The advantage to this is that no 3rd party modules are required. People
new to Python probably won't have flake8/pyflakes/pylint installed. This
will get them basic syntax checking (no linting) out of the box.
* only check `executable()` for the sub checkers once - at the top of
the script
* recapitalize `s:getPHPMDErrors` to `s:GetPHPMDErrors` errors for
style consistency
* simplify the logic in `SyntaxCheckers_php_GetLocList`
If no syntax errors are found, `gofmt -l % 1>/dev/null` prints the file
name to STDOUT, which is redirected to /dev/null. Less to parse for
syntastic!
If errors are found, they are written to STDERR.
This invocation does not alter the source code, which has been indicated
in the comments.
Query RVM for the version of ruby that should be used to do the syntax
check.
This wont work if the user has different versions of ruby for different
directories (e.g. if they are using a project rvmrc) as it will only a
single ruby version per vim instance.
I think this should satisfy almost everyone though, so we can wait for
feedback before doing anything more hardcore.
The error message in 'puppet parser validate' changed between Puppet 2.x
and Puppet 3.0.0, preventing syntax errors from being caught.
In addition, the logic to apply --ignoreimport was falsely triggering on
3.0.0, because it was written assuming a major version of "2". The
--ignoreimport flag has been broken since 2.6.1, so I removed all of that
logic. In theory, it could be re-added for 2.6.0 and 0.2x.x, but the
version number checking didn't handle 0.2x.x, so I didn't reach back that
far.
If the line a ruby error occurs on is 'too long' it will truncate the line it
displays in the error output and wrap it in `...`. This breaks %p from finding
the correct column so this patch ignores lines starting with `...`
e.g. %p working
```
ruby -w -T1 -c broken.rb
broken.rb:2: syntax error, unexpected tIDENTIFIER, expecting $end
puts sprintf "%d, %.2f, %.2f, %.2f, %d" k, v
^
```
%p not working
```
ruby -w -T1 -c broken.rb
broken.rb:2: syntax error, unexpected tIDENTIFIER, expecting $end
...tf "%d, %.2f, %.2f, %.2f, %d" k, v[:cost], v[:val], v[:carri...
... ^
```
Sass partials depend on their parents files for context. This patch disables the
syntax checking for partials by default because of this. To enable checking of
partials let g:syntastic_sass_check_partials = 1. Fixes issue #300.