We now use illuaminate[1]'s linting facilities to check the rom and
bios.lua for a couple of common bugs and other problems.
Right now this doesn't detect any especially important bugs, though it
has caught lots of small things (unused variables, some noisy code). In
the future, the linter will grow in scope and features, which should
allow us to be stricter and catch most issues.
As a fun aside, we started off with ~150 bugs, and illuaminate was able
to fix all but 30 of them, which is pretty neat.
[1]: https://github.com/SquidDev/illuaminate
- Adds cc.completions module, with a couple of helper functions for
working with the more general completion functionality (i.e. that
provided by read).
- Adds cc.shell.completions module, which provides shell-specific
completion functions.
- Add a "program completion builder", which allows you to write stuff
like this:
shell.setCompletionFunction( "rom/programs/redstone.lua",
completion.build(
{ completion.choice, { "probe", "set ", "pulse " } },
completion.side) )
Closes#232
Lua 5.2+ uses loadfile(filename, mode, env), not loadfile(filename,
env). While this is a minor incompatibility, it'd be nice to be
consistent as much as possible.
We try to handle the incorrect case too, as obviously we don't want to
break existing programs.
This moves expect from the bios into a new craftos.expect module,
removing the internal _G["~expect"] definition. Apparently people were
using this irrespective of the "don't use this" comment, so we need to
find another solution.
While this does introduce some ugliness (having to load the module in
weird ways for programs, duplicating the expect function in memory), it
does allow people to use the function in a supported way, and removes
the global ugliness.
Equivalent to `pastebin run`, but allows running arbitrary URLs
instead.
Is this a little questionable? Yes - people shouldn't be downloading
and running code from the internet. But hey, people do that already,
so we might as well make it convenient.
- Convert existing changelog over to use Markdown. This mostly involves
wrapping code in backticks, and marking things as headers where
appropriate.
- Copy all of CC:T's release notes over to the changelog. This is
somewhat more verbose than Dan's notes, but keeping them in sync
seems reasonable (and allows for automation!).
As 'require' operates relative to the current program's directory,
rather than the current directory, it meant we were trying to load files
from /rom/programs.
This is never a good idea, so we add the current directory to the
package path, allowing you to use require as one'd expect.
- Define an expect(index, actual_value, types...) helper function which
takes an argument index, value and list of permissable types and
ensures the value is of one of those types.
If not, it will produce an error message with the expected and actual
type, as well as the argument number and (if available) the function
name.
- Expose expect in the global scope as _G["~expect"], hopefully making
it clear it is internal.
- Replace most manual type checks with this helper method.
- Write tests to ensure this argument validation works as expected
Also fix a couple of bugs exposed by this refactor and the subsequent
tests:
- Make rednet checks a little more strict - rednet.close(false) is no
longer valid.
- Error when attempting to redirect the terminal to itself
(term.redirect(term)).
Rendering an item worked in principle, but had several caveats:
- The terminal did not fit well within the item's texture, so we had a
rather large border.
- The "correctness" of this was very tied to Minecraft's item rendering
code. This changed a little in 1.13, causing problems like #208.
Instead we effectively reuse the computer GUI rendering code, though
also handling coloured pocket computers and rendering the modem light.
This fixes#208, and hopefully fixes#212.
Actually, many *globs*. It additionally prints the glob if no files
matched it, since that's clearer.
Also move the ComputerTestDelegate's filesystem to be disk-based. This
is what actual computers use, and the MemoryMount is a little broken.
Are most of these changes small and petty? Yes. However, IMO they do
make the code more readable. Anyway, a summary of some of the more
interesting changes:
- Expose Abstract*Upgrade classes in the API
- Fix the spelling of Jonathan in the API docs (*shakes fist*)
- Fix bug with printout not working in the offhand.
- Rename any argments/variables accidentally named "m_*", and add an
inspection to prevent it happening again.
- Remove most of the Block*.Properties classes - just inline them in
the parent class.
- Return super.writeToNBT instead of reassigning at the top.
This makes use of the "sent" variable, which would otherwise go unused. It also makes rednet.send compliant to the behaviour specified in the Wiki: http://www.computercraft.info/wiki/Rednet.send
- Some performance improvements to JEI recipe resolver
- Use a shared map for upgrade items, meaning we only need one map
lookup.
- Cache the basic upgrade recipes.
- Use the MC version within project rather than version name.
Before IPocketAccess.getEntity would return the entity which last held
fthis computer, even if not holding it any more. As
ba823bae13 describes, this caused
pocket.equip/pocket.unequip to dupe items.
We move the validation from the PocketAPI into the main IPocketAccess
implementation, to ensure this issue does not occur elsewhere. Note, we
require a separate method, as this is no longer thread-safe.
We also now return ok, err instead of throwing an exception, in order to
be consistent with the turtle functions. See dan200/ComputerCraft#328.