* Move FindRailsRoot() to more general location
* Add rails_best_practices handler (resolves#655)
* Update documentation for rails_best_practices
Also add brakeman to *ale* documentation.
* rails_best_practices: allow overriding the executable
* rails_best_practices: format help correctly
* rails_best_practices: capture tool output on Windows
* Use rubocop's JSON output format (resolves#339)
Rubocop's emacs formatter seems to have changed format in some
not-so-ancient version. The JSON formatter should provide a more stable
interface than parsing lines with a regex.
The JSON formatter was introduced in mid-2013, so it should be safe to
assume available in any reasonably-modern environment. The oldest
currently-supported version of ruby (according to ruby-lang.org) was
not supported by rubocop until 2014.
* Rubocop: Use global function for GetType
* Rubocop: Use scope prefix in GetType
* Rubocop: Update command_callback test
* Rubocop: add end_col to Handle
* Use different reporter to support older versions of jscs
* Add test and make more consistent with other code
* Add documentation for jscs
* Add more test coverage
* Improve elm linter
Some types of errors do not return nice JSON.
Show them on the first line instead of showing nothing.
* Remove unnecessary properties from elm linter
* Add a vader test for elm-make linter
* Test non-JSON elm-make errors are shown
* Include span label in rust lints
This turns relatively unhelpful error messages like
mismatched types
into more expressive messages along the lines of
mismatched types: expected bool, found integral variable
Fixes#597.
* Exclude rust lint span label if empty
* Use single-quoted strings in vimscript
* Add test for detailed rust errors
* Prune Cargo JSON
* Use matching error file name
* Byte offsets not char offsets
* Improve performance when using gometalinter
Before this change when I opened a big project that had 6000+ warnings/errors it took ages to get the actual warnings/errors and it caused my CPU to be busy for quite some time. The call to gometalinter alone took about 24 seconds, but after that vim was struggling as well.
After this change the gometalinter call just takes 2 seconds and nothing noticable happens with the CPU and/or vim.
* Removed obsolete test
This logic is no longer done by the `ale` plugin, but by `gometalinter` itself.