Juri Linkov writes: >>>>>>> > However this doesn't explain why dired-do-touch uses a completing-read >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Indeed, this was an oversight. Here is the patch >>>>>>> that replaces 'completing-read' with 'read-string': >>>>>> >>>>>> Thierry, is this solution okay with you? >>>>> >>>>> This fix one issue, >>>> >>>> Thanks, so I pushed the fix. >>> >>> Thanks. >>> >>>>> but default is still wrong IMHO: >>>>> >>>>> When pressing RET with an empty prompt the value is different than what >>>>> is inserted in minibuffer with M-n. Why do we bother setting the >>>>> timesamp at the exact time when pressing RET instead of when pressing >>>>> "T", I mean user would consider the timestamp is set once "T" is >>>>> pressed, with this the behavior would be consistent with RET and M-n and >>>>> the code much simpler. >>>> >>>> There is no need to make the value used by RET and the value inserted by M-n >>>> consistent in 100% of cases. >>> >>> Sorry but I disagree on this. >> >> Same question as with previous issue: >> >> How do I guess (as a third party package maintainer) what DEFAULT is if >> you do such things in Emacs? >> >> We had a similar bug recently where a completing-read was specifying the >> default in prompt (with format-prompt) but the DEFAULT arg was not >> provided, instead DEFAULT was computed later in the function... How do I >> guess what DEFAULT is in such cases? From the prompt? This is not a >> valid solution, like this issue prove. > > The docstring of 'read-string' says: > > Fourth arg DEFAULT-VALUE is the default value or the list of default values. > If non-nil, it is used for history commands, and as the value (or the first > element of the list of default values) to return if the user enters the > empty string. > > So it never returns an empty string. It always returns the default value > that is quite confusing in this case. > > OTOH, the docstring of 'read-from-minibuffer' says: > > Sixth arg DEFAULT-VALUE, if non-nil, should be a string, which is used > as the default to read if READ is non-nil and the user enters > empty input. But if READ is nil, this function does _not_ return > DEFAULT-VALUE for empty input! Instead, it returns the empty string. > > Unlike 'read-string', 'read-from-minibuffer' does not return > the default value for empty input. > > So indeed it would be clearer to use 'read-from-minibuffer' > instead of 'read-string' to return an empty string for RET. > This is now fixed as well. In why returning an empty string fix the issue? We are now back at initial point, no? -- Thierry