I see no reason to do this? It is just setting the environment to what
it already is?
It was originally added in #297, but that entire PR is not a great idea
in the first place; that PR (together with #270) tried to make the Go do
non-standard and non-supported stuff like compiling packages outside of
GOPATH.
That's not something that works well (I tried), so was eventually
removed in #465, but these "go env" calls remained, for no reason in
particular, as far as I can think of.
This will improve on #1834; you will now no longer get a confusing error
(but still won't get a meaningful error; need to think how to do that).
* Adding support for haskell-ide-engine
* Work with the current directory if no stack.yaml file is found
* Added Cabal file detection, updated documentation and added tests
* Updated help
* Rust Cargo linter: Improve workspace support
When using Cargo workspaces [1], there is a 'Cargo.toml' directory in a
top level directory, listing all the crates in the project. If we are
currently editing one of the crates, 'cargo build' should execute in
that directory for that crate's separate `Cargo.toml`, otherwise Cargo
may spend more time possibly rebuilding the entire workspace, and maybe
failing on one of the other crates, instead of succeeding on the current.
[1] https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/second-edition/ch14-03-cargo-workspaces.html
For now, it only detects undefined steps. The nearest `features` dir
above the buffer file is loaded, so step definitions should be found
correctly.
Tested only with Cucumber for Ruby, but it should work for any cucumber
that follows a substantially similar directory structure.
This removes the argument if the specified toolchain is empty.
As far as I can tell there is no +nighly (or similar) option [1] leading to
the termination of the server. But since people needed this option and
have yet to complain about it it stays the default for now.
[1] https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/rls/blob/master/src/main.rs#L87
* Add first qmlfmt support
* Add GetCommand() function
- pass --error/-e option
* Add handle unittest
- fix pattern regex
- store col as integer
* Update docs
* Add command callback unit test
* Add fsc as a Scala linter
* Pull reused code into `autoload/ale/` directory
* Include fsc into the README
* Add unit test for testing the scala handler
* Add unit test for scala's fsc linter
* Rename scala unit tests for clarity
* Fix typo in README
* Fix typos in doc/ale.txt
* Fix author headline
* Put methods for fsc commands back into fsc.vim
* Move command_callback tests to correct location
* Rewrite handler test so it actually tests handler
* Clarify description of test in test_scala_handler
* Fixed (g)awk linter
* Made it secure, albeit less useful.
* Added gawk handler; the cpplint one was not working?
* Added gawk handler test.
* added warning to gawk handler.
* added gawk command callback test
* added comment about --source
* added back optional commandline option
* Flawfinder support added for C and C++
A minor modification to gcc handler was made to support flawfinder's
single-line output format that does not have a space following the
colon denoting the warning level. gcc handler still passes its
Vader tests after this modification.
* Documentation fixes
* Revert documentation regression
* Added Flawfinder to table of contents
* Removed trailing whitespace
* Follow ALE conventions better
Added additional documentation and Vader tests
Erubi is yet another parser for eRuby. This is the default parser in
Rails as of version 5.1. It supports some additional syntax with similar
behavior to Rails' extensions to the language, though incompatible.
Rails currently still recommends their own syntax, so GetCommand still
has to do the translation introduced in
https://github.com/w0rp/ale/pull/1114 .
Erubi does not supply an executable—It is intended to be invoked only
from within a Ruby program. In this case, a one-liner on the command
line.