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author | Peter Stephenson <pws@zsh.org> | 2015-06-18 14:54:41 +0100 |
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committer | Peter Stephenson <pws@zsh.org> | 2015-06-24 10:21:12 +0100 |
commit | 39b28980f38e83e15cdeb19a489b5659af97fe93 (patch) | |
tree | e68f09fc59fc7008ff732704cbabed7e3df5f188 /NEWS | |
parent | a68d22eb00ea5c85422d70d1be7efa42acfda739 (diff) | |
download | zsh-39b28980f38e83e15cdeb19a489b5659af97fe93.tar.gz zsh-39b28980f38e83e15cdeb19a489b5659af97fe93.tar.xz zsh-39b28980f38e83e15cdeb19a489b5659af97fe93.zip |
various posts: Implement assignment parsing for typeset.
Typeset assignments now work like raw assignments except for no "+=" and no GLOB_ASSIGN. Documented in typeset builtin doc and mentioned in release notes. Tests to ensure basic sanity. Enabled by default, can be turned off by "disable -r" with typeset family of commands.
Diffstat (limited to 'NEWS')
-rw-r--r-- | NEWS | 19 |
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS index 44bf6b9c0..d515a6036 100644 --- a/NEWS +++ b/NEWS @@ -4,7 +4,21 @@ CHANGES FROM PREVIOUS VERSIONS OF ZSH Note also the list of incompatibilities in the README file. -Changes from 5.0.7 to 5.0.8 +Changes from 5.0.8 to 5.0.9 +--------------------------- + +The builtins declare, export, local, readonly and typeset +now have corresponding reserved words. When used in +this form, the builtin syntax is extended so that assignments +following the reserved word are treated similarly to +assignments that appear at the start of the command line. +For example, + local scalar=`echo one word` array=(several words) +creates a local "scalar" containing the text "one word" +and an array "array" containing the words "several" +"words". + +Changes from 5.0.0 to 5.0.8 --------------------------- - Global aliases can be created for syntactic tokens such as command @@ -47,9 +61,6 @@ Changes from 5.0.7 to 5.0.8 - Some rationalisations have been made to the zsh/db/gdbm module that should make it more useful and predictable in operation. -Changes from 5.0.0 to 5.0.7 ---------------------------- - - Numeric constants encountered in mathematical expressions (but not other contexts) can contain underscores as separators that will be ignored on evaluation, as allowed in other scripting languages. For example, |