Mercurial > octave-nkf
view test/line-continue.tst @ 20510:7fa1970a655d
pkg.m: drop check of nargout value, the interpreter already does that.
* scripts/pkg/pkg.m: the interpreter already checks if there was any variable
that got no value assigned, there's no need to make the code more
complicated to cover that. Also, there's no point in calling describe()
with different nargout since it doesn't check nargout.
author | Carnë Draug <carandraug@octave.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 03 Sep 2015 16:21:08 +0100 |
parents | 4197fc428c7d |
children |
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## Copyright (C) 2006-2015 John W. Eaton ## ## This file is part of Octave. ## ## Octave is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it ## under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ## the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at ## your option) any later version. ## ## Octave is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but ## WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU ## General Public License for more details. ## ## You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ## along with Octave; see the file COPYING. If not, see ## <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. %!shared x, a, b %! x = [1,2]; %! a = 1; %! b = 2; %!test %! y = [a... # comments here ok %! b]; %! assert (y, x); ## FIXME: Next 3 tests use '\' continuation outside of a double-quoted string ## This behavior is deprecated and will be removed at some point. ## When it does these %!test %! x = [1;2]; %! y = [a... # comments here ok %! ;\ %! %! b]; %! assert (y, x); %!assert (1 + ... %! 2 - \# comments here ok %! 3 / ... # comments here ok %! -1,6); %!function y = f (a,... %! b, ... %! c, ... % comments ok %! x, # continuation characters not required in parens %! y, \# but they should work too. %! z) %! %! y = 1; %!endfunction %! %!assert (f (), 1) # String continuation using '\' %!assert (["abc\ %! def"], "abc def") %!test %!assert (1 == 1 %! && 2 == 2 %! || 3 == 5); %!test %! x = [1, ... %! %! ... %! %! 2]; %! y = [1;2]; %! assert (y, x); %!test %! x = [1 ,... %! 2]; %! y = [1,2]; %! assert (y, x); %!test %! x = [ 1 , ... %! 2]; %! y = [1,2]; %! assert (y, x); %!test %! x = [ 1 , ...anything after the ... is ignored %! 2]; %! y = [1,2]; %! assert (y, x);