The benchmark data file had errors when checking with Cppcheck.
And people reported these errors. So replace the file with one
that has no (currently found) errors.
The 'test/test.cxx' is a test file that contains some errors for
testing purposes. Exclude it from the GUI-project file used to
check Cppcheck sources so people don't report errors from it.
The script is available in another repository. I don't want to
distribute it with Cppcheck sources for now. Maybe if and when
there is more interest towards GUI tests...
If the "extra version" is defined (not empty) then it is shown
after the actual version number in the About-dialog.
Ticket: #2164 ([GUI] Add revision info to "About" window)
The "ExtraVersion" can be used for things like Git commit Id,
release tag (version control), release date etc. If the string
is empty, nothing is printed.
New help text emphasizes we are ignoring/excluding source files.
The header files (include via source files) are not touched.
Ticket: #2965 (CLI: need better description for -i option (applies only to source files))
tools/ Makefile contained errmsg target whose source does not
exist anymore. And it didn't have a target for extracttests.
Removed the errmsg target and added new target for extracttests.
Ticket: #2988 (In tools, make error: no rule to make target `errmsg.cpp', needed by `errmsg'.)
My earlier commit (cfcfa3f0) removed the use of style parameter.
This commit adds it back.
Ticket: #2987 (GCC: warning: unused parameter ‘style’ in test/testdivision.cpp:39:10)
Settings-class currently enables style checking via dedicated
boolean attribute. All other CLI's enable-options are handled
through the enable-list. This commit moves style-check enabling
to use the enable-list.
Main advantage is the consistency how options are handled/stored
in the Settings class. Which also unifies using them for the other
code. You need to enable certain type of checks? Use the
addEnabled()-method. You want to check if certain type of checks
are enabled? Use the isEnabled()-method.
Filename exclusion (with -i) works only for the source files.
Print a warning if user tries to exclude header file. The warning
instructs user to use --suppress for ignoring warnings from the
header files.