| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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expected text
All of the other tests already check that the output ends with the expected
output and isn’t exactly equal to it. This is because I don’t have enough
control over (or don’t know enough about) the output Emacs and other packages
generate. In order to prevent false-positives from happening as is happening
with ‘scheme-mode’, I don’t check what’s before the output I expect.
The false-positive that’s happening with ‘scheme-mode’ is an issue that it seems
like ‘geiser’ has started complaining that it can’t find ‘guile’, which is
expected.
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In bats, when you print to stdout during a test, if the test fails bats will
show the output that was generated. If everything succeeds it hides the output.
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‘org-roam’ doesn’t seem to work correctly on all the machines that I use
‘org-mode’ on.
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ends in t
There can be other output, but that doesn’t mean the test failed, as long as t
is the last thing.
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Both ‘Jenkinsfile’ files and ‘*.pipeline’ files should be using
‘jenkinsfile-mode’.
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At work I have to work with a lot of files that other people work on as well.
Other people don’t usually have their editor set up to remove all trailing
whitespace, and we’re not allowed to make a change that includes a lot of extra
whitespace changes[1]. So I end up having to revert a lot of whitespace changes
just before submitting. And if I then have to make more changes, for example
because something was pointed out in a code review, I have to do it again.
‘ws-butler’ promises that it will still prevent me from submitting extraneous
whitespace, but will not touch lines that I haven’t changed, so that would
prevent me from having to revert them all the time.
[1]: This is good, having a lot of whitespace changes can distract from or even
completely hide the actual change you’re trying to make.
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‘bmx-mode’ is a package to be used with ‘bat-mode’.
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‘string-empty-p’ is defined in ‘subr-x’ and this library isn’t loaded into Emacs
by default.
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Apparently in the docker container that’s running the tests, reading from the
command-line makes it a multibyte character (105 776 127 130), but defined in
Emacs it’s a unibyte character (61442). This might have something to do with
UTF-16 vs UTF-8?
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Both of these file types are used for MSBuild.
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beginning-of-line
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The output contains more than just the print statement in the test, but it ends
with the result.
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‘oni-c++’ was renamed to ‘oni-cpp’
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consistent
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