[GNC] ANNOUNCE: GnuCash 5.10 Released

Sherlock sh025622 at gmail.com
Thu Dec 19 17:12:26 EST 2024


On 12/18/24 8:11 PM, John Ralls wrote:
> 
> 
>> On Dec 18, 2024, at 15:56, AP <gnucash at inml.grue.cc> wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, Dec 17, 2024 at 08:01:01PM -0800, John Ralls wrote:
>>> I’d made an error when I wrote bit in the bundler script that derives the version to pass to the setup-generator: It gets the release instal directories, sorts them, and grabs the last one. The problem with that is that it’s a lexical sort so if say 5.8, 5.9. and 5.10 directories exist then the sort order is
>>> Gnucash-5.10
>>> Gnucash-5.8
>>> Gnucash-5.9
>>> And the last one is 5.9. https://github.com/Gnucash/gnucash-on-windows/commit/317b10b7d99a4ae8281e866efc4403b9b7624320 changes it to sort them by creation date. That’s still not perfect, of course, because someone might come along and builds an earlier version by hand it will have the last time stamp.
>>
>> I asked the Lord God AI (as I'm not a powershell user) and it came up with this:
>>
>> --- 8<---
>> # Define an array of strings with non-version related text before the version numbers
>> $versionStrings = @(
>>     'ProductA v1.2.3',
>>     'ProductB v1.10.0',
>>     'ProductC v1.3.5',
>>     'ProductD v2.0.0'
>> )
>>
>> # Extract the version part using a regular expression and sort by the extracted version
>> $sortedVersions = $versionStrings | Sort-Object {
>>     if ($_ -match 'v([\d\.]+)$') {
>>         [version]$matches[1]
>>     }
>> }
>>
>> # Display the sorted versions
>> $sortedVersions
>> --- 8<---
>>
>> Don't know how right it is but if it's not right in and of itself then, maybe, it's right enough to get you most of the way there. :)
>>
> 
> You don’t show the output, but the result of the regex match is still a string so I think it will still sort lexically, i.e. 1.10.0, 1.2.3, 1.3.5, 2.0.0.
> 
> This S-O suggests using a function called System.Version: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/711107/sorting-powershell-versions. Dunno if it works on two-digit version numbers. My default approach in most languages would be to do two captures, ‘(\d+).(\d+)$’ and cast each to int and do a two-level sort.  https://stackoverflow.com/questions/71232189/how-to-sort-multilevel-list suggests how to do the multi-level sort part.
> 
> Regards,
> John Ralls
> 
> _______________________________________________
> gnucash-user mailing list
> gnucash-user at gnucash.org
> To update your subscription preferences or to unsubscribe:
> https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user
> -----
> Please remember to CC this list on all your replies.
> You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.

John,

The PowerShell's System.Version object supports the form of:

   Major . Minor . Build . Revision

The cast maps the missing elements to -1.
|
For example:

PS C:\Users\sherlock> [version]"1.0"

Major  Minor  Build  Revision
-----  -----  -----  --------
1      0      -1     -1


The sort implemented is an appropriate multi-level numeric order: Major, 
then Minor, then Build, and finally Revision.


If you really want to select the gnucash folder with the greatest 
version suffix in bundle-mingw64.ps1 (assuming there is such a folder), 
the following should suffice:

$gnucash = get-childitem -path $target_dir\build | sort-object { 
[Version] $(if ($_.Name -match "^gnucash-([0-9\.]+)$") { $matches[1] } 
else { "0.0.0.0" }) } | select-object -last 1


You may want to add some logic in bundle-mingw64.ps1 to verify the 
package version subsequently derived from the config.h contained within 
the selected folder is a match.


Regards,

Sherlock






More information about the gnucash-user mailing list