| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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Instead of the current hack that won't work as soon as we check some
part of the document asynchronously, we make the warning processor
recover a proper location if the warning doesn't have one attached.
This is what CoqIDE does [but it queries it's own document model].
Fixes: #6172
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This completes the Loc.ghost removal, the idea is to gear the API
towards optional, but uniform, location handling.
We don't print <unknown> anymore in the case there is no location.
This is what the test suite expects.
The old printing logic for located items was a bit inconsistent as
it sometimes printed <unknown> and other times it printed nothing as
the caller checked for `is_ghost` upstream.
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- The flags are now interpreted from left to right, without any other
precedence rule. The previous one did not make much sense in interactive
mode.
- Set Warnings and Set Warnings Append are now synonyms, and have the
"append" semantics, which is the most natural one for warnings.
- Warnings on unknown warnings are now printed only once (previously the
would be repeated on further calls to Set Warnings, sections closing,
module requiring...).
- Warning status strings are normalized, so that e.g. "+foo,-foo" is reduced
to "-foo" (if foo exists, "" otherwise).
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On the user side, coqtop and coqc take a list of warning names or categories
after -w. No prefix means activate the warning, a "-" prefix means deactivate
it, and "+" means turn the warning into an error. Special categories include
"all", and "default" which contains the warnings enabled by default.
We also provide a vernacular Set Warnings which takes the same flags as argument.
Note that coqc now prints warnings.
The name and category of a warning are printed with the warning itself.
On the developer side, Feedback.msg_warning is still accessible, but the
recommended way to print a warning is in two steps:
1) create it by:
let warn_my_warning =
CWarnings.create ~name:"my-warning" ~category:"my-category"
(fun args -> Pp.strbrk ...)
2) print it by:
warn_my_warning args
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