Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Thanks for the feedback! I understand how having ordered structs would
potentially make it easier to use for some use cases. But at the same time I'm
hesitant to introduce order-dependency for subsections, as it feels somewhat
inconsistent (sections and variables in sections are order-independent) and may
not work well with other (planned) features, such as multi-file support which
is also a common need (and already kind of supported by calling ReadFileInto
consecutively with different files).
Consider for example what if one file defines processors "a" and "b" in that
order, and then another file (re)defines/overrides processors in the order "c"
"b" "a" (or just "c" "a"). Does it only override the values inside "a" and "b"
or does it also override the order (and should it drop "b" in the latter case)?
I think going either way would confuse many users, and that it's better to have
the precedence listed explicitly rather than implied by the order in file.
Currently the only place where order is maintained is for multi-valued
variables. So for the current version, I'd suggest to add a new variable
somewhere with the list of names, e.g.
[processors]
processor = a
processor = b
processor = default
[processor "a"]
match = foo.*
...
It is a bit more typing, but it makes the order explicit, and more consistent
with existing and planned features. It also makes reordering easier.
Another variation (which requires a bit of value parsing) is to do something
like this, similarly to how git-config handles proxy configuration:
[routing]
processor = a for foo.*
processor = b for bar.*
processor = default
[processor "a"]
...
This decouples routing (when to use which processor) from the processor itself
(i.e. what the processor does), which can be useful in some contexts (but not
sure if it is useful in your case). In addition it also allows multiple routing
entries with different patterns to share the same processor (again, you may not
need this).
Your use case also seems somewhat related to issue 10 which also relates to
ordered subsections (which I closed at the time because it seemed too niche).
For future enhancement, one possibility could be to add subsections with
integer keys (stored in an array/slice with the key as the index):
[processor 0]
name = a
match = foo.*
...
This seems to be a good solution in case there is a fixed number of items and
there is no need for inserting / reordering (like in issue 10), but I got the
impression that reordering / inserting could occur in your case, which makes
using numbers cumbersome due to the need for renumbering. Still if you think it
would be useful in your use case, let me know, and I'll consider it as a vote
towards adding this feature.
Original comment by speter....@gmail.com
on 26 Feb 2015 at 11:02
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
datsun...@gmail.com
on 25 Feb 2015 at 10:36