Manal upgrade to prettier 3.4.2 (#2037)

Including the reformatting changes needed to make it pass again
(mostly due to https://github.com/prettier/prettier/pull/15526).
This commit is contained in:
David Baker 2024-12-11 10:21:33 +00:00 committed by GitHub
parent cb88661aa0
commit 9327447538
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: B5690EEEBB952194
8 changed files with 55 additions and 55 deletions

View File

@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
## Checklist
- [ ] Ensure your code works with manual testing.
- [ ] New or updated `public`/`exported` symbols have accurate [TSDoc](https://tsdoc.org/) documentation.
- [ ] Linter and other CI checks pass.
- [ ] I have licensed the changes to Element by completing the [Contributor License Agreement (CLA)](https://cla-assistant.io/element-hq/element-desktop)
- [ ] Ensure your code works with manual testing.
- [ ] New or updated `public`/`exported` symbols have accurate [TSDoc](https://tsdoc.org/) documentation.
- [ ] Linter and other CI checks pass.
- [ ] I have licensed the changes to Element by completing the [Contributor License Agreement (CLA)](https://cla-assistant.io/element-hq/element-desktop)

View File

@ -75,10 +75,10 @@ yarn run build
This will do a couple of things:
- Run the `setversion` script to set the local package version to match whatever
version of Element you installed above.
- Run electron-builder to build a package. The package built will match the operating system
you're running the build process on.
- Run the `setversion` script to set the local package version to match whatever
version of Element you installed above.
- Run electron-builder to build a package. The package built will match the operating system
you're running the build process on.
## Docker
@ -131,9 +131,9 @@ Alternatively, a custom location for the profile data can be specified using the
# User-specified config.json
- `%APPDATA%\$NAME\config.json` on Windows
- `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/$NAME/config.json` or `~/.config/$NAME/config.json` on Linux
- `~/Library/Application Support/$NAME/config.json` on macOS
- `%APPDATA%\$NAME\config.json` on Windows
- `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/$NAME/config.json` or `~/.config/$NAME/config.json` on Linux
- `~/Library/Application Support/$NAME/config.json` on macOS
In the paths above, `$NAME` is typically `Element`, unless you use `--profile
$PROFILE` in which case it becomes `Element-$PROFILE`, or it is using one of

View File

@ -1,17 +1,17 @@
# Summary
- [Introduction](../README.md)
- [Introduction](../README.md)
# Build
- [Native Node modules](native-node-modules.md)
- [Windows requirements](windows-requirements.md)
- [Native Node modules](native-node-modules.md)
- [Windows requirements](windows-requirements.md)
# Distribution
- [Updates](updates.md)
- [Packaging](packaging.md)
- [Updates](updates.md)
- [Packaging](packaging.md)
# Setup
- [Config](config.md)
- [Config](config.md)

View File

@ -17,9 +17,9 @@ when releasing.
Install the pre-requisites for your system:
- [Windows pre-requisites](https://github.com/vector-im/element-desktop/blob/develop/docs/windows-requirements.md)
- Linux: TODO
- OS X: TODO
- [Windows pre-requisites](https://github.com/vector-im/element-desktop/blob/develop/docs/windows-requirements.md)
- Linux: TODO
- OS X: TODO
Then optionally, [add seshat and dependencies to support search in E2E rooms](#adding-seshat-for-search-in-e2e-encrypted-rooms).

View File

@ -17,8 +17,8 @@ Simply go to https://github.com/vector-im/element-desktop/actions/workflows/buil
For releasing Element Desktop, we assume the following prerequisites:
- a tag of `element-desktop` repo with the Element Desktop version to be released set in `package.json`.
- an Element Web tarball published to GitHub with a matching version number.
- a tag of `element-desktop` repo with the Element Desktop version to be released set in `package.json`.
- an Element Web tarball published to GitHub with a matching version number.
**Both of these are done automatically when you run the release automation.**

View File

@ -6,19 +6,19 @@ We rely on Github Actions `windows-2022` plus a few extra utilities as per [the
If you want to build native modules, make sure that the following tools are installed on your system.
- [Git for Windows](https://git-scm.com/download/win)
- [Node 16](https://nodejs.org)
- [Python 3](https://www.python.org/downloads/) (if you type 'python' into command prompt it will offer to install it from the windows store)
- [Strawberry Perl](https://strawberryperl.com/)
- [Rustup](https://rustup.rs/)
- [NASM](https://www.nasm.us/)
- [Build Tools for Visual Studio 2019](https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/downloads/#build-tools-for-visual-studio-2019) with the following configuration:
- On the Workloads tab:
- Desktop & Mobile -> C++ build tools
- On the Individual components tab:
- MSVC VS 2019 C++ build tools
- Windows 10 SDK (latest version available)
- C++ CMake tools for Windows
- [Git for Windows](https://git-scm.com/download/win)
- [Node 16](https://nodejs.org)
- [Python 3](https://www.python.org/downloads/) (if you type 'python' into command prompt it will offer to install it from the windows store)
- [Strawberry Perl](https://strawberryperl.com/)
- [Rustup](https://rustup.rs/)
- [NASM](https://www.nasm.us/)
- [Build Tools for Visual Studio 2019](https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/downloads/#build-tools-for-visual-studio-2019) with the following configuration:
- On the Workloads tab:
- Desktop & Mobile -> C++ build tools
- On the Individual components tab:
- MSVC VS 2019 C++ build tools
- Windows 10 SDK (latest version available)
- C++ CMake tools for Windows
Once installed make sure all those utilities are accessible in your `PATH`.

View File

@ -5,12 +5,12 @@ documentation for it.
Goals:
- Must build compiled native node modules in a shippable state
(ie. only dynamically linked against libraries that will be on the
target system, all unnecessary files removed).
- Must be able to build any native module, no matter what build system
it uses (electron-rebuild is supposed to do this job but only works
for modules that use gyp).
- Must build compiled native node modules in a shippable state
(ie. only dynamically linked against libraries that will be on the
target system, all unnecessary files removed).
- Must be able to build any native module, no matter what build system
it uses (electron-rebuild is supposed to do this job but only works
for modules that use gyp).
It's also loosely designed to be a general tool and agnostic to what it's
actually building. It's used here to build modules for the electron app
@ -25,13 +25,13 @@ If no dependencies are given, hak runs the command on all dependencies.
There are a lot of files involved:
- scripts/hak/... - The tool itself
- hak/[dependency] - Files provided by the app that tell hak how to build each of its native dependencies.
Contains a hak.json file and also some script files, each of which must be referenced in hak.json.
- .hak/ - Files generated by hak in the course of doing its job. Includes the dependency module itself and
any of the native dependency's native dependencies.
- .hak/[dependency]/build - An extracted copy of the dependency's node module used to build it.
- .hak/[dependency]/out - Another extracted copy of the dependency, this one contains only what will be shipped.
- scripts/hak/... - The tool itself
- hak/[dependency] - Files provided by the app that tell hak how to build each of its native dependencies.
Contains a hak.json file and also some script files, each of which must be referenced in hak.json.
- .hak/ - Files generated by hak in the course of doing its job. Includes the dependency module itself and
any of the native dependency's native dependencies.
- .hak/[dependency]/build - An extracted copy of the dependency's node module used to build it.
- .hak/[dependency]/out - Another extracted copy of the dependency, this one contains only what will be shipped.
# Workings
@ -60,10 +60,10 @@ own in the .hak directory (unless one already exists, in which case this is your
Hak is divided into lifecycle stages, in order:
- fetch - Download and extract the source of the dependency
- link - Link the copy of the dependency into your node_modules directory
- build - The Good Stuff. Configure and build any native dependencies, then the module itself.
- copy - Copy the built artifact from the module build directory to the module output directory.
- fetch - Download and extract the source of the dependency
- link - Link the copy of the dependency into your node_modules directory
- build - The Good Stuff. Configure and build any native dependencies, then the module itself.
- copy - Copy the built artifact from the module build directory to the module output directory.
# hak.json

View File

@ -6353,9 +6353,9 @@ prelude-ls@^1.2.1:
integrity sha512-vkcDPrRZo1QZLbn5RLGPpg/WmIQ65qoWWhcGKf/b5eplkkarX0m9z8ppCat4mlOqUsWpyNuYgO3VRyrYHSzX5g==
prettier@^3.0.0:
version "3.3.3"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/prettier/-/prettier-3.3.3.tgz#30c54fe0be0d8d12e6ae61dbb10109ea00d53105"
integrity sha512-i2tDNA0O5IrMO757lfrdQZCc2jPNDVntV0m/+4whiDfWaTKfMNgR7Qz0NAeGz/nRqF4m5/6CLzbP4/liHt12Ew==
version "3.4.2"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/prettier/-/prettier-3.4.2.tgz#a5ce1fb522a588bf2b78ca44c6e6fe5aa5a2b13f"
integrity sha512-e9MewbtFo+Fevyuxn/4rrcDAaq0IYxPGLvObpQjiZBMAzB9IGmzlnG9RZy3FFas+eBMu2vA0CszMeduow5dIuQ==
pretty-ms@^9.0.0:
version "9.2.0"