##// END OF EJS Templates
merge: return an attrs class from update() and applyupdates()...
merge: return an attrs class from update() and applyupdates() Previously, we returned a tuple containing counts. The result of an update is kind of complex and the use of tuples with nameless fields made the code a bit harder to read and constrained future expansion of the return value. Let's invent an attrs-defined class for representing the result of an update operation. We provide __getitem__ and __len__ implementations for backwards compatibility as a container type to minimize code churn. In (at least) Python 2, the % operator seems to insist on using tuples. So we had to update a consumer using the % operator. .. api:: merge.update() and merge.applyupdates() now return a class with named attributes instead of a tuple. Switch consumers to access elements by name instead of by offset. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2692

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index.tmpl
31 lines | 795 B | application/x-cheetah | CheetahLexer
{header}
<title>Mercurial repositories index</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<div class="menu">
<a href="{logourl}">
<img src="{staticurl|urlescape}{logoimg}" width=75 height=90 border=0 alt="mercurial" /></a>
</div>
<div class="main">
<h2 class="breadcrumb"><a href="/">Mercurial</a> {pathdef%breadcrumb}</h2>
<table class="bigtable">
<thead>
<tr>
<th><a href="?sort={sort_name}">Name</a></th>
<th><a href="?sort={sort_description}">Description</a></th>
<th><a href="?sort={sort_contact}">Contact</a></th>
<th><a href="?sort={sort_lastchange}">Last modified</a></th>
<th>&nbsp;</th>
<th>&nbsp;</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody class="stripes2">
{entries%indexentry}
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
</div>
{footer}