On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 11:36 AM Boudewijn Rempt <b...@valdyas.org> wrote: > > It does look kind of interesting... But why doesn't it realize that there's > some C++ in Krita?
Probably it does, but it failed to build because of dependencies, let me check. Checked. It failed on timeout while building the c++ part. I just retriggered a build (as last try was 2 months ago) you can always go to 'add languge' to a software and add a new language if the system couldn't pickup the real one. there's also a .lgtm file that we can add to the repository to help their tool to analize our source, if you want I can try to create one for krita. > On donderdag 21 maart 2019 10:04:29 CET Tomaz Canabrava wrote: > > Hello kdevelopers, > > > > I'v come to know the lgtm.com this week and started to enjoy it quite > > a bit. It provides code analisys for various languages like c/c++ / > > java / javascript / python, transforming code to data and extracting > > information using a QL Schema + Deep learning. > > > > It's opensource, and *already* runs thru all the kde codebase because > > our code has a mirror on github (but it also supports gitlab, > > bitbucket). Some of the code from kde can't be analized yet because of > > unmatched dependencies, but here's an example of a software we all > > know and love, being analized by their tools. > > > > https://lgtm.com/projects/g/KDAB/GammaRay/alerts/?mode=list > > > > I belive we should get in contact with them and ask for a ~formal~ > > partnership and integrate this into our phab / gitlab instances. > > > > Tomaz > > > > > -- > https://www.krita.org