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Address feedback from plenary #77
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cc @erights @waldemarhorwat @gibson042 Please take a look. |
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spec.emu
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@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ contributors: | |||
1. Return the string-concatenation of 0x005C (REVERSE SOLIDUS) and the string in the "ControlEscape" column of the row whose "Code Point" column contains _c_. | |||
1. Let _otherPunctuators_ be the string-concatenation of *",-=<>#&!%:;@~'`"* and the code unit 0x0022 (QUOTATION MARK). | |||
1. Let _toEscape_ be StringToCodePoints(_otherPunctuators_). | |||
1. If _toEscape_ contains _c_ or _c_ is matched by |WhiteSpace| or |LineTerminator|, then | |||
1. If _toEscape_ contains _c_, _c_ is matched by |WhiteSpace| or |LineTerminator|, or _c_ is in the inclusive interval from U+D800 to U+DFFF (i.e. _c_ is a leading surrogate or trailing surrogate), then |
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1. If _toEscape_ contains _c_, _c_ is matched by |WhiteSpace| or |LineTerminator|, or _c_ is a leading surrogate or a trailing surrogate, then
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Strictly speaking, leading and trailing surrogates are defined to be code units, not code points. I figure it's close enough for the parenthetical, but not the actual algorithm step. I could change the parenthetical to be "c is the code point corresponding to a leading surrogate or trailing surrogate" but that's getting pretty wordy.
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other than the oxford comma, this suggestion is a nit, so i'm ambivalent
How do I see a rendered form of this? |
I've put up a rendering here. |
Thanks. FWIW LGTM, but I delegate an approval decision to @gibson042 who understands this better than I do. |
Thanks for the rendering. Cut down the review effort for me by a huge factor. |
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Nice catch on LineTerminator! I still prefer the universally applicable \x…/\u… approach, but this does work (even if it could get stale).
1. If _c_ is matched by |SyntaxCharacter| or _c_ is U+002F (SOLIDUS), then | ||
1. Return the string-concatenation of 0x005C (REVERSE SOLIDUS) and UTF16EncodeCodePoint(_c_). |
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This strikes me as a point-in-time snapshot, and I'm not a fan because it will be weird if e.g. \@
becomes a valid escape in the future. My preference remains the universally applicable \x…
/\u…
approach. But that said, there is no technical issue here; merely an aesthetic one.
1. NOTE: Escaping a leading digit ensures that output corresponds with pattern text which may be used after a `\0` character escape or a |DecimalEscape| such as `\1` and still match _S_ rather than be interpreted as an extension of the preceding escape sequence. | ||
1. Set _escaped_ to the string-concatenation of _escaped_, the code unit 0x005C (REVERSE SOLIDUS), *"x3"*, and the code unit whose numeric value is the numeric value of _c_. | ||
1. If _escaped_ is the empty String, and _c_ is matched by |DecimalDigit| or |AsciiLetter|, then | ||
1. NOTE: Escaping a leading digit ensures that output corresponds with pattern text which may be used after a `\0` character escape or a |DecimalEscape| such as `\1` and still match _S_ rather than be interpreted as an extension of the preceding escape sequence. Escaping a leading ASCII letter does the same for the context after `\c`. |
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Nit: this sentence is too long to not use a parenthetical.
1. NOTE: Escaping a leading digit ensures that output corresponds with pattern text which may be used after a `\0` character escape or a |DecimalEscape| such as `\1` and still match _S_ rather than be interpreted as an extension of the preceding escape sequence. Escaping a leading ASCII letter does the same for the context after `\c`. | |
1. NOTE: Escaping a leading digit ensures that output corresponds with pattern text, which may be used after a `\0` character escape or a |DecimalEscape| such as `\1`, and still match _S_ rather than be interpreted as an extension of the preceding escape sequence. Escaping a leading ASCII letter does the same for the context after `\c`. |
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Those commas read as ungrammatical to me. In particular the second comma cuts a clause in the middle - the pattern text "maybe used after \0 [...] and still match S". Open to other rephrasing here but I don't like this particular suggestion.
1. NOTE: Escaping a leading digit ensures that output corresponds with pattern text which may be used after a `\0` character escape or a |DecimalEscape| such as `\1` and still match _S_ rather than be interpreted as an extension of the preceding escape sequence. | ||
1. Set _escaped_ to the string-concatenation of _escaped_, the code unit 0x005C (REVERSE SOLIDUS), *"x3"*, and the code unit whose numeric value is the numeric value of _c_. | ||
1. If _escaped_ is the empty String, and _c_ is matched by |DecimalDigit| or |AsciiLetter|, then | ||
1. NOTE: Escaping a leading digit ensures that output corresponds with pattern text which may be used after a `\0` character escape or a |DecimalEscape| such as `\1` and still match _S_ rather than be interpreted as an extension of the preceding escape sequence. Escaping a leading ASCII letter does the same for the context after `\c`. |
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Also, TIL \c0
is a valid escape. This also prevents new RegExp("\\" + escape('n'))
from combining.
Commits should be reviewed individually. Summary:
\$
etc where possibly; this is not possible for all punctuators, but it is for some\n
etc where possiblex
-mode RegExps, and someone writesnew RegExp(RegExp.escape('\uHEAD') + RegExp.escape('\uTAIL'), 'x')
where\uHEAD\uTAIL
encodes that non-BMP whitespace character, the resulting RegExp will match the character instead of being interpreted as whitespace and therefore (inx
-mode) ignorednew RegExp('\c' + RegExp.escape('Z'))
will either be an error (inu
- orv
-mode RegExps) or match the string'\\cZ'
(in other RegExps); this also has the effect that the result cannot combine with a preceding\x
or\u
when the first character isA-F
ora-f
. Fixes Which leading characters should be escaped? #66.