Fred checked in an Eclipse formatter file (which, unfortunately, I never
got in the habit of using).  I noticed it is not in the repo right now.
You can use

  git show 3ef34c70aaf5ca9c71f5fb55c1917eb055c98d66

to see it.

How important is the SonarQube stuff to getting a release out?  Could
SonarQube wait for the next release?

Thanks,
-Alex

On 6/16/16, 4:34 AM, "Christofer Dutz" <christofer.d...@c-ware.de> wrote:

>I have seen some project use something like this [1] ... at least
>IntelliJ understands it out of the box.
>
>It's an IDE independent format for defining settings like indentation,
>end of line settings and so on.
>
>
>Chris
>
>
>[1]: http://editorconfig.org/
>
>EditorConfig<http://editorconfig.org/>
>editorconfig.org
>EditorConfig is a file format and collection of text editor plugins for
>maintaining consistent coding styles between different editors and IDEs.
>
>
>________________________________
>Von: Christofer Dutz <christofer.d...@c-ware.de>
>Gesendet: Donnerstag, 16. Juni 2016 13:06:47
>An: 'dev@flex.apache.org'
>Betreff: Coding conventions?
>
>Hi,
>
>
>I am currently having a look at the SonarQube findings, since activating
>the Xml analysis the number of problems did jump up by about 1,1k most of
>them being related to my Xml indention of 4 spaces instead of 2. Now it
>would be one option to disable checks like this, but sometimes they are
>good to have since some times it reveals problems you just don't seem to
>be able to see. The other option would be to have code style checked.
>
>
>Now I started thinking that it might be good to setup my IntelliJ to
>format everything correctly and to make sure code I write follows the
>rules. But I was unable to find a document like this. Do we have one? If
>not, how about creating one and voting on it and make it official.
>
>
>Chris

Reply via email to