re.match features an implicit left anchor, which can be surprising.
re.fullmatch features implicit anchors on both sides, but is aptly named
and unsurprising.
re.search has no such implicit anchors, which ought to be the default
even if a single anchor is needed.
Perviously, 'foo bar' would match 'foo/bar' but not 'bar/foo'. Now it
will match both, using a query with a WHERE clause like:
WHERE ((url || title) like '%foo%' AND (url || title) like '%bar%')
This does not seem to change the performance benchmark. However, it does
create a new query for every character added rather than re-running the
same query with different parameters. We could re-use queries if we
maintained a list like self._queries=[1_arg_query, 2_arg_query, ...].
However, it isn't clear that such a complexity would be necessary.
Resolves#1651.
This change makes it so that stderr and stdout is unconditionally read
from for a completed process, and sent to qute://spawn-output. This
allows the user to see the results of the previous process, even if they
had forgotten to use --output.
This fixes the following problems found in a review:
1. Manual modification of the asciidoc has been undone.
2. --output-to-tab has been renamed to the less verbose --output.
3. spawn_output has been changed to spawn-output in the url.
4. Erroneous newline in imports has been removed.
5. output in guiprocess.py has been marked private.
6. If there is no output for either stderr or stdout, say so.
7. Missing space in a text line was added.
8. Redundant initialising of an empty string removed.
This test is supposed to ensure that user scripts don't run on iframes
when the @noframes directive is set in the greasemonkey metadata. It is
failing sometimes on travis but passing on local test runs. Personally I
haven't actually ran the whole test suite through, just the javascript
tests. It maybe be some stale state that only shows up when you run the
whole suite. It may be some timing issue that only shows up on travis
because ???. Hopefully this stops the red x from showing up on the PR.