Showing 118 of 118 total issues
Multiple consecutive blank lines Open
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD012 - Multiple consecutive blank lines
Tags: whitespace, blank_lines
Aliases: no-multiple-blanks
This rule is triggered when there are multiple consecutive blank lines in the document:
Some text here
Some more text here
To fix this, delete the offending lines:
Some text here
Some more text here
Note: this rule will not be triggered if there are multiple consecutive blank lines inside code blocks.
Line length Open
This library is a departure from the typical 'C' runtime environments of the past which had to run on all AmigaOS releases, down to *Kickstart 1.1*. This very library was designed to take advantage of the routines available since *Kickstart 2.04* was introduced and virtually nobody ever put to use. This helps to cut the code size, and it also helps to keep bugs out of the library by falling back onto well-tested implementations. However, the catch is that the code won't run under *Kickstart 1.3* and below. But then these operating system releases have been obsolete for more than a decade, and you can always go back to a compiler environment which supports them.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
Thread-safety does not imply that you can have multiple callers access and close the same file. There is no resource tracking to that degree yet. All that the thread-safety tries to afford you is not to get into big trouble if simultaneous and overlapping accesses to files, memory allocation and other resources are taking place.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
The use of the socket I/O functions is problematic because the underlying `bsdsocket.library` API is not supposed to be used by any process other than the one which opened it. While one TCP/IP stack (my own "Roadshow") allows you to share the library base among different processes, if so configured, it is the exception. No other TCP/IP stack available for the Amiga robustly supports a similar feature. If the TCP/IP stack supports this feature, then the global variable `__can_share_socket_library_base` will be set to a non-zero value.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
A much more serious problem resides with the `exit()`, `abort()`, `assert()` and `raise()` functions, and how the `SIGINT` signal is processed. In the thread-safe library only the `main()` function may directly or indirectly call the `exit()` function. No child process may do so, since this would wreck its stack context, crashing it instantly; the main program would be very likely to crash, too, because `exit()` will clean up after all memory allocations and files currently in use. Functions such as `abort()` and `raise()` may call the `exit()` function indirectly. And the `raise()` function may be invoked as part of the `Control+C` checking. You should make sure that the signal handling does not affect any child processes. This can be done by replacing the `__check_abort()` function or by disabling `SIGINT` processing altogether, such as through a `signal(SIGINT,SIG_IGN)` call.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
The PowerPC version of *clib2* supports only double precision floating point numbers, according to the *IEEE 754* standard, because that is exactly what the PowerPC CPU supports. Single precision numbers may be implicitly converted to double precision numbers. This also means that the *C99* data type `long double` is identical to the `double` data type. Because there is no difference between these two, the library omits support for *C99* functions specifically designed to operate on `long double` data types, such as `rintl()`.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
The input for the `%p` conversion must be a hexadecimal number, preceded by either the string `0x` or `0X`.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
The reference point used by the `clock()` function is the time when the program was started.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
The `nrcrt0.S` file was adapted from *libnix* startup code, too, and sets up the base relative data area for programs to be made resident. Note that the `geta4()` stub is missing here; it wouldn't work in a resident program anyway.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Inline HTML Open
<pre>
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD033 - Inline HTML
Tags: html
Aliases: no-inline-html
This rule is triggered whenever raw HTML is used in a markdown document:
Inline HTML header
To fix this, use 'pure' markdown instead of including raw HTML:
# Markdown header
Rationale: Raw HTML is allowed in markdown, but this rule is included for those who want their documents to only include "pure" markdown, or for those who are rendering markdown documents in something other than HTML.
Line length Open
Both the 68k and the PowerPC versions of *clib2* may call software floating point support routines in order to perform double and single precision operations that go beyond simple addition and multiplication, such as `sqrt()`. These functions come from Sun Microsystems <a href="http://www.netlib.org/fdlibm/">fdlibm 5.3</a> library.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
Space characters in a text stream before a new line character are read in and are not discarded.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
In the `libunix.a` implementation a request to allocate 0 (zero) bytes will result in an allocation of at least 4 bytes, which will be set to zero. Each zero length allocation will return a different memory address.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Line length Open
The default time zone is derived from the Amiga operating system locale settings and takes the form `GMT+*hh*` or `GMT-*hh*`, respectively, in which *hh* stands for the difference between the local time zone and Greenwich Mean Time (actually, this is not GMT but UTC).
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Code block style Open
Olaf Barthel
- Exclude checks
Line length Open
Normally, the `specs` file is located at the compiler's installation directory. For cross-compilers, this is `/usr/local/amiga/lib/gcc/ppc-amigaos/*compiler-version*/specs`. For a native compiler, it's in `gcc:lib/gcc/ppc-amigaos/*compiler-version*/specs`. Most likely, your compiler will already have this added to it's `specs` file.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD013 - Line length
Tags: line_length
Aliases: line-length Parameters: linelength, codeblocks, tables (number; default 80, boolean; default true)
This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the configured line length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line up into multiple lines.
This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without being forced to break them in the middle.
You also have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks and tables. To
do this, set the code_blocks
and/or tables
parameters to false.
Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.
Trailing punctuation in header Open
## What does it do?
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD026 - Trailing punctuation in header
Tags: headers
Aliases: no-trailing-punctuation
Parameters: punctuation (string; default ".,;:!?")
This rule is triggered on any header that has a punctuation character as the last character in the line:
# This is a header.
To fix this, remove any trailing punctuation:
# This is a header
Note: The punctuation parameter can be used to specify what characters class
as punctuation at the end of the header. For example, you can set it to
'.,;:!'
to allow headers with question marks in them, such as might be used
in an FAQ.
Trailing punctuation in header Open
## What does it not do?
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD026 - Trailing punctuation in header
Tags: headers
Aliases: no-trailing-punctuation
Parameters: punctuation (string; default ".,;:!?")
This rule is triggered on any header that has a punctuation character as the last character in the line:
# This is a header.
To fix this, remove any trailing punctuation:
# This is a header
Note: The punctuation parameter can be used to specify what characters class
as punctuation at the end of the header. For example, you can set it to
'.,;:!'
to allow headers with question marks in them, such as might be used
in an FAQ.
Inline HTML Open
For the PowerPC platform, the library uses code borrowed from <a href="http://www.netlib.org/fdlibm/">fdlibm 5.3</a>, which is a portable library of arithmetic functions developed by Sun Microsystems which, for example, is also used within the Java platform.
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD033 - Inline HTML
Tags: html
Aliases: no-inline-html
This rule is triggered whenever raw HTML is used in a markdown document:
Inline HTML header
To fix this, use 'pure' markdown instead of including raw HTML:
# Markdown header
Rationale: Raw HTML is allowed in markdown, but this rule is included for those who want their documents to only include "pure" markdown, or for those who are rendering markdown documents in something other than HTML.
Inline HTML Open
<a href="http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975">Open Group's Single Unix
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
MD033 - Inline HTML
Tags: html
Aliases: no-inline-html
This rule is triggered whenever raw HTML is used in a markdown document:
Inline HTML header
To fix this, use 'pure' markdown instead of including raw HTML:
# Markdown header
Rationale: Raw HTML is allowed in markdown, but this rule is included for those who want their documents to only include "pure" markdown, or for those who are rendering markdown documents in something other than HTML.