The `BUNDLE_` prefix should be reserved to first class settings that
should be listed when running `bundle config`. This one is just a hacky
environment variable that has not corresponding documented setting.
https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/commit/7e255c5058
In some tests, the LineEditor#reset method is always called, but doesn't
need to set the signal handlers there, so cuts it out to a separate
method.
https://github.com/ruby/reline/commit/b143c4f5f9
Windows Terminal does smart screen clearing when \e 2 J (not clear entire screen but scrolls down just needed)
On consoles not support sequences, ruby still converts it to API call.
https://github.com/ruby/reline/commit/c00930dab9
If `bundler _<version>_` is given, I guess the most reasonable approach
is to completely skip version switching, because the user is technically
opting out of it. But since binstubs completely remove this argument
from `ARGV` after processing it, we have no way of detecting that it was
actually passed in the first place in order to skip the feature. So we
set `BUNDLER_VERSION` explicitly in this case.
https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/commit/e0f360d6d7
When merged to ruby/ruby, reline.gemspec file is located under
lib/reline, as the same as reline/version.rb. That is the latter
path relative from the former differs from the ruby/reline case,
and the reline/version.rb in the default load path will be loaded.
Try `require_relative` not to load unexpected files.
https://github.com/ruby/reline/commit/54905d0e1b
This check is needed to fix a bug of error_highlight when NameError
occurred in eval'ed code.
https://github.com/ruby/error_highlight/pull/16
The same check for proc/method has been already introduced since
64ac984129a7a4645efe5ac57c168ef880b479b2.
The use of `etc.so` here requires that etc is always implemented
as a C extension on-disk. However at least one impl – JRuby –
currently implements it as an internal extension, loaded via a
Ruby script. This require should simply use the base name of the
library, `etc`, to allow Ruby-based implementations to load as
well.
https://github.com/ruby/pp/commit/2061f994e0
This class does not exist in any implementation except CRuby.
I would recommend moving this code somewhere else, like a separate
file loaded only on CRuby or into CRuby itself. For now this
change is sufficient to load the library on other implementations.
https://github.com/ruby/pp/commit/7d5a220f64
Formatting a datetime should only pertain to itself and valid datetimes do not contain a space. Should there be a desire to show show a space between the datetime and the process pid in the formatted log, this formatting logic should take place there.
Furthermore, the default datetime format is moved to a class variable to allowing this variable to be overwritten by subclasses.
https://github.com/ruby/logger/commit/7cbd434349
If we are resolving a dependency against a particular platform, and
there are no platform specific variants of the candidates that match
that platform, we should not consider those candidates.
https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/commit/f6077fe27d
The number of lines below the cursor position was known by
"@rest_height" alone, but the problem was caused by adding
"lower_space". Remove "lower_space" as it is unnecessary.
https://github.com/ruby/reline/commit/a575cef6a3
If Reline::IOGate.encoding contains 7-bit characters, convert-meta will set it On.
Because in readline(3):
> The default is On, but readline will set it to Off if the locale contains eight-bit characters.
As far as I know, 7-bit encoding used in terminals is only US-ASCII.
https://github.com/ruby/reline/commit/b71d1fa496
fix `#357`
When using 8-bit characters, it is better not to use `compress_meta_key`.
I believe not to use `compress_meta_key` unless `set convert-meta on` is written in the `.inputrc`.
The following is a quote from tmtm's comments.
> The behavior of this compress_meta_key method is similar to the behavior of convert-meta=on in readline, but readline turns off convert-meta if the locale contains 8bit characters.
> In readline(3):
> convert-meta (On)
> If set to On, readline will convert characters with the eighth
> bit set to an ASCII key sequence by stripping the eighth bit and
> prefixing it with an escape character (in effect, using escape
> as the meta prefix). The default is On, but readline will set
> it to Off if the locale contains eight-bit characters.
https://github.com/ruby/reline/commit/9491cc8542
Co-authored-by: TOMITA Masahiro <tommy@tmtm.org>