* Add rustc checker for rust files
* Add documentation for rustc
* Use a nice helper function
* Add cargo as linter
* Complete the doc for rust linters
* Put l: in front of every local variable
* Apply the requested stylistic changes
This makes php output more specific error messages. The format is the normal one ALE expects, but on some systems ALE does not work with PHP unless the display_errors=1 option is used. Without that option php will only output a generic message without a line number like "Errors parsing index.php"
* add go build for build errors
* Add go build to doc and README
* Improvement for Go build
Go build works on package level, so copy over the other files
that belong to the same package to the temp folder as well.
* revert back to simple go build
* change gobuild script var name
* Filters out unrelated errors in Elm linter
The function now filters out errors that are unrelated to the file,
those that were found in imported modules.
It does this by comparing the temp directory environment variable to the
file name in the elm output. If the file begins with the temp directory,
then it sould be included (it's from the buffer).
* Changing output to '/dev/null'
Turns out the compiler only accepts /dev/null as an ignorable name. It's
hard-coded here
https://github.com/elm-lang/elm-make/blob/master/src/Flags.hs
Changing this allows Windows linting to work. Otherwise the compiler
errors when using "nul"
* Fixes for Windows
Should now be able to successfully handle Windows.
Windows seemed to not handle the ";" properly, so I switched it to "&&",
which probably should've been done anyway to prevent false positives.
Oddly, matchend(l:error.file, l:temp_dir), and various other regex
solutions, couldn't properly match the two. Subsetting did though, hence
the new solution.
* Applying corrections
Made the file check case-insensitive for Windows, case-sensitive for
Unix/non-windows.
Added comment explaining hard coding of 'dev/null'
* Spelling correction
* Minor corrections
Actually uses the is_file_buffer variable now, added space between the
if statements, and added space between '-'
For ghc, it seemed that the conditional
```
if l:corrected_lines[-1] =~# ': error:$'
let l:line = substitute(l:line, '\v^\s+', ' ', '')
endif
```
was never being reached. It's actually better to unconditionally
collapse whitespace anyway and so I simply removed the conditional
check.
For hlint I added more information about the error. This changes the
reported error from `Error:` to something like:
` Error: Avoid lambda. Found: \ x -> foo x Why not: foo`
* Add support for Elm linting
* Adding documentation for Elm
* Adjusting spacing
* Addressing concerns listed in pull request
Removed the s:FindRootDirectory function as it does not make much sense
in this context. Adjusted the rest of the code to handle the removal of
that function, including using the ale#util function to find the nearest
file.
Ensured that when an empty filepath is found, the code does not attempt
to change directories.
Ensured that the linter would take from stdin using the wrapper.
* Add chktex linter
* Alias plaintex to tex
* Add lacheck linter
Closes#179
* Add the chktex warning code
This very useful to have when you want to suppress lint warnings with LaTeX
comments. chktex tends to be a bit noisy so this often needed.
* lacheck: Make regex less specific
To be more robust future changes in `stdin-wrapper`
* Start adding Puppet linters
* Use the correct output stream for puppet parser
* Finish Puppet and puppet-lint linters
* Add Puppet information to documentation
* Fix flow linter to provide filename of the buffer
Related #173
* Fix flow linter not to fail on empty response
* Various improvement to message parsing
Adding support the foodcritic linter for Chef files.
Listing all issues as warnings for now
Doesn't get in the way of rubocop linting if ft=ruby.chef
Updated documentation
Closes#127
* Add `javascript/flow` linter
* Add documentation for flow
* Remove a line from the docs that was from eslint
* Only run if flow gives output; Correct link in doc
* Address PR feedback #157
Shellcheck is smart enough to check the shebang in a given file to
determine which dialect to use. Unfortunately this doesn't work for
files without shebangs, even if it might be apparent what dialect should
be used, such as "bashrc" or "foo.bash". Luckily `filetype.vim` defines
specific vars based on which shell dialect is being used based on a huge
list of conditions. With this change we take those into account for all
the types shellcheck supports, otherwise we fallback to letting it try
and decide.