* Add fourmolu fixer
Fourmolu is aversion of Ormolu that supports configuration. This fixer
was modeled after the Ormolu one, but using the "stack executable"
approach of the Brittany and Stylish Haskell fixers.
* Sort supported-tools.md
Support replacing ALE's display of problems with sending problems to the Neovim diagnostics API.
:help g:ale_use_neovim_diagnostics_api
Co-authored-by: David Balatero <dbalatero@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Georgi Angelchev <angelchev@live.co.uk>
Co-authored-by: w0rp <devw0rp@gmail.com>
Default virtual-text to the Comment highlight group and prefix
virtual-text messages with comment text for each language by default.
Messages can now be formatted with `%type%` to print the error type.
The Vim 9.0 version has been updated in the Docker image to add test
coverage for virtual-text.
Consider a file like
```
#lang racket
(require racket/gui)
```
Type `Go(eventspace-`.
Pressing <C-x><C-o> to trigger omnicomplete should suggest
```
eventspace-handler-thread
eventspace-shutdown?
eventspace-event-evt
```
It does not (instead producing "top-level" completions, as if
`(eventspace-` wasn't even there).
Debugging, place the cursor on a space _after_. Now
`ale#completion#OmniFunc(1, '')` correctly returns `1`, but when given
`(0, 'eventspace-')` it returns either the empty list or generic
completion results as described above. I'm not entirely sure of the
mechanism, but it seems that `b:ale_completion_info.prefix` is the key,
and that this is set by `ale#completion#GetPrefix`. Calling
`ale#completion#GetPrefix('racket', line('.'), col('.'))` returned `''`!
Now, it returns `eventspace-` and the completions work correctly again.
Ref #4293, #4186, #3870
Gcc does not support `x c*-header` when using `-` as input filename,
which is what ALE does.
Rework the feature to only use `-x c*-header` flag when using Clang and
not GCC.
The feature is now also controlled with the variable
`g:ale_c_cc_use_header_lang_flag` and
`g:ale_cpp_cc_use_header_lang_flag`.
Add configuration files for pyright (JSON and TOML) to list of files
which identify a project root directory. Update documentation
accordingly.
Co-authored-by: Andreas Doll <andreas.doll@posteo.de>
When linting an header file in C or C++, `-x c-header` or
`-x c++-header` should be used instead of `-x c` or `-x c++`.
Using `-x c` or `-x c++` for headers files can lead to unused variables
and functions marked as static inlined as seen in #4096.
Using `-x c-header` or `-x c++-header` solve these issues.
The list of file extensions that are considered as header files can be
configured with the variables `g:ale_c_cc_header_exts` and
`g:ale_cpp_cc_header_exts`.
Deno LSP automatically detects config files named deno.json or
deno.jsonc since version 1.18.
For Deno 1.18+ this means that ALE no longer needs to resolve the
project root. However, removing the project root logic from ALE means
breaking changes for people that are still using an older version.
Adding deno.json to the list of looking files to look for will keep the
behavior consistent and compatible with the Deno config file naming
convention.
See also:
https://deno.com/blog/v1.18#auto-discovery-of-the-config-file
* Remove virtual text via types-filter
This is more robust and has the additional sideeffect that it will make
it easier to implement showing virtual text for all warnings
simultaneously.
We definitely do not want to do a call to prop_remove() for every
virtual text as that will cause noticeable lag when many warnings are
present, thus we can use this to remove all virtual text lines with one
call in the future.
Fixes#4294
refs: https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/10945
* Allow virtual text to appear for all warnings of the buffer
This can be enabled with:
let g:ale_virtualtext_cursor = 2
It is implemented both for neovim and vim 9.0.0297.
Note that sometimes it may appear like some warnings are displayed
multiple times. This is not a bug in the virtual text implementation,
but a sideeffect of multiple linters returning similar results.
For example for Rust, the 'cargo' and 'rls' linters appear to be
activated at the same time, but they sometimes return identical errors.
This causes the virtual text to show the same warning twice.
In the future we can mitigate this problem by removing duplicate errors
from our internal location list.
However users can also achieve cleaner warnings simply by activating
only one linter for each language (or multiple unambiguous linters).
For example for Rust, the problem could be solved with:
let g:ale_linters = {'rust': ['analyzer']}
Fixes#2962Fixes#3666
Regression was introduced in d93bc2baf7
The problem was that we did not handle the edge case where there is no
last popup to close, which caused old vim versions to enter code by
accident that was only supposed to be run by vim 9.
We fix this by guarding the if condition for vim 9.
Fixes#4290