| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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One last flurry with the broom before I leave you slobs to code
in your own filth. Eliminated all the trailing whitespace I
could manage, with special prejudice reserved for the test cases
which depended on the preservation of trailing whitespace.
Was reminded I cannot figure out how to eliminate the trailing
space on the "scala> " prompt in repl transcripts. At least
reduced the number of such empty prompts by trimming transcript
code on the way in.
Routed ConsoleReporter's "printMessage" through a trailing
whitespace stripping method which might help futureproof
against the future of whitespace diseases. Deleted the up-to-40
lines of trailing whitespace found in various library files.
It seems like only yesterday we performed whitespace surgery
on the whole repo. Clearly it doesn't stick very well. I suggest
it would work better to enforce a few requirements on the way in.
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Some scalac output is on stderr, and it's useful to see that
in the log file, especially for debugging.
Adds a line filter for logs, specified as "filter: pattern"
in the test source.
Backslashes are made forward only when detected as paths.
Test alignments:
Deprecations which do not pertain to the system under test
are corrected in the obvious way.
When testing deprecated API, suppress warnings by deprecating
the Test object.
Check files are updated with useful true warnings, instead of
running under -nowarn.
Language feature imports as required, instead of running under -language.
Language feature not required, such as casual use of postfix.
Heed useful warning.
Ignore broken warnings. (Rarely, -nowarn.)
Inliner warnings pop up under -optimise only, so for now, just
filter them out where they occur.
Debug output from the test required an update.
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Fixing consecutive type application made it more obvious there was
another missing bit of the parser, type application following function
application. This should (and now does) work:
object F { def apply[T] = List[T]() }
def g() = F
g()[String]
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The parser through I think a quirk of history would not allow
back to back type applications, like
expr[T1, T2][T3, T4]
Now it does, meaning the only thing it can:
val n0 = Partial[immutable.HashMap][String][Int] ++ Seq(("a", 1))
val n1 = Partial.apply[immutable.HashMap].apply[String].apply[Int] ++ Seq(("a", 1))
assert(n0 == n1)
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