I like the idea of [[tips/integrated_issue_tracking_with_ikiwiki]], and I do so on several wikis. However, as far as I can tell, ikiwiki has no functionality which can represent dependencies between bugs and allow pagespecs to select based on dependencies. For instance, I can't write a pagespec which selects all bugs with no dependencies on bugs not marked as done. --[[JoshTriplett]] > I started having a think about this. I'm going to start with the idea that expanding > the pagespec syntax is the way to attack this. It seems that any pagespec that is going > to represent "all bugs with no dependencies on bugs not marked as done" is going to > need some way to represent "bugs not marked as done" as a collection of pages, and > then represent "bugs which do not link to pages in the previous collection". > > One way to do this would be to introduce variables into the pagespec, along with > universal and/or existential [[!wikipedia Quantification]]. That looks quite complex. > > Another option would be go with a more functional syntax. The concept here would > be to allow a pagespec to appear in a 'pagespec function' anywhere a page can. e.g. > I could pass a pagespec to `link()` and that would return true if there is a link to any > page matching the pagespec. This makes the variables and existential quantification > implicit. It would allow the example requested above: > >> `bugs/* and !*/Discussion and !link(bugs/* and !*/Discussion and !link(done))` > > Unfortunately, this is also going to make the pagespec parsing more complex because > we now need to parse nested sets of parentheses to know when the nested pagespec > ends, and that isn't a regular language (we can't use regular expression matching for > easy parsing). > > One simplification of that would be to introduce some pagespec [[shortcuts]]. We could > then allow pagespec functions to take either pages, or named pagespec shortcuts. The > pagespec shortcuts would just be listed on a special page, like current [[shortcuts]]. > (It would probably be a good idea to require that shortcuts on that page can only refer > to named pagespecs higher up that page than themselves. That would stop some > looping issues...) These shortcuts would be used as follows: when trying to match > a page (without globs) you look to see if the page exists. If it does then you have a > match. If it doesn't, then you look to see if a similarly named pagespec shortcut > exists. If it does, then you check that pagespec recursively to see if you have a match. > The ordering requirement on named pagespecs stops infinite recursion. > > Does that seem like a reasonable first approach? > > -- [[Will]]