mksh/tests/integer.t
tg 6c8eabf72e polish, mop up whitespace, etc.
passes regressions on MirOS
2004-05-24 19:56:25 +00:00

218 lines
3.0 KiB
Perl

name: integer-base-err-1
description:
Can't have 0 base (causes shell to exit)
expected-exit: e != 0
stdin:
typeset -i i
i=3
i=0#4
echo $i
expected-stderr-pattern:
/^.*:.*0#4.*\n$/
---
name: integer-base-err-2
description:
Can't have multiple bases in a 'constant' (causes shell to exit)
(ksh88 fails this test)
expected-exit: e != 0
stdin:
typeset -i i
i=3
i=2#110#11
echo $i
expected-stderr-pattern:
/^.*:.*2#110#11.*\n$/
---
name: integer-base-err-3
description:
Syntax errors in expressions and effects on bases
(interactive so errors don't cause exits)
(ksh88 fails this test - shell exits, even with -i)
arguments: !-i!
stdin:
PS1= # minimize prompt hassles
typeset -i4 a=10
typeset -i a=2+
echo $a
typeset -i4 a=10
typeset -i2 a=2+
echo $a
expected-stderr-pattern:
/^([#\$] )?.*:.*2+.*\n.*:.*2+.*\n$/
expected-stdout:
4#22
4#22
---
name: integer-base-err-4
description:
Are invalid digits (according to base) errors?
(ksh93 fails this test)
expected-exit: e != 0
stdin:
typeset -i i;
i=3#4
expected-stderr-pattern:
/^([#\$] )?.*:.*3#4.*\n$/
---
name: integer-base-1
description:
Missing number after base is treated as 0.
stdin:
typeset -i i
i=3
i=2#
echo $i
expected-stdout:
0
---
name: integer-base-2
description:
Check 'stickyness' of base in various situations
stdin:
typeset -i i=8
echo $i
echo ---------- A
typeset -i4 j=8
echo $j
echo ---------- B
typeset -i k=8
typeset -i4 k=8
echo $k
echo ---------- C
typeset -i4 l
l=3#10
echo $l
echo ---------- D
typeset -i m
m=3#10
echo $m
echo ---------- E
n=2#11
typeset -i n
echo $n
n=10
echo $n
echo ---------- F
typeset -i8 o=12
typeset -i4 o
echo $o
echo ---------- G
typeset -i p
let p=8#12
echo $p
expected-stdout:
8
---------- A
4#20
---------- B
4#20
---------- C
4#3
---------- D
3#10
---------- E
2#11
2#1010
---------- F
4#30
---------- G
8#12
---
name: integer-base-3
description:
More base parsing (hmm doesn't test much..)
stdin:
typeset -i aa
aa=1+12#10+2
echo $aa
typeset -i bb
bb=1+$aa
echo $bb
typeset -i bb
bb=$aa
echo $bb
typeset -i cc
cc=$aa
echo $cc
expected-stdout:
15
16
15
15
---
name: integer-base-4
description:
Check that things not declared as integers are not made integers,
also, check if base is not reset by -i with no arguments.
(ksh93 fails - prints 10#20 - go figure)
stdin:
xx=20
let xx=10
typeset -i | grep '^xx='
typeset -i4 a=10
typeset -i a=20
echo $a
expected-stdout:
4#110
---
name: integer-base-5
description:
More base stuff
stdin:
typeset -i4 a=3#10
echo $a
echo --
typeset -i j=3
j=~3
echo $j
echo --
typeset -i k=1
x[k=k+1]=3
echo $k
echo --
typeset -i l
for l in 1 2+3 4; do echo $l; done
expected-stdout:
4#3
--
-4
--
2
--
1
5
4
---
name: integer-base-6
description:
Even more base stuff
(ksh93 fails this test - prints 0)
stdin:
typeset -i7 i
i=
echo $i
expected-stdout:
7#0
---
name: integer-base-7
description:
Check that non-integer parameters don't get bases assigned
stdin:
echo $(( zz = 8#100 ))
echo $zz
expected-stdout:
64
64
---