| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Confusing, now-it-happens now-it-doesn't mysteries lurk
in the darkness. When scala packages are declared like this:
package scala.collection.mutable
Then paths relative to scala can easily be broken via the unlucky
presence of an empty (or nonempty) directory. Example:
// a.scala
package scala.foo
class Bar { new util.Random }
% scalac ./a.scala
% mkdir util
% scalac ./a.scala
./a.scala:4: error: type Random is not a member of package util
new util.Random
^
one error found
There are two ways to play defense against this:
- don't use relative paths; okay sometimes, less so others
- don't "opt out" of the scala package
This commit mostly pursues the latter, with occasional doses
of the former.
I created a scratch directory containing these empty directories:
actors annotation ant api asm beans cmd collection compat
concurrent control convert docutil dtd duration event factory
forkjoin generic hashing immutable impl include internal io
logging macros man1 matching math meta model mutable nsc parallel
parsing partest persistent process pull ref reflect reify remote
runtime scalap scheduler script swing sys text threadpool tools
transform unchecked util xml
I stopped when I could compile the main src directories
even with all those empties on my classpath.
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These are the regexp replacements performed:
Sxcala
-> Scala
Copyright (\d*) LAMP/EPFL
-> Copyright $1-2012 LAMP/EPFL
Copyright (\d*)-(\d*)(,?) LAMP/EPFL
-> Copyright $1-2012 LAMP/EPFL
Copyright (\d*)-(\d*) Scala Solutions and LAMP/EPFL
-> Copyright $1-2012 Scala Solutions and LAMP/EPFL
\(C\) (\d*)-(\d*) LAMP/EPFL
-> (C) $1-2012 LAMP/EPFL
Copyright \(c\) (\d*)-(\d*)(.*?)EPFL
-> Copyright (c) $1-2012$3EPFL
The last one was needed for two HTML-ified copyright notices.
Here's the summarized diff:
Created using
```
git diff -w | grep ^- | sort | uniq | mate
git diff -w | grep ^+ | sort | uniq | mate
```
```
- <div id="footer">Scala programming documentation. Copyright (c) 2003-2011 <a href="http://www.epfl.ch" target="_top">EPFL</a>, with contributions from <a href="http://typesafe.com" target="_top">Typesafe</a>.</div>
- copyright.string=Copyright 2002-2011, LAMP/EPFL
- <meta name="Copyright" content="(C) 2002-2011 LAMP/EPFL"/>
- * Copyright 2002-2011 LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2004-2011 LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2005 LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2005-2011 LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2006-2011 LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2007 LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2007-2011 LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2009-2011 Scala Solutions and LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2009-2011 Scxala Solutions and LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2010-2011 LAMP/EPFL
- * Copyright 2012 LAMP/EPFL
-# Copyright 2002-2011, LAMP/EPFL
-* Copyright 2005-2011 LAMP/EPFL
-/* NSC -- new Scala compiler -- Copyright 2007-2011 LAMP/EPFL */
-rem # Copyright 2002-2011, LAMP/EPFL
```
```
+ <div id="footer">Scala programming documentation. Copyright (c) 2003-2012 <a href="http://www.epfl.ch" target="_top">EPFL</a>, with contributions from <a href="http://typesafe.com" target="_top">Typesafe</a>.</div>
+ copyright.string=Copyright 2002-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+ <meta name="Copyright" content="(C) 2002-2012 LAMP/EPFL"/>
+ * Copyright 2002-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+ * Copyright 2004-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+ * Copyright 2005-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+ * Copyright 2006-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+ * Copyright 2007-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+ * Copyright 2009-2012 Scala Solutions and LAMP/EPFL
+ * Copyright 2010-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+ * Copyright 2011-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+# Copyright 2002-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+* Copyright 2005-2012 LAMP/EPFL
+/* NSC -- new Scala compiler -- Copyright 2007-2012 LAMP/EPFL */
+rem # Copyright 2002-2012 LAMP/EPFL
```
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Since pickled data moved into annotations ShowPickled has been
confusedly scratching its head. Made tools/showPickled work again. In
the process created a simple interface for creating command line tools
for the (majority of) commands which would just like to specify a
handful of options. No review.
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Introduces scala.tools.cmd providing command line tool infrastructure.
For a quick look at what can be done, see
scala.tools.cmd.Demo
For a more involved, potentially eye-straining look, see
scala.tools.partest.PartestSpec
To experience it through the eyes of Joe Partest User, run
test/partest
Review by community.
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