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			154 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Perl
		
	
	
		
			Executable File
		
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			154 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Perl
		
	
	
		
			Executable File
		
	
	
	
	
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
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# vimparse.pl - Reformats the error messages of the Perl interpreter for use
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# with the quickfix mode of Vim
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#
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# Copyright (c) 2001 by Joerg Ziefle <joerg.ziefle@gmx.de>
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# You may use and distribute this software under the same terms as Perl itself.
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#
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# Usage: put one of the two configurations below in your ~/.vimrc (without the
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# description and '# ') and enjoy (be sure to adjust the paths to vimparse.pl
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# before):
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#
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# Program is run interactively with 'perl -w':
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#
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# set makeprg=$HOME/bin/vimparse.pl\ %\ $*
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# set errorformat=%f:%l:%m
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#
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# Program is only compiled with 'perl -wc':
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#
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# set makeprg=$HOME/bin/vimparse.pl\ -c\ %\ $*
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# set errorformat=%f:%l:%m
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#
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# Usage:
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#	vimparse.pl [-c] [-f <errorfile>] <programfile> [programargs]
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#
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#		-c	compile only, don't run (perl -wc)
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#		-f	write errors to <errorfile>
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#
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# Example usages:
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#	* From the command line:
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#		vimparse.pl program.pl
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#
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#		vimparse.pl -c -f errorfile program.pl
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#		Then run vim -q errorfile to edit the errors with Vim.
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#
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#	* From Vim:
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#		Edit in Vim (and save, if you don't have autowrite on), then
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#		type ':mak' or ':mak args' (args being the program arguments)
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#		to error check.
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#
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# Version history:
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#	0.2 (04/12/2001):
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#		* First public version (sent to Bram)
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#		* -c command line option for compiling only
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#		* grammatical fix: 'There was 1 error.'
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#		* bug fix for multiple arguments
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#		* more error checks
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#		* documentation (top of file, &usage)
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#		* minor code clean ups
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#	0.1 (02/02/2001):
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#		* Initial version
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#		* Basic functionality
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#
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# Todo:
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#	* test on more systems
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#	* use portable way to determine the location of perl ('use Config')
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#	* include option that shows perldiag messages for each error
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#	* allow to pass in program by STDIN
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#	* more intuitive behaviour if no error is found (show message)
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#
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# Tested under SunOS 5.7 with Perl 5.6.0.  Let me know if it's not working for
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# you.
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use strict;
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use Getopt::Std;
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use vars qw/$opt_c $opt_f $opt_h/; # needed for Getopt in combination with use strict 'vars'
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use constant VERSION => 0.2;
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getopts('cf:h');
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&usage if $opt_h; # not necessarily needed, but good for further extension
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if (defined $opt_f) {
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    open FILE, "> $opt_f" or do {
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	warn "Couldn't open $opt_f: $!.  Using STDOUT instead.\n";
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	undef $opt_f;
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    };
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};
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my $handle = (defined $opt_f ? \*FILE : \*STDOUT);
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(my $file = shift) or &usage; # display usage if no filename is supplied
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my $args = (@ARGV ? ' ' . join ' ', @ARGV : '');
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my @lines = `perl @{[defined $opt_c ? '-c ' : '' ]} -w "$file$args" 2>&1`;
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my $errors = 0;
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foreach my $line (@lines) {
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    chomp($line);
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    my ($file, $lineno, $message, $rest);
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    if ($line =~ /^(.*)\sat\s(.*)\sline\s(\d+)(\.|,\snear\s\".*\")$/) {
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	($message, $file, $lineno, $rest) = ($1, $2, $3, $4);
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	$errors++;
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	$message .= $rest if ($rest =~ s/^,//);
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	print $handle "$file:$lineno:$message\n";
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    } else { next };
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}
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if (defined $opt_f) {
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    my $msg;
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    if ($errors == 1) {
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	$msg = "There was 1 error.\n";
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    } else {
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	$msg = "There were $errors errors.\n";
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    };
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    print STDOUT $msg;
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    close FILE;
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    unlink $opt_f unless $errors;
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};
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sub usage {
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    (local $0 = $0) =~ s/^.*\/([^\/]+)$/$1/; # remove path from name of program
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    print<<EOT;
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Usage:
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	$0 [-c] [-f <errorfile>] <programfile> [programargs]
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		-c	compile only, don't run (executes 'perl -wc')
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		-f	write errors to <errorfile>
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Examples:
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	* At the command line:
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		$0 program.pl
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		Displays output on STDOUT.
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		$0 -c -f errorfile program.pl
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		Then run 'vim -q errorfile' to edit the errors with Vim.
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	* In Vim:
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		Edit in Vim (and save, if you don't have autowrite on), then
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		type ':mak' or ':mak args' (args being the program arguments)
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		to error check.
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EOT
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    exit 0;
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};
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