
1067 |
# Ensure that oils-for-unix detects the truncation of a fixed buffer.
|
1068 |
# bash has a buffer of 128.
|
1069 |
|
1070 |
set +o errexit
|
1071 |
(
|
1072 |
printf $(strftime-format 1000)
|
1073 |
)
|
1074 |
status=$?
|
1075 |
if test $status -ne 1; then
|
1076 |
echo FAIL
|
1077 |
fi
|
1078 |
;;
|
1079 |
esac
|
1080 |
|
1081 |
## STDOUT:
|
1082 |
4
|
1083 |
40
|
1084 |
120
|
1085 |
124
|
1086 |
0
|
1087 |
## END
|
1088 |
## OK osh STDOUT:
|
1089 |
4
|
1090 |
40
|
1091 |
120
|
1092 |
124
|
1093 |
128
|
1094 |
## END
|
1095 |
|
1096 |
## N-I ash/dash/mksh/zsh STDOUT:
|
1097 |
## END
|
1098 |
|
1099 |
|
1100 |
|
1101 |
case $SH in (dash|ash) return ;; esac
|
1102 |
|
1103 |
printf $'x\U0z'
|
1104 |
|
1105 |
printf $'\U0z'
|
1106 |
|
1107 |
## stdout-json: "x"
|
1108 |
## OK zsh stdout-repr: "x\0z\0z"
|
1109 |
## N-I dash/ash stdout-json: ""
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