Mercurial > octave
view test/line-continue.tst @ 28020:eb46a9f47164 stable release-5-2-0
Avoid color changes in MS Windows GUI terminal (bug #57658).
* scripts/miscellaneous/mkoctfile.m: Add the gcc compiler flag
"-fdiagnostics-color=never" in case of MS Windows and the GUI is running.
For the MS Windows CLI version the output looks very nice. Update year.
author | Kai T. Ohlhus <k.ohlhus@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 28 Jan 2020 10:57:35 +0900 |
parents | 00f796120a6d |
children | b442ec6dda5c |
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## Copyright (C) 2006-2019 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 ## <https://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);