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Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonathan Coates
b7df91349a
Rewrite computer selectors
This adds support for computer selectors, in the style of entity
selectors. The long-term goal here is to replace our existing ad-hoc
selectors. However, to aid migration, we currently support both - the
previous one will most likely be removed in MC 1.21.

Computer selectors take the form @c[<key>=<value>,...]. Currently we
support filtering by id, instance id, label, family (as before) and
distance from the player (new!). The code also supports computers within
a bounding box, but there's no parsing support for that yet.

This commit also (finally) documents the /computercraft command. Well,
sort of - it's definitely not my best word, but I couldn't find better
words.
2024-03-12 20:12:13 +00:00
Jonathan Coates
c0643fadca
Build a web-based emulator for the documentation site (#1597)
Historically we've used copy-cat to provide a web-based emulator for
running example code on our documentation site. However, copy-cat is
often out-of-date with CC:T, which means example snippets fail when you
try to run them!

This commit vendors in copy-cat (or rather an updated version of it)
into CC:T itself, allowing us to ensure the emulator is always in sync
with the mod.

While the ARCHITECTURE.md documentation goes into a little bit more
detail here, the general implementation is as follows

 - In project/src/main we implement the core of the emulator. This
   includes a basic reimplementation of some of CC's classes to work on
   the web (mostly the HTTP API and ComputerThread), and some additional
   code to expose the computers to Javascript.

 - This is all then compiled to Javascript using [TeaVM][1] (we actually
   use a [personal fork of it][2] as there's a couple of changes I've
   not upstreamed yet).

 - The Javascript side then pulls in the these compiled classes (and
   the CC ROM) and hooks them up to [cc-web-term][3] to display the
   actual computer.

 - As we're no longer pulling in copy-cat, we can simplify our bundling
   system a little - we now just compile to ESM modules directly.

[1]: https://github.com/konsoletyper/teavm
[2]: https://github.com/SquidDev/teavm/tree/squid-patches
[3]: https://github.com/squiddev-cc/cc-web-term
2023-10-03 09:19:19 +01:00
Jonathan Coates
895bc7721a
License CC:T according to the REUSE specification (#1351)
This adds SPDX license headers to all source code files, following the
REUSE[1] specification. This does not include any asset files (such as
generated JSON files, or textures). While REUSE does support doing so
with ".license" files, for now we define these licences using the
.reuse/dep5 file.

[1]: https://reuse.software/
2023-03-15 21:52:13 +00:00
Jonathan Coates
026afa7f73
Put some limits on various external queues
Ideally turtle functions would error, but wrangling that is more pain
than it's worth.
2021-06-06 19:26:20 +01:00
SquidDev
9f8774960f Generate documentation stubs from Javadocs
illuaminate does not handle Java files, for obvious reasons. In order to
get around that, we have a series of stub files within /doc/stub which
mirrored the Java ones. While this works, it has a few problems:

 - The link to source code does not work - it just links to the stub
   file.
 - There's no guarantee that documentation remains consistent with the
   Java code. This change found several methods which were incorrectly
   documented beforehand.

We now replace this with a custom Java doclet[1], which extracts doc
comments from @LuaFunction annotated methods and generates stub-files
from them. These also contain a @source annotation, which allows us to
correctly link them back to the original Java code.

There's some issues with this which have yet to be fixed. However, I
don't think any of them are major blockers right now:

 - The custom doclet relies on Java 9 - I think it's /technically/
   possible to do this on Java 8, but the API is significantly uglier.
   This means that we need to run javadoc on a separate JVM.

   This is possible, and it works locally and on CI, but is definitely
   not a nice approach.

 - illuaminate now requires the doc stubs to be generated in order for
   the linter to pass, which does make running the linter locally much
   harder (especially given the above bullet point).

   We could notionally include the generated stubs (or at least a cut
   down version of them) in the repo, but I'm not 100% sure about that.

[1]: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/9/docs/api/jdk/javadoc/doclet/package-summary.html
2020-07-03 13:31:26 +01:00
SquidDev
c311cdc6f5 Make our Javadoc validation a little stricter
I'm not sure there's much utility in this, but still feels worth doing.
2019-10-27 15:16:47 +00:00
SquidDev
29dce26bf6 Clean up checkstyle warning
Fixes #251, closes #252
2019-06-14 20:55:32 +01:00
SquidDev
a0e7c4a74c Add a little bit of source code checking to Gradle
- Adds a CheckStyle configuration which is pretty similar to CC's
   existing one.
 - Add the Gradle license plugin.
 - Ensure the existing source code is compatible with these additional
   checks.

See #239
2019-06-08 00:28:03 +01:00