| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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I delete the old tests because it turns out that:
* test runner would never put them in scope of each other even with
imports so just one would suffice
* test runner actually needed some hacking to keep links so in the end
we would end up with no anchors making them useless
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Test: a correct behaviour for fields comma-separating values. I'm
surprised we had no bug open for this. Maybe it affects how #301 renders
now but I doubt.
Operators: Seems GHC is giving us a new order for operators, something
must have changed on their side again. cc @haasn , this makes the fixity
to the side not match the order on the LHS which is a bit unpleasant.
Maybe the fixity can be made to match the GHC order?
Bug335: We expand examples by default now.
Bug310: Now inferred safe.
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Conflicts:
haddock-api/src/Haddock/Backends/Xhtml/Decl.hs
haddock-api/src/Haddock/Convert.hs
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Currently we only use it only for ‘since’ annotations but with these
patches it should be fairly simple to add new attributes if we wish to.
Closes #26. It seems to work fine but due to 7.10 rush I don't have the
chance to do more exhaustive testing right now. The way the meta is
output (emphasis at the end of the whole comment) is fairly arbitrary
and subject to bikeshedding.
Note that this makes test for Bug310 fail due to interface version bump:
it can't find the docs for base with this interface version so it fails.
There is not much we can do to help this because it tests for ’built-in’
identifier, not something we can provide ourselves.
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Fixes #310
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Closes #335
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This also fixes #86.
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This was long overdue, now running ./accept.lhs on a clean test from
master will not generate a bunch of changes.
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Because the change is in GHC 7.9 and we now work against 7.8.3, this
test no longer makes sense. We revert it until 7.10 becomes the standard
version. If anything, there should be a test for this in GHC itself.
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I get rid of the Monoid instance because we weren't satisfying the laws.
Convenience of having <> didn't outweigh the shock-factor of having it
behave badly.
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The benefit of this is that the ‘top-level’ element of such lists is
properly wrapped in <p> tags so any CSS working with these will be
applied properly. It also just makes more sense.
Pointed out at jgm/pandoc#1346.
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I can not remember why they were wrapped in paragraphs to begin with and
it seems unnecessary now that I test it. Closes #307.
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Fixes #298.
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The order of signature groups has been corrected upstream. Here we add a
test case and update some existing test-cases to reflect this change. We
remove grouped signature in test cases that we can (Minimal,
BugDeprecated &c) so that the test is as self-contained as possible.
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This fixes bug #294.
This also fixes a related but never-before-mentioned bug about the
display of GADT record selectors with non-polymorphic type signatures.
Note: Associated data type constructors fail to show up if nothing is
exported that they could be attached to. Exporting any of the data types
in the instance head, or the class + data family itself, causes them to
show up, but in the absence of either of these, exporting just the
associated data type with the constructor itself will result in it
being hidden.
The only scenario I can come up that would involve this kind of
situation involved OverlappingInstances, and even then it can be
mitigated by just exporting the class itself, so I'm not going to solve
it since the logic would most likely be very complicated.
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Fixes #201.
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This is a regression from the data family instances change. Data
instances are now distinguished from regular lists by usage of the new
class "inst", and the style has been updated to only apply to those.
I've also updated the appropriate test case to test this a bit better,
including GADT instances with GADT-style records.
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Previously this was not covered by the All xs check since here it is not
actually an All, rather a single Var n.
This also adds the previously missing html-test/src/Minimal.hs.
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These were accidentally left there when the tests were originally added
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This corresponds to the new {-# MINIMAL #-} pragma present in GHC 7.8+.
I also cleaned up some of the places in which ExportDecl is used to make
adding fields easier in the future.
Lots of test cases have been updated since they now render with
minimality information.
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Not sure what to do about data families yet, since technically it would
not make a lot of sense to display constructors that cannot be used by
the user.
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This moves them in-line with their corresponding lines, similar to a
presentation envision by @hvr and described in #ghc.
Redundant operator names are also omitted when no ambiguity is present.
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Identical fixities declared for the same line should now render using
syntax like: infix 4 <, >=, >, <=
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Affects functions, type synonyms, type families, class names, data type
names, constructors, data families, associated TFs/DFs, type synonyms,
pattern synonyms and everything else I could think of.
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See Haddock Trac #195. We now change this behaviour to only rendering
the documentation attached to the first instance of a duplicate field.
Perhaps we could improve this by rendering the first instance that has
documentation attached to it but for now, we'll stick with this.
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This test actually tests what #260 originally reported - I omitted the
RankNTypes scenario from the original fix because I realized it's not
relevant to the underlying issue and indeed, this renders as intended
now. Still good to have more tests.
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This drops them to the new precedence pREC_CTX, which makes single
eqaulity constraints show up as (a ~ b) => ty, in line with GHC's
rendering. Additional tests added to make sure other type operators
render as intended. Current behavior matches GHC
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This introduces a new precedence level for single contexts (because
implicit param contexts always need parens around them, but other types
of contexts don't necessarily, even when alone)
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The parsing of these seems to have been fixed by GHC folk and it now
renders differently. IMHO it now renders in a better way so I'm updating
the test to reflect this.
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This makes bird tracks in the form
> foo
> bar
> bat
parse as if they had been written as
>foo
>bar
>bat
ie. without the leading whitespace in front of every line.
Ideally we also want to look into how leading whitespace affects code
blocks written using the @ @ syntax, which are currently unaffected by
this patch.
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These should show up in every place where the class is visible, and
indeed they do right now.
Signed-off-by: Mateusz Kowalczyk <fuuzetsu@fuuzetsu.co.uk>
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This just tests various stuff including poly-kinded patterns and
operator patterns to make sure the rendering isn't broken.
Signed-off-by: Mateusz Kowalczyk <fuuzetsu@fuuzetsu.co.uk>
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This now displays them as (==) k a b c ... to mirror GHC's behavior,
instead of the old (k == a) b c ... which was just wrong.
Signed-off-by: Mateusz Kowalczyk <fuuzetsu@fuuzetsu.co.uk>
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This adds support for type/data families with their respective
instances, as well as closed type families and associated type/data
families.
Signed-off-by: Mateusz Kowalczyk <fuuzetsu@fuuzetsu.co.uk>
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the context
The basic idea is that "a" and "+" are either pretty-printed as "a" and "(+)" or "`a`" and "+"
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This updates tests due to Haddock Trac #271 fix and due to removal of
TypeHoles as an extension from GHC.
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The nesting rules are similar to Markdown's with the exception that we
can not simply indent the first line of a hard wrapped indented
paragraph and have it treated as if it was fully indented. The reason is
differences in markup as some of our constructs care about whitespace
while others just swallow everything up so it's just a lot easier to not
bother with it rather than making arbitrary rules.
Note that we now drop trailing for string entities inside of lists. They
weren't needed and it makes the output look uniform whether we use a
single or double newline between list elements.
Conflicts:
src/Haddock/Parser.hs
test/Haddock/ParserSpec.hs
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Any extensions that are not enabled by a used language (Haskell2010
&c) will be shown. Furthermore, any implicitly enabled are also going
to be shown. While we could eliminate this either by using the GHC API
or a dirty hack, I opted not to: if a user doesn't want the implied
flags to show, they are recommended to use enable extensions more
carefully or individually. Perhaps this will encourage users to not
enable the most powerful flags needlessly. Enabled with show-extensions.
Conflicts:
src/Haddock/InterfaceFile.hs
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Conflicts:
src/Haddock/Backends/Hoogle.hs
src/Haddock/Interface/Rename.hs
src/Haddock/Parser.hs
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