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Re: gnulib-tool.py: Display specified modules in bold.
From: |
Bruno Haible |
Subject: |
Re: gnulib-tool.py: Display specified modules in bold. |
Date: |
Sun, 31 Mar 2024 00:38:36 +0100 |
Hi Pádraig,
> As a matter of interest, where did you get the figure that
> 94% of users have a $TERM set to xterm.* ?
Personal guesses / estimations :-D.
> > +def get_terminfo_string(capability: str) -> str:
> > + '''Returns the value of a string-type terminfo capability for the
> > current value of $TERM.
> > + Returns the empty string if not defined.'''
> > + value = ''
> > + try:
> > + value = sp.run(['tput', capability], stdout=sp.PIPE,
> > stderr=sp.DEVNULL).stdout.decode('utf-8')
> > + except Exception:
> > + pass
> > + return value
>
> Might latin-1 be more appropriate here, to accept all byte sequences?
But it would be output in UTF-8 later, during print(...). therefore
converting to a string here is inappropriate.
I tried to return a byte array here instead of a string, but this led to
ugly code elsewhere.
> I used the following for example to see that xterm-8bit outputs an invalid
> utf-8 sequence:
>
> find /usr/share/terminfo -type f -printf '%f\n' | while read t; do
> echo -n $t; TERM=$t tput bold | od -An -tx1
> done | grep -v 1b
>
> I know the code path isn't used for xterm.* and I don't want to cause any
> more complexity,
> but was wondering all the same.
If such a TERM value is used, the decode('utf-8') step will fail, thus the
value returned from get_terminfo_string will be empty, and bold-face won't
work.
This is not perfect, but it is good enough. Often, it's necessary to say
"it's good enough" because otherwise I spend more and more time on a tiny
feature. I have verified that it works with all TERM values of all OSes
for which I have virtual machines (except for Solaris 11.4, as mentioned);
I'm not inclined in spending more time on it.
Bruno
Re: gnulib-tool.py: Display specified modules in bold., Collin Funk, 2024/03/29
Re: gnulib-tool.py: Display specified modules in bold., Bruno Haible, 2024/03/29