This ports sbt-cross-building's cross (`^`) and switch (`^^`) commands.
Instead of making it a plugin, the default settings are now changed
to use `sbtVersion in pluginCrossBuild` for the sbt dependency.
This was already supported in the internal Scripted used by sbt but not
in the ScriptedPlugin. This is fixed by just copy-pasting the modified
parser. We will have to wait for sbt itself to be built using an sbt
with the upgraded ScriptedPlugin to be able to avoid the code duplication.
To pass File => Unit callback across the classloader boundary
I am encoding it as a java.util.List[File] by overriding
method.
This was needed since Java didn't allow me to cast
from one classloader to the other.
The scripted newer command was effectively a noop, it always passed
because it returned false instead of throwing an exception when it
failed.
Implemented specs for most of the scripted file commands as well.
All of `sbtVersion`, `defScalaVersion` and `buildScalaVersions` were
not used anymore. According to @harrah they are coming from really
old days of sbt and are not needed because of changes to how sbt
interacts with different Scala versions.
Similar to task macros, the parsed value is accessed by calling `parsed`
on a Parser[T], Initialize[Parser[T]], or Initialize[State => Parser[T]].
Values of tasks and settings may be accessed as usual via `value`.
1. KList[M[_]] now instead of KList[HL <: HList, M[_]]
a. head, tail work properly in this variant
b. disadvantage is that full type not easily transformed to new type constructor
2. AList abstracts on K[L[x]], a higher order type constructor.
A. Instances written for:
a. KList
b. Seq[M[T]] for a fixed T
c. TupleN
d. single values
e. operate on one type constructor when nested
B. Main disadvantage is type inference. It just doesn't happen for K[L[x]].
This is mitigated by AList being used internally and rarely needing to construct a K.