@Nooble It's fun for Bastion as dual revolvers shoot as fast as you can click, and keeping LMB pressed fires slower than you could by repeatedly clicking.
@Puppy How hard is it to implement uh... idk how to call this... running errors? Like yknow how any compiler wont stop at the first error while compiling (unless it reaches X amount where X is often 100) ? How hard is that to implement vs well right now i just throw an exception cuz... simplicity =/
@Puppy Well I mean... I wouldnt mind implementing the easy ones, and not recovering on the hard ones for now. I just meant like, the "system" in general. Do you just return a sort of optional "ast something or error" or like... ?
im just not sure how that works, since you end up with an incomplete ast
@Borgleader For parse errors, I just throw an exception. I used to have an error recovery scheme but it's just not that useful for parse errors as re-parsing a single file is pretty trivial work and it's easy for the human to fix the error.
and even if you recover the future parse or semantic errors are fairly useless
IMO error recovery is mostly useful in the semantic phase because re-analyzing the whole codebase could take a long time, and it's relatively easily to treat individual units like functions in isolation
but if you have some advanced incremental re-analysis stuff it could be not worth it even then
ultimately error-recovery is a complete guessing game, the output is often crap, and it's a lot of effort
depends on your exact implementation strategy as to how to handle it really
@NateKerkhofs Good! (Consider posting and self answering on SO. Especially if you know the cause of the problem in the first place. I'd +1 that for helpful information)
@sehe actually, that's where I got the idea from. there was actually already a question on that on SO, but because it was closed as off-topic, I didn't look closely at it until today
I'm actually surprised that it's closed as off-topic, since it's a question about a software development tool
@sehe I mean, TMP seem to give more rep than regular C++ questions. Which I guess isnt surprising since regular C++ questions tend to be "debug my code", "i dont a ub" or some other basic issue