The strbuf_add_commented_lines() function passes a pair of prefixes,
one to be used for a non-empty line, and the other for an empty
line, to underlying add_lines(). The former is set to a comment
char followed by a SP, while the latter is set to just the comment
char. This is designed to give a SP after the comment character,
e.g. "# <user text>\n", on a line with some text, and to avoid
emitting an unsightly "# \n" for an empty line.
Teach this machinery to also use the latter space-less prefix when
the payload line begins with a tab, to show e.g. "#\t<user text>\n";
otherwise we will end up showing "# \t<user text>\n" which is
similarly unsightly.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
const char *next = memchr(buf, '\n', size);
next = next ? (next + 1) : (buf + size);
- prefix = (prefix2 && buf[0] == '\n') ? prefix2 : prefix1;
+ prefix = ((prefix2 && (buf[0] == '\n' || buf[0] == '\t'))
+ ? prefix2 : prefix1);
strbuf_addstr(out, prefix);
strbuf_add(out, buf, next - buf);
size -= next - buf;
test_cmp expect actual
'
+test_expect_success 'avoid SP-HT sequence in commented line' '
+ printf "#\tone\n#\n# two\n" >expect &&
+ printf "\tone\n\ntwo\n" | git stripspace -c >actual &&
+ test_cmp expect actual
+'
+
test_done