On Sat, Jan 9, 2016 at 11:27 AM, Jim Meyering <j...@meyering.net> wrote: > On Sat, Jan 9, 2016 at 10:20 AM, Paul Eggert <egg...@cs.ucla.edu> wrote: >> Jim Meyering wrote: >>> >>> Hah! TIL head -N and yes are not portable. Thank you. >>> I've been spoiled/corrupted by writing coreutils tests for so long. >>> >>> I would prefer to continue to use "yes" via the following, at least >>> in the first test. That way is clearer. In the second, I could go either >>> way, since your awk process replaces both yes and head, at the >>> expense of being a bit less concise and less readable. >> >> >> I could go either way too. >> >> Though it's not needed for these particular tests, the shell function can be >> tweaked to default to 'y' and to output quotes and backlashes in the arg >> as-is, like BSD 'yes'. Something like this, perhaps? >> >> yes() { line=${*-y} ${AWK-awk} 'BEGIN{for (;;) print ENVIRON["line"]}'; } > > Indeed, I thought of quotes and backslashes a little too late. > Nice hack. I will use that, probably with an added "local ", > since init.sh ensures that the test-run shell supports that. > Hmm... I see that gnulib's init.sh has a stray (new) use > of local. Will remove.
I will *not* be adding a "local " prefix. Not required. That "line" is an envvar, so just fine as-is.