I’m sure some of you have absolute monstrosities of sigils (I know I do, in my .zshrc alone). Post them without context, and try and guess what other users’s lines are. If you want to provide context or guess, use the markdown editor to spoiler-tag your guesses and explanations!

  • varsock
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    1 year ago

    [ “${(Oa@)argv[1,-2]}” “${argv[-1]//(#m)[[]]/${(#)$((6 ^ #MATCH))}}” # this one is definitely not useful

    spoiler

    The given shell script appears to be written in the Zsh shell syntax. Let’s break it down step by step:

    1. [ "${(Oa@)argv[1,-2]}" "${argv[-1]//(#m)[\[\]]/${(#)$((6 ^ #MATCH))}}" ]: This line encloses the entire script within square brackets [ ]. In Zsh, square brackets are commonly used for conditional expressions.

    2. "${(Oa@)argv[1,-2]}": This part refers to an expansion of the argv array, which typically holds command-line arguments passed to the script. Here’s what the individual components mean:

      • ${(Oa@)}: This is a parameter expansion flag in Zsh that sorts the elements of the array in ascending order and expands each element as separate words. The @ symbol is used to indicate the array variable argv.
      • argv[1,-2]: This is array slicing syntax that extracts a sub-array of elements from index 1 to the second-to-last element (-2). It excludes the last element, which is assumed to be the final argument.

      In summary, this part expands and sorts the elements of the argv array, excluding the last argument.

    3. "${argv[-1]//(#m)[\[\]]/${(#)$((6 ^ #MATCH))}}": This part refers to another expansion of the argv array, specifically targeting the last element (argv[-1]). Here’s what the individual components mean:

      • "${argv[-1]//pattern/replacement}": This is a parameter expansion that performs pattern substitution within the last element of the argv array.
      • (#m): This is an extended globbing flag in Zsh that enables multiline mode for pattern matching. It allows patterns to match across multiple lines.
      • [\[\]]: This is the pattern to match. It matches any occurrence of square brackets ([ or ]).
      • /${(#)$((6 ^ #MATCH))}}: This is the replacement part of the substitution. It calculates the bitwise XOR (^) of 6 and the matched pattern (#MATCH), and uses (()) to perform arithmetic expansion. The (#) flag is used to indicate that the result should be expanded.

      In summary, this part performs a substitution on the last element of the argv array, replacing any occurrence of square brackets with the result of a bitwise XOR operation between 6 and the matched pattern.

    Overall, the script appears to process command-line arguments, sort and manipulate them, and then enclose the result in a conditional expression for further evaluation or use. The exact purpose or context of the script can only be determined by understanding its broader context and usage.

    • GammaOPM
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      1 year ago
      Corrections

      ascending order

      O is descending order. o is ascending order. In particular (Oa) keeps the array order, but flips it.

      The @ symbol is used to indicate the array vriable argv.

      Not here. As a PE flag, @ puts array elements in separate words, even if the parameter is enclosed in quotes.

      The #MATCH gives the codepoint of the (first) character in $MATCH. The (#) flag turns codepoints into characters.

      Full context

      This is in a joke function called ], which is like [ but you have to specify the elements in reverse order and end it with a [. This uses bit-fiddling to swap [ and ] in the last parameter because I’m a masochist.