tsc handles its own incremental builds, and if a file is removed, it isn't
always regenerated. This resulted in a bad distribution being generated and
published to npm.
* .gitignore (tsconfig.tsbuildinfo): Ignore generated file (used for
incremental builds).
* Makefile.am (tsout): New variable an recipe.
(modindex, check): Depend on tsout.
* dummy.ts: New (temporary) file. Will be removed once we have at least one
ts file.
* npm-shrinkwrap.json: Update.
* package.json.in (devDependencies)[typescript]: New dependency.
* tsconfig.json: New configuration file.
Copyright notices updated. More casual references to "LoVullo
Associates" replaced with "RT Specialty / Lovullo", which will be "RT
Specialty Buffalo" in the future. Or "RT Specialty", depending on how
this is rolled out. Or "Ryan Specialty Group". Who knows.
"R-T Specialty, LLC." is the legal name, which includes the dash. Not
to be confused with a certain television network.
In newer versions of node, this flag goes away and it is enabled by
default.
* Makefile.am (test): Add NODE_DESTRUCTURE to mocha invocation.
* configure.ac (NODE, NODE_DESTRUCTURE): Add variables.
DEV-2296
Oops. Kind of hard to re-run `make' without the Makefile (you could have
run ./configure to create it, though).
* Makefile.am: Add 'Makefile' to EXTRA_DIST.
As it turns out, the main index.js was missing, and you couldn't build from
the distribution because of a missing tools/!
* Makefile.am: index.js no longer missing from distribution.
tools/ no longer missing from distribution.
It is expected that support for promises will be available in whatever
environment liza is run. Here, we're adding a shim for the sake of testing
in ancient environments.
It's almost as if I'm stuck using an ancient environment somewhere...*cough*
``Building'' Liza will not be required to use it; see ease.js for the style
of building that will be used here. In particular: the build process will be
used for minification and the creation of distribution archives, but one can
simply include the source files (using, say, node.js) to use it without
building.