line terminators when:
a) running under windows, and
b) the file on the disk (when DrRacket first opens it)
contains all CRLF line endings.
In all other situations, the file is saved with LF terminators.
Before this commit, DrRacket would always use the platform-specific
convention, regardless of the original content of the file.
closes PR 12242
Instead of generating a file for code and one for documentation, do both
via a macro instead. Most of the code is the same (modulo reformatting
in a more modern style), and instead of printing the result to a file,
it just returns it as the result of a macro. (Since this is done in a
naive way, the macro is bad -- it is unhygienic since this is basically
what it did before only through a generated file; it should eventually
be improved to avoid these hacks.)
Show process time of start of GC and otherwise adjust to make
the output more compact, and attach a prefab struct to the
logged message to report all available data in Racket form
(including real start and end times, which are not shown in
the output).
The `date*' structure type is an extension of `date' with
`nanosecond' and `time-zone-name' fields.
The `seconds->date' function now accepts a real and returns a
`date*'. The fractional part of its argument goes into the
`nanosecond' field.
esc;c:x send-toplevel-form-to-repl
m:c:x send-toplevel-form-to-repl
c:c;c:e send-toplevel-form-to-repl
c:c;c:r send-selection-to-repl
c:c;m:e send-toplevel-form-to-repl-and-go
c:c;m:r send-selection-to-repl-and-go
c:c;c:z move-to-interactions
Took the inspiration for the list from the keybindings
available in Scheme mode in Emacs.
Closes PR 12211 (and probably others)
specifically add an argument to move/copy-to-edit so that it
does copy-only and export a function for trigger a submission
to the input port of a text:ports<%> object programmatically
This is a backwards incompatible change; there is a more complex change
that just stubs this stuff out that may be better that we may need
isntead of this commit.
Macros and other tools that need syntax privilege used
`(current-code-inspector)' at the module top-level to try to
capture the right code inspector at load time. It's more
consistent to instead use the enclosing module's declaration-time
inspector, and `var-ref->mod-decl-insp' provides that. The
new function works only on references to anonymous variables,
which limits access to the inspector.
The real function name is longer, of course.
Related to the already fixed PR 12114 and PR 12133, which motivated the
error, and a few additional typos of the same kind.
(Note that it uses the symbols, but that's how they'll render anyway.)