209 lines
7 KiB
Text
209 lines
7 KiB
Text
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# @(#)quoting 5.5 (Berkeley) 11/12/94
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QUOTING IN EX/VI:
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There are four escape characters in historic ex/vi:
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\ (backslashes)
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^V
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^Q (assuming it wasn't used for IXON/IXOFF)
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The terminal literal next character.
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Vi did not use the lnext character, it always used ^V (or ^Q).
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^V and ^Q were equivalent in all cases for vi.
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There are four different areas in ex/vi where escaping characters
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is interesting:
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1: In vi text input mode.
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2: In vi command mode.
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3: In ex command and text input modes.
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4: In the ex commands themselves.
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1: Vi text input mode (a, i, o, :colon commands, etc.):
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The set of characters that users might want to escape are as follows.
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As ^L and ^Z were not special in input mode, they are not listed.
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carriage return (^M)
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escape (^[)
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autoindents (^D, 0, ^, ^T)
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erase (^H)
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word erase (^W)
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line erase (^U)
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newline (^J) (not historic practice)
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Historic practice was that ^V was the only way to escape any
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of these characters, and that whatever character followed
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the ^V was taken literally, e.g. ^V^V is a single ^V. I
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don't see any strong reason to make it possible to escape
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^J, so I'm going to leave that alone.
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One comment regarding the autoindent characters. In historic
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vi, if you entered "^V0^D" autoindent erasure was still
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triggered, although it wasn't if you entered "0^V^D". In
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nvi, if you escape either character, autoindent erasure is
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not triggered.
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Abbreviations were not performed if the non-word character
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that triggered the abbreviation was escaped by a ^V. Input
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maps were not triggered if any part of the map was escaped
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by a ^V.
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The historic vi implementation for the 'r' command requires
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two leading ^V's to replace a character with a literal
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character. This is obviously a bug, and should be fixed.
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2: Vi command mode
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Command maps were not triggered if the second or later
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character of a map was escaped by a ^V.
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The obvious extension is that ^V should keep the next command
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character from being mapped, so you can do ":map x xxx" and
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then enter ^Vx to delete a single character.
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3: Ex command and text input modes.
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As ex ran in canonical mode, there was little work that it
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needed to do for quoting. The notable differences between
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ex and vi are that it was possible to escape a <newline> in
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the ex command and text input modes, and ex used the "literal
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next" character, not control-V/control-Q.
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4: The ex commands:
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Ex commands are delimited by '|' or newline characters.
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Within the commands, whitespace characters delimit the
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arguments. Backslash will generally escape any following
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character. In the abbreviate, unabbreviate, map and unmap
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commands, control-V escapes the next character, instead.
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This is historic behavior in vi, although there are special
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cases where it's impossible to escape a character, generally
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a whitespace character.
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Escaping characters in file names in ex commands:
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:cd [directory] (directory)
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:chdir [directory] (directory)
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:edit [+cmd] [file] (file)
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:ex [+cmd] [file] (file)
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:file [file] (file)
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:next [file ...] (file ...)
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:read [!cmd | file] (file)
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:source [file] (file)
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:write [!cmd | file] (file)
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:wq [file] (file)
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:xit [file] (file)
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Since file names are also subject to word expansion, the
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underlying shell had better be doing the correct backslash
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escaping. This is NOT historic behavior in vi, making it
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impossible to insert a whitespace, newline or carriage return
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character into a file name.
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4: Escaping characters in non-file arguments in ex commands:
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:abbreviate word string (word, string)
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* :edit [+cmd] [file] (+cmd)
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* :ex [+cmd] [file] (+cmd)
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:map word string (word, string)
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* :set [option ...] (option)
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* :tag string (string)
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:unabbreviate word (word)
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:unmap word (word)
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These commands use whitespace to delimit their arguments, and use
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^V to escape those characters. The exceptions are starred in the
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above list, and are discussed below.
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In general, I intend to treat a ^V in any argument, followed by
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any character, as that literal character. This will permit
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editing of files name "foo|", for example, by using the string
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"foo\^V|", where the literal next character protects the pipe
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from the ex command parser and the backslash protects it from the
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shell expansion.
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This is backward compatible with historical vi, although there
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were a number of special cases where vi wasn't consistent.
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4.1: The edit/ex commands:
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The edit/ex commands are a special case because | symbols may
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occur in the "+cmd" field, for example:
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:edit +10|s/abc/ABC/ file.c
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In addition, the edit and ex commands have historically
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ignored literal next characters in the +cmd string, so that
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the following command won't work.
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:edit +10|s/X/^V / file.c
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I intend to handle the literal next character in edit/ex consistently
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with how it is handled in other commands.
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More fun facts to know and tell:
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The acid test for the ex/edit commands:
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date > file1; date > file2
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vi
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:edit +1|s/./XXX/|w file1| e file2|1 | s/./XXX/|wq
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No version of vi, of which I'm aware, handles it.
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4.2: The set command:
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The set command treats ^V's as literal characters, so the
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following command won't work. Backslashes do work in this
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case, though, so the second version of the command does work.
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set tags=tags_file1^V tags_file2
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set tags=tags_file1\ tags_file2
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I intend to continue permitting backslashes in set commands,
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but to also permit literal next characters to work as well.
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This is backward compatible, but will also make set
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consistent with the other commands. I think it's unlikely
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to break any historic .exrc's, given that there are probably
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very few files with ^V's in their name.
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4.3: The tag command:
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The tag command ignores ^V's and backslashes; there's no way to
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get a space into a tag name.
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I think this is a don't care, and I don't intend to fix it.
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5: Regular expressions:
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:global /pattern/ command
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:substitute /pattern/replace/
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:vglobal /pattern/ command
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I intend to treat a backslash in the pattern, followed by the
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delimiter character or a backslash, as that literal character.
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This is historic behavior in vi. It would get rid of a fairly
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hard-to-explain special case if we could just use the character
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immediately following the backslash in all cases, or, if we
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changed nvi to permit using the literal next character as a
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pattern escape character, but that would probably break historic
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scripts.
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There is an additional escaping issue for regular expressions.
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Within the pattern and replacement, the '|' character did not
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delimit ex commands. For example, the following is legal.
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:substitute /|/PIPE/|s/P/XXX/
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This is a special case that I will support.
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6: Ending anything with an escape character:
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In all of the above rules, an escape character (either ^V or a
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backslash) at the end of an argument or file name is not handled
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specially, but used as a literal character.
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