I removed the grammar recipes in 3b58741 to avoid redundancy with the
upstream recipes, but didn't realize that those upstream recipes weren't
added until Emacs 31, so users on 30 and older would get errors when
trying to install any missing grammars.
This also establishes a hard dependency between :lang (php +tree-sitter)
and :lang ({javascript,web} +tree-sitter).
Amend: 3b58741522
BREAKING CHANGE: This commit removes a number of core packages and
features from this module and only replaces a handful of them, so that
we can lean more on LSP and tree-sitter. To be specific:
- We used to rely on `rjsx-mode` (derived from js2-mode) for total
JS/JSX support (though imperfect; Emacs was starved for options at the
time). This has now been replaced with `js-ts-mode` (built-in after
Emacs 29), falling back to `js-mode` (very rudimentary, but a decent
fallback).
- This also meant the removal of `js2-mode`, which `skewer-mode`,
`js2-refactor`, and `xref-js2` depended on, so those were removed
too, and have *somewhat* been replaced with LSP integration (offers
jump-to-definition/references and *some* refactoring actions, but no
replacement for skewer's functionality).
- Typescript support no longer relies on the jury-rigged, web-mode-derived
major mode (because TSX support in the upstream `typescript-mode`
isn't great). We now use `typescript-ts-mode` (built-in into Emacs
29.1+), falling back to `typescript-mode`.
- JSX/TSX support now *requires* tree-sitter (and Emacs 29.1+), where
`tsx-ts-mode` is available and outshines all the alternatives (at the
time of writing).
Due to the absolute chaos that is webdev, this module sacrifices some of
the graceful-degradation I've implemented for other modules and creates
a hard requirement on tree-sitter and Emacs 29.1+ for JSX/TSX. It still
tries to degrade gracefully for plain JS and TS, but the module's doctor
and docs will actively recommend tree-sitter.
Close: #5278Fix: #6172Fix: #7042Close: #8447
Co-authored-by: ribaricplusplus <ribaricplusplus@users.noreply.github.com>
bash-ts-mode is inferior to shell-script-mode's syntax highlighting and
no other *-ts-mode modes are available for other shells (though,
there *are* powershell and nushell ts-modes; I'll investigate those
later).
No *-ts-mode exists for ess-r-mode (or any other ess mode, afaik). The
ess module will fall back to font-lock rules so this is not a breaking
changing.
No *-ts-mode exists for tuareg-mode. There *is* a ocaml-ts-mode, but
it's too rudimentary. The ocaml module will fall back to font-lock rules
so this is not a breaking changing.