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contrib: add a partial-merge tool for sorted lists (such as Python imports)...
contrib: add a partial-merge tool for sorted lists (such as Python imports) This is a pretty naive tool that uses a regular expression for matching lines. It is based on a Google-internal tool that worked in a similar way. For now, the regular expression is hard-coded to attempt to match single-line Python imports. The only commit I've found in the hg core repo where the tool helped was commit 9cd6292abfdf. I think that's because we often use multiple imports per import statement. I think this tool is still a decent first step (especially once the regex is made configurable in the next patch). The merging should ideally use a proper Python parser and do the merge at the AST (or CST?) level, but that's significantly harder, especially if you want to preserve comments and whitespace. It's also less generic. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D12380

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dates.txt
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Some commands allow the user to specify a date, e.g.:
- backout, commit, import, tag: Specify the commit date.
- log, revert, update: Select revision(s) by date.
Many date formats are valid. Here are some examples:
- ``Wed Dec 6 13:18:29 2006`` (local timezone assumed)
- ``Dec 6 13:18 -0600`` (year assumed, time offset provided)
- ``Dec 6 13:18 UTC`` (UTC and GMT are aliases for +0000)
- ``Dec 6`` (midnight)
- ``13:18`` (today assumed)
- ``3:39`` (3:39AM assumed)
- ``3:39pm`` (15:39)
- ``2006-12-06 13:18:29`` (ISO 8601 format)
- ``2006-12-6 13:18``
- ``2006-12-6``
- ``12-6``
- ``12/6``
- ``12/6/6`` (Dec 6 2006)
- ``today`` (midnight)
- ``yesterday`` (midnight)
- ``now`` - right now
Lastly, there is Mercurial's internal format:
- ``1165411109 0`` (Wed Dec 6 13:18:29 2006 UTC)
This is the internal representation format for dates. The first number
is the number of seconds since the epoch (1970-01-01 00:00 UTC). The
second is the offset of the local timezone, in seconds west of UTC
(negative if the timezone is east of UTC).
The log command also accepts date ranges:
- ``<DATE`` - at or before a given date/time
- ``>DATE`` - on or after a given date/time
- ``DATE to DATE`` - a date range, inclusive
- ``-DAYS`` - within a given number of days from today