>> I don't understand.. "a/b/.." matches a/b/c but not a/b/c/d ? That doesn't
>> seem natural to me at all. --Ethan
+>>> Ah.. in that case, why not use "a/b/* and !a/b/*/*" ? No need for a new
+>>> symbol. --[[Joey]]
+
+>>>> I know it's not necessary, but it would be helpful. --Ethan
+
+>>>>> I don't see the need for a new syntax since it's only a little long
+>>>>> using the old one. And of course even that can now be shortened:
+>>>>> "./* and !./*/*" --[[Joey]]
+
OK, I took a shot at implementing the changes. I was thinking about making
pagespecs relative by default but I couldn't decide whether page
`foo/bar` inlining `*` should match `foo/bar/*` or `foo/*`.
>> clothes/pants inlines `./jeans/*` -- probably means clothes/pants/jeans
>> vacation/bermuda/blog inlines `./pics/*` -- probably vacation/bermuda/pics
+>>> What strikes me about your examples is that the "right thing" is
+>>> utterly contect dependent. Unfortunatly, I don't think that using
+>>> bestlink inside pagespec is possible. bestlinks change as pages are
+>>> added/removed, and dealing with the matches of a pagespec changing when
+>>> some page that is added or removed seems Hard.
+>>>
+>>> Since it seems we have to arbitrarily pick one of the two behaviors, I
+>>> prefer the one I picked for two reasons:
+>>> 1. The other behavior can be obtained easily from it, for example,
+>>> use ./c/* to limit the matches to that subdir.
+>>> 2. The common case is a bunch of pages in a single directory, not lots
+>>> of deeply nested subdirs.
+>>> --[[Joey]]
+
+>>>> Context-dependence was my conclusion too. My feeling is that inlining
+>>>> in a subdirectory of the current page is more common, but I don't
+>>>> really know. However, I think the changes as written should work OK
+>>>> with my index patch and allowing inlining from a/b/c/, so I'm
+>>>> satisfied. --Ethan
+
> I've committed support for ./ to ikiwiki now, based on your patch.
+> [[todo/done]]
> --[[Joey]]
>> Cool! I haven't played with it yet, but looking over the patch, I see that
>> you added another parameter to match_glob, which is an approach that didn't
->> occur to me. I like it, it's more flexible. --Ethan
\ No newline at end of file
+>> occur to me. I like it, it's more flexible. --Ethan