This keeps the PROMPT variable as is and changes the prompt to the cmder style
in the clink code.
This has two advantages:
* opening a cmd in a cmder session will now show the old prompt code instead of
a ugly raw prompt without the replacements. This led to ugly output when a
batch file echoed their content (e.g `conda build recipe/`).
* when a command rewrites the prompt (e.g. an activate in a virtualenv), these
command sometimes simply overwrites the PROMPT so that the cmder enhancements
were not anymore in place. Now we simply don't care and overwrite it with our
stuff in the clink part. This might mean that a user has to install a lua
script so that e.g. conda environments are visible on the prompt.
Add a pre and post function hook around the Cmder prompt.
Specify the cmder prompt as a function that could be replaced by a user.
Write a friendly message when the user profile template is created.
Create the user profile with cmder prompt hooks ready to use.
It was concerning to run any function with a specific name every prompt
with no guarantee it remains what it was initally created as.
Core functions have been explicitly called from their
namespace like Microsoft.PowerShell.Utility\Write-Host to try and prevent
clobbering.
User supplied functions are passed in as script blocks, created as the
session runs the profile script. By creating them as constants these
function names cannot be declared again for the duration of the process.
Since the prompt function already exists by this time, set the readOnly
flag so to re-declare the prompt requires the use of -force.
It is hoped these changes limit what could be the risk of any script
redefining functions that are called automatically without user intent or
input.
There were problems when a path contained a parenthesis like `C:\temp\test (test)\`
As a precaution, quote all variables when they are used in echo or set.
Join-Path won't add "\"'s without the use of a delimeter. In this case there is no delimiter and as a result the script will fail when it tries to look up $CmderModulePath.
The idea is:
* if the users points as to a specific git, use that
* test if a git is in path and if yes, use that
* last, use our vendored git
We don't make any attempt to guess a different location, if a user wants their
own git install, they have to choose "add git to path".
Also check that we have a recent enough version of git (e.g. test for
<GIT>\cmd\git.exe)