From 6804cd042e367954c9cf8d52392f1c3f59aaed70 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ben Boeckel Date: Thu, 1 May 2014 14:47:18 -0400 Subject: Help: Add documentation on escaping changes with CMP0053 --- Help/manual/cmake-language.7.rst | 19 +++++++++++++------ 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) (limited to 'Help/manual/cmake-language.7.rst') diff --git a/Help/manual/cmake-language.7.rst b/Help/manual/cmake-language.7.rst index 5bbe16ebc1..b83dcad4b3 100644 --- a/Help/manual/cmake-language.7.rst +++ b/Help/manual/cmake-language.7.rst @@ -296,16 +296,18 @@ An *escape sequence* is a ``\`` followed by one character: .. productionlist:: escape_sequence: `escape_identity` | `escape_encoded` | `escape_semicolon` - escape_identity: '\(' | '\)' | '\#' | '\"' | '\ ' | - : '\\' | '\$' | '\@' | '\^' + escape_identity: '\' escape_encoded: '\t' | '\r' | '\n' escape_semicolon: '\;' -A ``\`` followed by one of ``()#" \#@^`` simply encodes the literal +A ``\`` followed by a non-alphanumeric character simply encodes the literal character without interpreting it as syntax. A ``\t``, ``\r``, or ``\n`` -encodes a tab, carriage return, or newline character, respectively. -A ``\;`` encodes itself but may be used in an `Unquoted Argument`_ -to encode the ``;`` without dividing the argument value on it. +encodes a tab, carriage return, or newline character, respectively. A ``\;`` +outside of any `Variable References`_ encodes itself but may be used in an +`Unquoted Argument`_ to encode the ``;`` without dividing the argument +value on it. A ``\;`` inside `Variable References`_ encodes the literal +``;`` character. (See also policy :policy:`CMP0053` documentation for +historical considerations.) .. _`Variable References`: @@ -319,6 +321,11 @@ or by the empty string if the variable is not set. Variable references can nest and are evaluated from the inside out, e.g. ``${outer_${inner_variable}_variable}``. +Literal variable references may consist of alphanumeric characters, +the characters ``/_.+-``, and `Escape Sequences`_. Nested references +may be used to evaluate variables of any name. (See also policy +:policy:`CMP0053` documentation for historical considerations.) + The `Variables`_ section documents the scope of variable names and how their values are set. -- cgit v1.2.1