That is, when right-clicking on an imported identifier, if the
file that has that identifier's definition is open and online
check syntax has completed, then offer a "jump to definition" menu
item that just jumps there with the already computed informtion.
If the file isn't open or online check syntax hasn't completed,
instead offer just to go to the file, without jumping to the definition
also
- things should generally work slightly better with submodules
- jumping to identifiers should do a better job with scrolling,
specifically it should scroll so the jumped-to identifier is
about 20% from the top of the window (unless it was already visible,
in which case no scrolling should occur)
* Check `sandbox-path-permissions' for bad values such as
'(<perm> <path1> <path2>) where <path2> would get silently ignored.
* Try to clarify the intent of `call-in-sandbox-context' as a meta tool
rather than a safe execution tool.
The intent is to support phase-crossing data such as the `exn:fail:syntax'
structure type that is instantiaed by macros and recognized by contexts
that use `eval' or `expand'. Phaseless modules are highly constrained,
however, to avoid new cross-phase channels, and a module is inferred to
be phaseless when it fits syntactic constraints.
I've adjusted `racket/kernel' and improved its documentation a little
so that it can be used to implement a phaseless module (which can
import only from other phaseless modules).
This change also adds a `flags' field to the `mod' structure type
from `compiler/zo-structs'.
This adds a tag to DrRacket File menu docs. It adds two margin notes
to the quick start, one linking to the essentials for using DrRacket,
and the other for saving Definitions.
Addresses PR 9501.
These additions could create backward-compatibility problems, but our
searches suggest that problems will be rare; it's more common for
`_size_t' to be incorrectly aliased to `_int', so having definitions
for these standard types is likely to avoid future problems.
A part with style property 'toc-hidden no longer
hides child sections, which makes it consistent with Latex/PDF
rendering.
A part with style 'grouper and 'unnumbered does not make its
child parts render as more nested, which is consistent with
'gruper without 'unnumbered. An unnumbered grouper is represented
as "" in a section-number list (while #f is still used for
unnumbered non-grouper layers).