Shellfu - Bash dot on steroids
if when using debug -v
you stumble on a variable name
that is really used internally by pretty.sh, routines
pick up the internal ones which may easily confuse you.
Examples are src
or caller
.
You can circumvent this by composing the debug string yourself, e.g.:
debug "src='$src'"
in place of
debug -v src
This will be solved in the future (1.0.0?) probably by refactoring the internal names to some long, ugly but "safe" names. Now, however, readability of the internal code is of higher priority.
Note that there is no risk damage to data integrity, it's just that the routine is unable to show you desired value.
if debug -v "x*:
is used, x*
apparently tries to match
filenames first, and only if there is no match, it goes
on to match variable names. This does not seem to affect
@
, though.
Probably some eval pitfall. For now I'll just remove *
.
If somebody can fix it, we can re-add it.
On the other hand, I don't even understand how *
should
exactly behave compared to @
, so having it disabled does
not seem like such a loss. And by the way, did you know
that the eval is evil? So in the end, maybe we should not
have this feature in the first place... :)