https://github.com/andy-goryachev-oracle/jfx/pull/9
Hmm. I don't really like the abbreviations. They would change something
that is self-explanatory to something completely opaque, although I see
you did leave the descriptive name as a comment.
-- Kevin
On 7/9/2024 8:37 AM, Andy Goryachev wrote:
Have you tried building in Eclipse on the latest Linux Mint? Or
building on an EncFS mount?
I don't know why Mint decided to use EncFS knowing its issues, and I
suppose I can try fixing my setup (it's a default Mint installation),
but I was quite surprised myself and thought that it might be just as
easy to fix the tests... here is how the fix might look:
https://github.com/andy-goryachev-oracle/jfx/pull/9
-andy
*From: *John Hendrikx <john.hendr...@gmail.com>
*Date: *Tuesday, July 9, 2024 at 08:22
*To: *Andy Goryachev <andy.goryac...@oracle.com>, Johan Vos
<johan....@gluonhq.com>, openjfx-dev <openjfx-dev@openjdk.org>
*Subject: *[External] : Re: consistent naming for tests
On 09/07/2024 16:52, Andy Goryachev wrote:
Two test files consistently generate an error in Eclipse
- ObservableValueFluentBindingsTest
- LazyObjectBindingTest
I admit I have a weird setup (EncFS on Linux Mint running on
MacBook Pro), and it only manifests itself in Eclipse and not in
the gradle build - perhaps Eclipse actually verifies the removal
of files?
Anyway, a suggestion - if you use @Nested, please keep the class
names /short/.
This is not an Eclipse bug as I never encounter such issues. 143
characters is rather short these days, but I suppose we could limit
the nesting a bit. Still, I'd look into a way to alleviate this
problem in your setup, sooner or later this is going to be a problem.
--John