On Apr 11, 2008, at 2:29 PM, Rick DeNatale wrote:
> I love the TextMate feature of syntax checking ruby source with ^V.
> But often when I use it in an RSpec example group or a story steps
> file, I run into the problem that, although the file is syntactically
> correct, I get all kinds of warnings like:
>
>
> line 44: warning: useless use of '==' in void context
>
>
> which can produce a rather large tooltip, forcing me to scan to the
> end to see the Syntax OK I'm looking for, and worse, causing TextMate
> to scroll to the first line with a warning.
>
>
> Here's how to fix this:
>
>
> 1) Open the bundle editor, look at the Validate Syntax command in the
> Ruby bundle. You want to create a similar command in the RSpec
> bundle. Copy the text of this command, go to the RSpec bundle, add a
> new command, and paste the text in. Make sure that the options save:
> nothing, input:entire document, output: show as tooltip, and
> activation: key equivalent are selected. Click in the input field
> next to key equivalent and type ^-shift-v. Set the scope to
> rspec.ruby.source
>
>
> 2) Now look at the text for the command, change the line
>
> result = `"${TM_RUBY:=ruby}" -wc 2>&1`
>
> to
>
> result = `"${TM_RUBY:=ruby}" -c -W1 2>&1`
>
>
> which kicks the warning level down a notch.
>
>
> 3) Now look at the language definition in the RSpec bundle
>
> The first two lines should look like this:
>
> { scopeName = 'source.ruby.rspec';
> fileTypes = ( 'spec.rb' );
>
>
> change that second line to:
>
>
> fileTypes = ( 'spec.rb', 'steps.rb' );
>
>
> This should let the bundle 'claim' story files as well. You'll get a
> few snippets that aren't really appropriate, but having those
> expectation snippets in a steps file is nice.
Wanna make a patch?
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