GNU bug report logs -
#60819
28.2; `ls-lisp.el' regression introduced in Emacs 26
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Reported by: Drew Adams <drew.adams <at> oracle.com>
Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 22:29:02 UTC
Severity: normal
Found in version 28.2
Done: Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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Message #10 received at 60819-done <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
> From: Drew Adams <drew.adams <at> oracle.com>
> Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 22:28:36 +0000
>
> In all Emacs releases prior to Emacs 26, if you use command `dired' with
> an input directory name that has wildcards and ends with a slash,
> e.g. c:/foo/bar/*b*/, the command simply ignores the trailing slash and
> correctly gives you a listing of all files and dirs in c:/foo/bar/ whose
> names contain a b character.
>
> Starting with Emacs 26, such input raises an error. IMO it should not.
>
> Other than that, the error message is anyway inappropriate: "No files
> matching regexp".
I fixed the message to say "No files matching wildcard" instead.
> In general, the character / in a glob pattern cannot be matched by a
> wildcard. E.g., Wikipedia says "Normally, the path separator character
> (/ on Linux/Unix, MacOS, etc. or \ on Windows) will never be matched."
> and Linux man page glob(7) says "A '/' in a pathname cannot be matched
> by a '?' or '*' wildcard, or by a range like "[.-0]"."
This is incorrect. A wildcard like "*b*/" should expand to the list
of directories whose names match "*b*", whereas "*b*" should expand to
the list of files _and_ directories with matching names. This is how
Dired behaves on Posix platforms (where such an expansion is done by
the 'ls' program), and we want a similar behavior with ls-lisp.
So I've now made ls-lisp on the emacs-29 branch behave like that: a
wildcard that ends in a slash is expanded to the list of matching
directories. And with that, I'm closing this bug.
This bug report was last modified 1 year and 154 days ago.
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