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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 13 of 17] docs: generate an index for the html output
On Fri, 2011-11-25 at 12:22 +0000, Ian Jackson wrote:
> Ian Campbell writes ("Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 13 of 17] docs: generate an
> index for the html output"):
> > On Thu, 2011-11-24 at 17:42 +0000, Ian Jackson wrote:
> > > next unless m/\S/;
> >
> > I think that would be a syntax error so die unless m/\S/ ?
>
> Surely ignoring blank lines is going to be less irritating.
I missed that this was \S not \s. Your way does indeed make sense.
> > > This is not correct because $outdir is not a regular expression. The
> > > shortest way of doing this is indeed substr.
> >
> > OK.
> >
> > Aside: how does one dynamically construct a regex then?
>
> However you like. Make a variable which contains your regexp. If you
> have a string in a scalar and want a regexp which matches that string
> you can do this:
> my $regexp = $string;
> $regexp =~ s/\W/\\$&/g;
> ... m/^$regexp/ ...
Ah, I thought you were suggesting that /$something/ was not valid at
all, but you meant only if you don't correctly quote it etc.
Thanks,
Ian.
>
> > > Do we really want an index per subdirectory ?
> >
> > I was thinking of folks how manually type urls or who string the last
> > element off. Having an index in each dir ensures they get something
> > structured and not the apache generated thing.
>
> True.
>
> > It does complicate the code though so I could be convinced to drop it.
>
> No, that's OK.
>
> Ian.
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