> On Sep 8, 2024, at 12:48 AM, Yuan Fu <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On Sep 8, 2024, at 12:02 AM, Eli Zaretskii <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>>> From: Yuan Fu <[email protected]>
>>> Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2024 22:57:29 -0700
>>> Cc: [email protected],
>>> [email protected],
>>> [email protected]
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On Sep 7, 2024, at 10:54 PM, Eli Zaretskii <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> From: Yuan Fu <[email protected]>
>>>>> Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2024 22:44:53 -0700
>>>>> Cc: Wilhelm Kirschbaum <[email protected]>,
>>>>> Eli Zaretskii <[email protected]>,
>>>>> [email protected]
>>>>> 
>>>>> Meanwhile, I want to push the fix for the other bug I discovered to 
>>>>> emacs-30. Eli, I wrote a debugging function that prints parser states, 
>>>>> naturally this function isn’t called anywhere so there’ll be a compiler 
>>>>> warning, what should I do in this case?
>>>> 
>>>> Why would there be a compiler warning?  What kind of warning?
>>> 
>>> A function-not-used warning. Maybe it’s an lldb thing?
>> 
>> If the function is not static, there should be no such warning.
> 
> Ah, you’re right, I marked it static. Thanks!
> 
> Yuan

Good news: not an Emacs bug. Bad news: a tree-sitter bug. Turns out I made an 
error in my test program, which is the reason why Emacs hangs but the test 
program doesn’t. Once I fixed the error, the test program hangs too. I 
submitted a bug report to tree-sitter: 
https://github.com/tree-sitter/tree-sitter/issues/3620

I can finally sleep soundly at night now; and I guess tree-sitter dev will 
start having sleepless nights :-)

Yuan




Reply via email to