From: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
To: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Cc: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>, git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH 2/3] test-lib: simplify lsan results check
Date: Thu, 9 Jan 2025 11:00:44 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <Z3-eTDsHQ9Nu1er9@pks.im> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20250109075750.GC2735258@coredump.intra.peff.net>
On Thu, Jan 09, 2025 at 02:57:50AM -0500, Jeff King wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 07, 2025 at 08:37:33AM +0100, Patrick Steinhardt wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Jan 07, 2025 at 02:07:52AM -0500, Jeff King wrote:
> > > We want to know if there are any leaks logged by LSan in the results
> > > directory, so we run "find" on the containing directory and pipe it to
> > > xargs. We can accomplish the same thing by just globbing in the shell
> > > and passing the result to grep, which has a few advantages:
> > >
> > > - it's one fewer process to run
> > >
> > > - we can glob on the TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE pattern, which is what we
> > > checked at the beginning of the function, and is the same glob use
> >
> > s/use/used
> >
> > I'm always a bit thrown off by your style of bulleted lists, where they
> > feel like sentences but start with a lower-case letter, and sometimes
> > they do and sometimes they don't end with punctuation. Maybe it's just
> > me not being a native speaker and it's a natural thing to do in English.
> > In any case, it's nothing that really matters in the end, but would be
> > happy to learn if this is indeed something you tend to do in English.
>
> Heh. Yeah, I've seen you mention them before and I've been tempted to
> start a big discussion. But I never felt like it was worth it. But
> tonight's your lucky night. ;)
>
> In short: I think it's a style question. I perceive them as
> continuations of the sentence that has the ":". Though admittedly I do
> not always grammatically continue that sentence. So for example I could:
>
> - have one bullet item that completes the sentence.
>
> - and then another that likewise completes it.
>
> ;) I think many style guides would frown on that. Especially with the
> periods at the end (you might argue that they should be semicolons).
>
> In the example you quoted above they don't grammatically continue the
> sentence, so arguably what I'm saying doesn't even apply. But I also
> kind of think of the list items as sentence fragments. That sometimes
> happen to make a full sentence. Or need punctuation because that
> fragments gets so long it contains multiple sentences.
>
> I dunno. You asked if it is something you tend to do in English. It is
> something _I_ tend to do in English, but I think most style guides would
> suggest against it (but then, most also suggest against bulleted lists
> in the first place). (They probably also suggest against lots of
> parentheses). So I wouldn't necessarily copy me.
>
> My general feeling is that unless a commit message is inaccurate or hard
> to understand, we should mostly let it pass (even typos). Yes, they are
> an artifact that is enshrined in the history. But at some point they are
> also just a written communication between developers, and we all have
> our own voices and styles. And make mistakes. Polishing them is
> something we _can_ do collaboratively, but there are diminishing
> returns.
Yup, agreed. It's a minor detail and I'm happy to gloss over it in the
future.
> In case it is not clear, I would not say the same for documentation,
> error messages, etc. Those are artifacts that hits a wider audience, and
> we have a tool for polishing them together: git.
>
> And people should still proofread and correct their own messages before
> sending. Believe it or not, I do always take a final pass when sending
> out my commits and still manage to have errors. ;) A lot of times I end
> up improving clarity and wording on the final pass, but end up
> introducing a typo (I'm pretty sure that the use/used above was me
> switching last-minute between "the same glob we use" and "the same glob
> used").
>
> Bringing it back to the example at hand, my assumption is that the
> bullet list capitalization and punctuation is mostly a question of
> style, and isn't making the result hard to understand. But if it is, I
> can try to adjust. I actually wrote a bulleted list in a commit message
> earlier today and capitalized it just for you. :)
Thanks for explaining!
Patrick
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2025-01-09 10:00 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 37+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2024-12-30 17:33 What's cooking in git.git (Dec 2024, #11; Mon, 30) Junio C Hamano
2024-12-31 17:27 ` René Scharfe
2025-01-03 7:39 ` Patrick Steinhardt
2025-01-01 19:14 ` a less-invasive racy-leak fix, was " Jeff King
2025-01-01 20:12 ` [PATCH 0/6] a less-invasive racy-leak fix Jeff King
2025-01-01 20:12 ` [PATCH 1/6] test-lib: use individual lsan dir for --stress runs Jeff King
2025-01-01 20:12 ` [PATCH 2/6] Revert "index-pack: spawn threads atomically" Jeff King
2025-01-01 20:14 ` [PATCH 3/6] test-lib: rely on logs to detect leaks Jeff King
2025-01-03 12:05 ` Patrick Steinhardt
2025-01-03 20:10 ` Jeff King
2025-01-01 20:17 ` [PATCH 4/6] test-lib: simplify leak-log checking Jeff King
2025-01-03 12:05 ` Patrick Steinhardt
2025-01-03 20:24 ` Jeff King
2025-01-06 7:56 ` Patrick Steinhardt
2025-01-07 7:01 ` Jeff King
2025-01-01 20:18 ` [PATCH 5/6] test-lib: check leak logs for presence of DEDUP_TOKEN Jeff King
2025-01-01 20:21 ` [PATCH 6/6] test-lib: ignore leaks in the sanitizer's thread code Jeff King
2025-01-03 12:05 ` Patrick Steinhardt
2025-01-03 20:26 ` Jeff King
2025-01-06 7:56 ` Patrick Steinhardt
2025-01-07 7:04 ` [PATCH 0/3] lsan test-lib readability Jeff King
2025-01-07 7:05 ` [PATCH 1/3] test-lib: invert return value of check_test_results_san_file_empty Jeff King
2025-01-07 7:07 ` [PATCH 2/3] test-lib: simplify lsan results check Jeff King
2025-01-07 7:37 ` Patrick Steinhardt
2025-01-09 7:57 ` Jeff King
2025-01-09 10:00 ` Patrick Steinhardt [this message]
2025-01-07 16:23 ` Junio C Hamano
2025-01-09 7:59 ` Jeff King
2025-01-07 7:08 ` [PATCH 3/3] test-lib: add a few comments to LSan log checking Jeff King
2025-01-07 7:37 ` Patrick Steinhardt
2025-01-02 0:25 ` a less-invasive racy-leak fix, was Re: What's cooking in git.git (Dec 2024, #11; Mon, 30) Junio C Hamano
2025-01-02 2:32 ` Jeff King
2025-01-02 2:41 ` Chris Torek
2025-01-02 14:42 ` Junio C Hamano
2025-01-02 19:06 ` Jeff King
2025-01-02 19:33 ` Junio C Hamano
2025-01-02 3:24 ` Jeff King
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