This commit allows for the /api-new/ page to rendered similarly to our
/help pages. It's based on the old content for /api, but we're not
replacing the old content yet, to give a bit of time to restructure
things reasonably.
Tweaked by eeshangarg and tabbott.
The "subdomain" label is redundant, to the extent it's even
accurate -- this is really just the URL we want to display,
which may or may not involve a subdomain. Similarly "external".
The former `external_api_path_subdomain` was never a path -- it's a
host, followed by a path, which together form a scheme-relative URL.
I'm not quite convinced that value is actually the right thing in
2 of the 3 places we use it, but fixing that can start by giving an
accurate name to the thing we have.
This lint rule has bitten me a couple of times in working on logging.
These regex rules will inevitably be heuristic, but we can make it a bit more
specific so that the heuristic mainly means it could occasionally miss
something, rather than get in the way with an obviously wrong complaint.
This has a ton of exclude rules, for two reasons:
(1) We haven't been particularly systematic about avoiding unnecessary
inline style in the past, so there's a lot of code we need to fix.
(2) There are cases where one wants to dynamically compute style
rules. For the latter category, ideally we'd figure out a way to
exclude these automatically (e.g. checking for mustache tags in the
style tag).
This doesn't yet do much, but it gives us a suitable place to
add code to customize how log messages are displayed, beyond what
a format string passed to the default formatter can do.
The pattern test method `test_rule_patterns` tests each rule by
fetching two strings from it: `test_good` and `test_bad`. Each
string is then presented as an input file to `custom_check_file`,
which should return True or False.
All lines in a string need to end with `\n`. Since the linter
expects an additional newline at the end of a file, the test case
adds `\n` to each string on top of that.
Fixes#6320.
This enforces our use of a consistent style in how we access Python
modules; "from os.path import dirname" is a particularly popular
abbreviation inconsistent with our style, and so it deserves a lint
rule.
Commit message and error text tweaked by tabbott.
Fixes#6543.
We want to convert stream names to stream ids as close
to the "edges" of our system as possible, so we let our
caller do the work of finding the stream id for a stream
narrow.
There are four regexes which try to ensure that the i18n strings are
properly captured.
1) The one which disallows multiline strings.
```
i18n\.t\([^)]+[^,\{\)]$
// Disallows:
i18n.t('some '
+ 'text');
```
2) The one which disallows concatenation within argument to i18n.t():
```
i18n\.t\([\'\"].+?[\'\"]\s*\+
// Disallows:
i18n.t("some " + "text");
```
3) There are two which disallow concatenation with i18n.t():
```
i18n\.t\(.+\).*\+
// Disallows:
i18n.t('some text') +
\+.*i18n\.t\(.+\)
// Disallows:
+ i18n.t('some text')
```
The ideal case is that you try to bring the string argument to the
i18n.t() on one line. In case this is not possible, you can do the
following:
```
var1 = i18n.t("Some text to be translated");
var2 = i18n.t("Some more text to be translated");
complete = var1 + var2;
This is needed in order to mock the method when testing
`custom_check.py`. The diff for this commit is a bit broken;
all it really does is moving the method out of `build_custom_checkers`.
We're about to do this (a) in a number of places mentioning
system packages like `python3-dev` to install, and (b) in the
shebangs of every script in the tree.