From: ydirson@free.fr
To: Noam Postavsky <npostavs@gmail.com>
Cc: 41536@debbugs.gnu.org
Subject: bug#41536: uniquify can select non-unique prefix
Date: Thu, 28 May 2020 00:23:12 +0200 (CEST) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <521374123.1041844255.1590618192543.JavaMail.root@zimbra39-e7> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <857dwxt67f.fsf@gmail.com>
----- Mail original -----
> De: "Noam Postavsky" <npostavs@gmail.com>
> À: ydirson@free.fr
> Cc: 41536@debbugs.gnu.org
> Envoyé: Mercredi 27 Mai 2020 23:32:04
> Objet: Re: bug#41536: uniquify can select non-unique prefix
>
> ydirson@free.fr writes:
>
> > In my case the "y" level is even a python package for modules
> > containing abstract
> > classes, call it "lib" -- you'll understand that "lib/foo.py" is
> > not really
> > helpful, when other packages could have a module of the same name
> > in a "lib/"
> > subpackage.
>
> I agree this can be annoying in many cases, but how do you expect
> Emacs
> to know which directory names should be considered? Have a backlist
> of
> "too generic" words like "lib", "utils", "config", etc?
No, I'd rather using a couple of rules, but I do agree finding a one-fits-all
heuristic is likely hard to get. Let me think aloud a bit, in the hope it will
stir ideas from others as well.
(by the way, I did not look at the code yet, getting the gist of the current heuristic
will be obviously useful)
My initial thought when seeing a/x/b/y/c vs. a/b/c resolved as y/c vs b/c was
something like "never select a dirname for one buffer if it exists for all".
Obviously that formulation is not sufficient, as it would not handle the a/b/c vs.
b/a/c case, but maybe but as a work approximation we can leave the latter case
for later rule refining if needed..
That rule would result, for my a/x/b/y/c vs. a/b/c case, in "(x/)?(y/)?c" vs. just "c".
That could be an option, although arguably the "c" part does appear in both paths and
we don't want strip it.
When only 2 files are at hand, maybe a heuristic like "strip all common leading
dirs and take the next" would fit: that would let a/x/b/y/c vs. a/b/c to resolve
as x/c vs. b/c. The idea is that an outer directory is likely to carry more semantic
weight.
With more than 2 files if ambiguities arise, it is likely acceptable in many cases
to keep this first dir and recurse. Say we add a/x/t/c to the lot, that would give
x/b/c, x/t/c, and b/c.
Does that make any sense to anyone beside me ?
Best regards,
--
Yann
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2020-05-27 22:23 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <1806725215.1035270044.1590497113540.JavaMail.root@zimbra39-e7>
2020-05-26 12:56 ` bug#41536: uniquify can select non-unique prefix ydirson
2020-05-27 21:32 ` Noam Postavsky
2020-05-27 22:23 ` ydirson [this message]
2020-05-27 22:58 ` ydirson
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