This ports the REPL over to Rust and makes use of an inspector session to run a REPL on top of any isolate which lets make full use of rustylines various things like validators and completors without having to introduce a bunch of hard to test internal ops and glue code.
An accidental but good side effect of this is that the multiple line input we previously had is now an editable multi-line input prompt that is correctly stored in the history as a single entry.
This commit adds basic support for collecting coverage
data using "deno test".
Currently the report is only a text added to the end
of output from "deno test".
This commits adds support for "--config" flag in "deno install"
subcommand. Specified configuration file is copied alongside
source code to installation directory.
- Add more support for generics
- Add the --private flag - displays documentation for
not exported and private nodes
- Display more attributes like abstract, static and readonly
- Display type aliases
- Refactor module to use the Display trait
- Use a bit more color
This commit adds a "--no-check" option to following subcommands:
- "deno cache"
- "deno info"
- "deno run"
- "deno test"
The "--no-check" options allows to skip type checking step and instead
directly transpiles TS sources to JS sources.
This solution uses `ts.transpileModule()` API and is just an interim
solution before implementing it fully in Rust.
Currently, the documentation makes it sound like the test subcommand's filter
flag could accept some kind of pattern matching value like a glob or a regex,
although the function "createFilterFn" accepts a regex as an argument, there's
no way to pass an actual regex value from the CLI.
This commit makes it possible to pass a string that could be cast as regex
when string matches "^/.*/$".
With this change, a user can use the filter flag as follow:
deno test --filter "/test-.+/"
Also tested that `\` get escaped properly, on MacOS at least, and this is
also a valid flag:
deno test --filter "/test-\d+/"