diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/Zsh/builtins.yo')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/Zsh/builtins.yo | 60 |
1 files changed, 56 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/Zsh/builtins.yo b/Doc/Zsh/builtins.yo index 4487ee175..1d74d7f49 100644 --- a/Doc/Zsh/builtins.yo +++ b/Doc/Zsh/builtins.yo @@ -356,10 +356,6 @@ noderef(Compatibility) )\ . -If tt(-c) tt(arg) is given, evaluate tt(arg) after temporary setting -requested emulation. Emulation and all options will be restored to their -original values before tt(emulate) returns. - If the tt(-R) option is given, all options are reset to their default value corresponding to the specified emulation mode, except for certain options describing the interactive @@ -370,6 +366,62 @@ well, causing the effects of the tt(emulate) command and any tt(setopt) and tt(trap) commands to be local to the immediately surrounding shell function, if any; normally these options are turned off in all emulation modes except tt(ksh). The tt(-L) and tt(-c) are mutually exclusive. + +If tt(-c) tt(arg) is given, evaluate tt(arg) while the requested +emulation is temporarily in effect. The emulation and all options will +be restored to their original values before tt(emulate) returns. The +tt(-R) flag may be used. + +Use of tt(-c) enables `sticky' emulation mode for functions defined +within the evaluated expression: the emulation mode is associated +thereafter with the function so that whenever the function is executed +the emulation (respecting the tt(-R) flag, if present) and all +options are set before entry to the function, and restored after exit. +If the function is called when the sticky emulation is already in +effect, either within an `tt(emulate) var(shell) tt(-c)' expression or +within another function with the same sticky emulation, entry and exit +from the function do not cause options to be altered (except due to +standard processing such as the tt(LOCAL_OPTIONS) option). + +For example: + +example(emulate sh -c 'fni+LPAR()RPAR() { setopt cshnullglob; } +fno+LPAR()RPAR() { fni; }' +fno +) + +The two functions tt(fni) and tt(fno) are defined with sticky tt(sh) +emulation. tt(fno) is then executed, causing options associated +with emulations to be set to their values in tt(sh). tt(fni) then +calls tt(fno); because tt(fno) is also marked for sticky tt(sh) +emulation, no option changes take place on entry to or exit from it. +Hence the option tt(cshnullglob), turned off by tt(sh) emulation, will +be turned on within tt(fni) and remain on on return to tt(fno). On exit +from tt(fno), the emulation mode and all options will be restored to the +state they were in before entry to the temporary emulation. + +The documentation above is typically sufficient for the intended +purpose of executing code designed for other shells in a suitable +environment. More detailed rules follow. +startsitem() +sitem(1.)(The sticky emulation environment provided by `tt(emulate) +var(shell) tt(-c)' is identical to that provided by entry to +a function marked for sticky emulation as a consequence of being +defined in such an environment. Hence, for example, the sticky +emulation is inherited by subfunctions defined within functions +with sticky emulation.) +sitem(2.)(No change of options takes place on entry to or exit from +functions that are not marked for sticky emulation, other than those +that would normally take place, even if those functions are called +within sticky emulation.) +sitem(3.)(No special handling is provided for functions marked for +tt(autoload) nor for functions present in wordcode created by +the tt(zcompile) command.) +sitem(4.)(The presence or absence of the tt(-R) flag to tt(emulate) +corresponds to different sticky emulation modes, so for example +`tt(emulate sh -c)', `tt(emulate -R sh -c)' and `tt(emulate csh -c)' +are treated as three distinct sticky emulations.) +endsitem() ) findex(enable) cindex(enabling commands) |