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ale/ale_linters/elm/make.vim
Keith Pinson f21f52343d Fix Elm linter for Windows (resolves #980)
Looks like elm-make only respects /dev/null, even on Windows. The person
who wrote this linter maybe did not test it on Windows, and wrote the
code in the way you would expect to be solid by using NUL on Windows.
However it seems elm-make is not actually making use of /dev/null but
rather using it as a form of flag. Ironically this seems to be what is
already described in the comments; I added some clarification.
2017-10-06 17:26:50 -04:00

89 lines
3.4 KiB
VimL

" Author: buffalocoder - https://github.com/buffalocoder, soywod - https://github.com/soywod
" Description: Elm linting in Ale. Closely follows the Syntastic checker in https://github.com/ElmCast/elm-vim.
call ale#Set('elm_make_executable', 'elm-make')
call ale#Set('elm_make_use_global', 0)
function! ale_linters#elm#make#GetExecutable(buffer) abort
return ale#node#FindExecutable(a:buffer, 'elm_make', [
\ 'node_modules/.bin/elm-make',
\])
endfunction
function! ale_linters#elm#make#Handle(buffer, lines) abort
let l:output = []
let l:is_windows = has('win32')
let l:temp_dir = l:is_windows ? $TMP : $TMPDIR
let l:unparsed_lines = []
for l:line in a:lines
if l:line[0] is# '['
let l:errors = json_decode(l:line)
for l:error in l:errors
" Check if file is from the temp directory.
" Filters out any errors not related to the buffer.
if l:is_windows
let l:file_is_buffer = l:error.file[0:len(l:temp_dir) - 1] is? l:temp_dir
else
let l:file_is_buffer = l:error.file[0:len(l:temp_dir) - 1] is# l:temp_dir
endif
if l:file_is_buffer
call add(l:output, {
\ 'lnum': l:error.region.start.line,
\ 'col': l:error.region.start.column,
\ 'end_lnum': l:error.region.end.line,
\ 'end_col': l:error.region.end.column,
\ 'type': (l:error.type is? 'error') ? 'E' : 'W',
\ 'text': l:error.overview,
\ 'detail': l:error.overview . "\n\n" . l:error.details
\})
endif
endfor
elseif l:line isnot# 'Successfully generated /dev/null'
call add(l:unparsed_lines, l:line)
endif
endfor
if len(l:unparsed_lines) > 0
call add(l:output, {
\ 'lnum': 1,
\ 'type': 'E',
\ 'text': l:unparsed_lines[0],
\ 'detail': join(l:unparsed_lines, "\n")
\})
endif
return l:output
endfunction
" Return the command to execute the linter in the projects directory.
" If it doesn't, then this will fail when imports are needed.
function! ale_linters#elm#make#GetCommand(buffer) abort
let l:elm_package = ale#path#FindNearestFile(a:buffer, 'elm-package.json')
let l:elm_exe = ale_linters#elm#make#GetExecutable(a:buffer)
if empty(l:elm_package)
let l:dir_set_cmd = ''
else
let l:root_dir = fnamemodify(l:elm_package, ':p:h')
let l:dir_set_cmd = 'cd ' . ale#Escape(l:root_dir) . ' && '
endif
" The elm-make compiler, at the time of this writing, uses '/dev/null' as
" a sort of flag to tell the compiler not to generate an output file,
" which is why this is hard coded here. It does not use NUL on Windows.
" Source: https://github.com/elm-lang/elm-make/blob/master/src/Flags.hs
let l:elm_cmd = ale#Escape(l:elm_exe)
\ . ' --report=json'
\ . ' --output=/dev/null'
return l:dir_set_cmd . ' ' . l:elm_cmd . ' %t'
endfunction
call ale#linter#Define('elm', {
\ 'name': 'make',
\ 'executable_callback': 'ale_linters#elm#make#GetExecutable',
\ 'output_stream': 'both',
\ 'command_callback': 'ale_linters#elm#make#GetCommand',
\ 'callback': 'ale_linters#elm#make#Handle'
\})