| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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The author of maud seems to be slow on updating to newer actix releases, and the syntax, while clever, is ultimately less tool-friendly than "HTML with some weird characters" is.
I do still like the idea, but I also want to use Actix 4.
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`maud`, which was the main reason for nightlies, relies on proc macros. Those are stable in the 2021 edition, and maud 0.23+ uses them in a stable-friendly way.
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This is in preparation for a bulk update - Github notified me that there are a ton of outdated deps here (which is true), so I'm using this as an opportunity to practice handling stale deps.
Part of the motivation here is for `cargo upgrade` (from `cargo-edit`) to be able to do something reasonable.
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The maintainer has put up-to-date packages on crates.io, so let's use 'em for hygiene.
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The argument is as given in the proptest docs at
<https://altsysrq.github.io/proptest-book/proptest/vs-quickcheck.html>.
I've found that the resulting tests are somewhat clearer, and that the
tools for working with test case generation are more useful.
The other killer feature is recalling test failure examples from run to
run. This change includes at least one bug found while testing the port!
Finally, if <https://github.com/AltSysrq/proptest/issues/179> is to be
believed, proptest is considerably closer to supporting async tests.
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That was an experiment that didn't really go anywhere. There are no meaningful "versions" of this software - it runs on a single host, and there are no compatibility promises.
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This accomplishes two things:
1. The og cards and page title no longer contain half-baked markup. Instead, they show the markdown equivalent, which is generally pretty friendly. In other words, the page title is "Have you checked `resolv.conf`?" and not "Have you checked <code>resolve.conf</code>?"
2. Phrases can now start with terms other than "Have you checked".
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This is somewhat overengineered in places, but does the job and exposes broadly the same interfaces as the Python version. Builds with emk/rust.
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