On Wed, Mar 16, 2016 at 5:23 PM, Jeff King <p...@peff.net> wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 02:36:51AM +0530, Pranit Bauva wrote:
>> I agree to you on the point that parse-options should not care about
>> the value passed to it. But I think plainly incrementing the value of
>> the variable is not a very nice way. I have an another approach to it.
>> The parse-options will first store a temporary structure. If there is
>> some changes (not the "--no-" ones) then it sets the respective
>> variable in temporary structure to the set value. If "--no-" is passed
>> then it writes the "reset" value to the respective variable in
>> temporary structure. If nothing about that options is specified then
>> it copies the respective variable from original to temporary. After
>> completing the entire process, it can copy temporary structure to the
>> original structure.
>>
>> What are your opinions about this?
>
> I don't think that would produce the wrong behavior, but it seems like a
> very complicated solution to a problem that can easily be solved by just
> following the usual conventions (that verbose starts at 0, options make
> it go up or down, and "--no-" resets it to zero).

I agree that this is overly complicated.

> Perhaps it would make more sense if I understood what your goal was in
> setting verbose to -1 in the first place.

The goal comes from his GSoC microproject. Specifically, Pranit wants
an "unspecified" value. The reason is that he is adding a
commit.verbose=<level> config variable to back the existing git-commit
--verbose option. Any use of --verbose (one or more times) or
--no-verbose should override the config.verbose value altogether, so
he wants a way to know if --verbose or --no-verbose was used; hence
the "unspecified" value. And, really, this issue isn't necessarily
specific to git-commit. It could apply to any command that understands
verbosity levels and wants to be able to get them from both a config
variable and a command-line option.

A much easier solution would be to update OPT_VERBOSE() to understand
that negative values are "unspecified", and then --verbose would
(pseudocode):

    if (value < 0)
        value = 0
    value++;

and --no-verbose would:

    value = 0

That should be compatible with existing clients of OPT__VERBOSE()
which initialize the value to 0, and should satisfy Pranit's case; he
can initialize it to -1, and if it is still -1 when option parsing is
done, then he knows that neither --verbose nor --no-verbose was seen.
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