On Tuesday, 1 October 2013 at 09:57:38 UTC, Iain Buclaw wrote:
On Oct 1, 2013 8:20 AM, "eles" <e...@eles.com> wrote:
On Tuesday, 1 October 2013 at 03:36:09 UTC, Iain Buclaw wrote:
On 3 September 2013 17:03, Iain Buclaw <ibuc...@ubuntu.com>
wrote:
On 3 September 2013 16:54, eles <e...@eles.com> wrote:
It would be possible to implement this for gdc, too:
As for errors, only errors that go through the gcc error
system shows
in colours. So would have to modify the frontend
accordingly in that
case...
https://github.com/D-Programming-GDC/GDC/commit/b2a4421180f70475b52497a75ab0fe760ebc82d7
Great! Could you make fdiagnostic-color=auto by default?
(instead of
never). Just like gcc.
Sorry, I think I made a mistake. Actually, it depends of the
state of the variable GCC_COLORS:
"-fno-diagnostics-color
Use color in diagnostics. WHEN is ‘never’, ‘always’, or ‘auto’.
The default is ‘never’ if GCC_COLORS environment variable isn't
present in the environment, and ‘auto’ otherwise. ‘auto’ means to
use color only when the standard error is a terminal. The forms
-fdiagnostics-color and -fno-diagnostics-color are aliases for
-fdiagnostics-color=always and -fdiagnostics-color=never,
respectively."
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Language-Independent-Options.html
It seems to work the same way.