* clang-format improvements
- Add a clang-format linter check to the PR pipeline
- Apply clang-format to files where the linter initially failed
- Remove `CommentPragmas` from `.clang-format`
- Remove all `// clang-format off` and `// NO-FORMAT` as they are not needed
- Remove a commented out `GSL_SUPPRESS`
* clang-format 20
* pipeline fail
* Update .github/workflows/clang-format.yml
Co-authored-by: Carson Radtke <nosrac925@gmail.com>
* output used clang-format version
* installed version is 18 which replaces "GSL_SUPPRESS(bounds.1)" with "GSL_SUPPRESS(bounds .1)"
* only include/gsl, not include
to prevent formatting of include/CMakeLists.txt
* apply clang-format[-20]
In a VS2026 developer command prompt I ran `clang-format -i include\gsl\* --assume-filename x.cpp`. This was necessary because VS GUI does not format files without an extension :(. Please note that `--assume-filename` is necessary here, otherwise the files will not be formatted. Surprisingly the behaviour for the formatter differs from the behaviour of `lang-format(-20) --dry-run --Werror include/gsl/*` where clang-format recognizes that the files is C++.
* change "#if 0" back to original version with comments only
* formatting scripts for windows and linux
for linux with linter (shfmt and shellcheck)
* add WhitespaceSensitiveMacros: [GSL_SUPPRESS]
* provide path for clang-format (Windows)
Currently not clear to me:
On my personal computer at home, when I start "Developer Command Prompt for VS18", I can run `clang-format` without providing the path.
On my managed (domain) company computer, when I start "Developer Command Prompt for VS18", I can NOT run `clang-format` without providing the path. I need to call `"%VCINSTALLDIR%Tools\Llvm\bin\clang-format"`.
I have no idea what the difference is. At least the version `"%VCINSTALLDIR%Tools\Llvm\bin\clang-format"` works on both computers, so I add the path.
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Co-authored-by: Werner Henze <w.henze@avm.de>
Co-authored-by: Carson Radtke <nosrac925@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Werner Henze <werner.henze+gitcommits@posteo.de>
Reverts commit that changes #include "assert" -> #include "gsl/assert".
This change is necessary in order to comply with CppCoreGuideline's
SF.12. Now we do #include "./assert".
Office is seeing build breaks due to `#include "span"` including
C++20 span instead of gsl/span. Most likely we want all headers
includes qualified with "gsl/" to avoid similar issues.