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When the snippets_translate tool fails, the build process
continues normally, falling back to use the original C++
snippets.
This problem can be dangerous, since we will not notice if
something is wrong without checking the full log.
This patch make the build process to fail when the tool
doesn't exit normally.
For builds where the documentation generation is skipped,
this change will have no effect.
Complementary to this, the patch includes a new Python file
to determine if the C++ include have an import
counterpart in Python.
Fixes: PYSIDE-1527
Pick-to: 6.0.4
Change-Id: I725b623f60dbc540a6e7834502300c39cd22b5a3
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
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This is not a C++ -> Python translator,
but a line-by-line conversion tool.
This scripts requires two arguments to identify a Qt and PySide
directory including the sources.
There is a set of file extensions that are currently omitted from
the process, and for the ones that will be copied, there will be
messages related if the file already exists or if it's new.
If you use the '-v' option, you will see the C++ code and the
converted Python code, so it's easy to check for issues and missing
features.
Also, two command line options were added to have a different behavior
'--filter' to include a word to filter the full paths of all the
snippets found (for example the name of a directory),
and '-s/--single' to translate only a specific C++ file to be
translated.
Including test cases for transformations related to the C++
snippets.
Fixes: PYSIDE-691
Pick-to: 6.0
Change-Id: I208e3a9139c7e84fe369a7c2ea93af240d83fa83
Reviewed-by: Christian Tismer <tismer@stackless.com>
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