Mercurial > vim
view runtime/tools/shtags.1 @ 10960:d7b78cbf85e4 v8.0.0369
patch 8.0.0369: a few options are not defined, depending on features
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/c43a8b8de0676caf8a460b6af1310d7aba8221bb
Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Date: Sat Feb 25 21:12:29 2017 +0100
patch 8.0.0369: a few options are not defined, depending on features
Problem: The 'balloondelay', 'ballooneval' and 'balloonexpr' options are
not defined without the +balloon_eval feature. Testing that an
option value fails does not work for unsupported options.
Solution: Make the options defined but not supported. Don't test if
setting unsupported options fails.
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 25 Feb 2017 21:15:03 +0100 |
parents | 3fc0f57ecb91 |
children | bdda48f01a68 |
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.TH shtags 1 "local Utilities" .SH NAME shtags \- Create tags for shell scripts .SH SYNOPSIS .B shtags [\fI-mvw\fP] [\fI-t <file>\fP] [\fI-s <shell>\fP] <files> .SH DESCRIPTION \fBshtags\fP creates a \fBvi(1)\fP tags file for shell scripts - which essentially turns your code into a hypertext document. \fBshtags\fP attempts to create tags for all function and variable definitions, although this is a little difficult, because in most shell languages, variables don't need to be explicitly defined, and as such there is often no distinct "variable definition". If this is the case, \fBshtags\fP simply creates a tag for the first instance of a variable which is being set in a simple way, ie: \fIset x = 5\fP. .SH OPTIONS .IP "\fB-t <file>\fP" Name of tags file to create. (default is 'tags') .IP "\fB-s <shell>\fP" The name of the shell used by the script(s). By default, \fBshtags\fP tries to work out which is the appropriate shell for each file individually by looking at the first line of each file. This wont work however, if the script starts as a bourne shell script and tries to be clever about starting the shell it really wants. .b Currently supported shells are: .RS .IP \fBsh\fP Bourne Shell .IP \fBperl\fP Perl (versions 4 and 5) .IP \fBksh\fP Korn Shell .IP \fBtclsh\fP The TCL shell .IP \fBwish\fP The TK Windowing shell (same as tclsh) .RE .IP \fB-v\fP Include variable definitions (variables mentioned at the start of a line) .IP \fB-V\fP Print version information. .IP \fB-w\fP Suppress "duplicate tag" warning messages. .IP \fB-x\fP Explicitly create a new tags file. Normally new tags are merged with the old tags file. .PP \fBshtags\fP scans the specified files for subroutines and possibly variable definitions, and creates a \fBvi\fP style tags file. .SH FILES .IP \fBtags\fP A tags file contains a sorted list of tags, one tag per line. The format is the same as that used by \fBvi\fP(1) .SH AUTHOR Stephen Riehm .br sr@pc-plus.de .SH "SEE ALSO" ctags(1), etags(1), perl(1), tclsh(1), wish(1), sh(1), ksh(1).