From: Mike Frysinger Date: Fri, 21 Dec 2012 05:03:17 +0000 (-0500) Subject: manual: glob flags: fix sorting order X-Git-Tag: glibc-2.18~823 X-Git-Url: http://review.tizen.org/git/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=aba5e59604da465adc6eb65b33a414dfc29904de;p=platform%2Fupstream%2Fglibc.git manual: glob flags: fix sorting order Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger --- diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog index 55c36f2..68b5d32 100644 --- a/ChangeLog +++ b/ChangeLog @@ -1,5 +1,10 @@ 2013-01-13 Mike Frysinger + * manual/pattern.texi (Flags for Globbing): Move GLOB_NOSORT after + GLOB_NOESCAPE. + +2013-01-13 Mike Frysinger + * manual/pattern.texi (Flags for Globbing): Highlight GNU extensions. 2013-01-13 Mike Frysinger diff --git a/manual/pattern.texi b/manual/pattern.texi index 60e9dc8..1966f3f 100644 --- a/manual/pattern.texi +++ b/manual/pattern.texi @@ -495,13 +495,6 @@ matches.) @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 -@item GLOB_NOSORT -Don't sort the file names; return them in no particular order. -(In practice, the order will depend on the order of the entries in -the directory.) The only reason @emph{not} to sort is to save time. - -@comment glob.h -@comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_NOESCAPE Don't treat the @samp{\} character specially in patterns. Normally, @samp{\} quotes the following character, turning off its special meaning @@ -514,6 +507,13 @@ If you use @code{GLOB_NOESCAPE}, then @samp{\} is an ordinary character. @code{glob} does its work by calling the function @code{fnmatch} repeatedly. It handles the flag @code{GLOB_NOESCAPE} by turning on the @code{FNM_NOESCAPE} flag in calls to @code{fnmatch}. + +@comment glob.h +@comment POSIX.2 +@item GLOB_NOSORT +Don't sort the file names; return them in no particular order. +(In practice, the order will depend on the order of the entries in +the directory.) The only reason @emph{not} to sort is to save time. @end vtable @node More Flags for Globbing