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Author SHA1 Message Date
Kim Morrison
330be908c9 doc: commit conventions and Mathlib CI 2025-01-12 11:57:50 +11:00
2 changed files with 23 additions and 8 deletions

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@@ -33,6 +33,9 @@ Format of the commit message
- chore (maintain, ex: travis-ci)
- perf (performance improvement, optimization, ...)
Every `feat` or `fix` commit must have a `changelog-*` label, and a commit message
beginning with "This PR " that will be included in the changelog.
``<subject>`` has the following constraints:
- use imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
@@ -44,6 +47,7 @@ Format of the commit message
- just as in ``<subject>``, use imperative, present tense
- includes motivation for the change and contrasts with previous
behavior
- If a `changelog-*` label is present, the body must begin with "This PR ".
``<footer>`` is optional and may contain two items:
@@ -60,17 +64,21 @@ Examples
fix: add declarations for operator<<(std::ostream&, expr const&) and operator<<(std::ostream&, context const&) in the kernel
This PR adds declarations `operator<<` for raw printing.
The actual implementation of these two operators is outside of the
kernel. They are implemented in the file 'library/printer.cpp'. We
declare them in the kernel to prevent the following problem. Suppose
there is a file 'foo.cpp' that does not include 'library/printer.h',
but contains
kernel. They are implemented in the file 'library/printer.cpp'.
expr a;
...
std::cout << a << "\n";
...
We declare them in the kernel to prevent the following problem.
Suppose there is a file 'foo.cpp' that does not include 'library/printer.h',
but contains
```cpp
expr a;
...
std::cout << a << "\n";
...
```
The compiler does not generate an error message. It silently uses the
operator bool() to coerce the expression into a Boolean. This produces
counter-intuitive behavior, and may confuse developers.

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@@ -80,3 +80,10 @@ Unlike most Lean projects, all submodules of the `Lean` module begin with the
`prelude` keyword. This disables the automated import of `Init`, meaning that
developers need to figure out their own subset of `Init` to import. This is done
such that changing files in `Init` doesn't force a full rebuild of `Lean`.
### Testing against Mathlib/Batteries
You can test a Lean PR against Mathlib and Batteries by rebasing your PR
on to `nightly-with-mathlib` branch. (It is fine to force push after rebasing.)
CI will generate a branch of Mathlib and Batteries called `lean-pr-testing-NNNN`
that uses the toolchain for your PR, and will report back to the Lean PR with results from Mathlib CI.
See https://leanprover-community.github.io/contribute/tags_and_branches.html for more details.