The linter can correctly parse pydocstyle output with any of the following
command-line options enabled: --explain, --source, --debug, and/or
--verbose
- Add g:ale_virtualtext_cursor boolean to enable/disable it
- Add g:ale_virtualtext_prefix to configure what prefix to use (default:
'> ')
- Requires neovim 0.3.2's unreleased API `nvim_buf_set_virtual_text`
This is the callback-based variant of the existing `lsp_config` linter
option. It serves the same purpose but can be used when more complicated
processing is needed.
`lsp_config` and `lsp_config_callback` are mutually exclusive options;
if both an given, a linter preprocessing error will be raised.
The runtime logic has been wrapped in `ale#lsp_linter#GetConfig` for
convenience, similar to `ale#lsp_linter#GetOptions`.
This also adds documentation and an `AssertLSPConfig` test function for
completeness.
* add prolog/swipl linter
* use load_files/2 instead of read_term/2
Because it also checks some semantic warnings / errors
not only syntactic warnings / errors.
e.g.:
* singleton warning
* discontiguous warning
* ...
cf. http://www.swi-prolog.org/pldoc/doc_for?object=style_check/1
* support error messages with no line number
:- module(module_name, [pred/0]).
causes
ERROR: Exported procedure module_name:pred/0 is not defined
* add test for prolog/swipl handler
* cosmetic fixes
* detect timeout using SIGALRM
* rename g:prolog_swipl_goals to g:prolog_swipl_load
* write doc for prolog/swipl linter
* update toc and README
* fix ignore patterns
ElixirLS (https://github.com/JakeBecker/elixir-ls) is an LSP server for
Elixir. It's distributed as a release package that can be downloaded
from https://github.com/JakeBecker/elixir-ls/releases or built locally.
The easiest way to start it is via Unix- and Win32-specific helper
scripts, so that's the basis of this command integration. Alternatively,
we could implement the contents of those platform-specific scripts in
the linter's command callback in a language-neutral way, but there isn't
any benefit to doing that aside from eliminating the platform check, and
that could prove to be too tight of a coupling going forward.
* Add better support for Haskell stack compiler tools
This commit adds support for `stack` as the executable of a tool. This
follows a pattern that has been implemented for `bundler`'s tool chain.
* Move hlint command to linter file
* Add vader test for stack exec handling
* Update ghc-mod to support stack execution
`ghc-mod` was previously broken into 2 linters.
1. ghc_mod
2. stack_ghc_mod
This additional linter is not necessary with proper support for
executable variables and `stack exec` handling.
* Support stack exec in hfmt
* Support stack in hdevtools