`rome lint --fix` is still there to automatically apply fixes. But with an easier way to review each error and decide an action, it allows for the addition of potentially unsafe fixes, and with it being easy to add suppressions, the rules can be more strict.
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looks awesome! watching got me wondering if another option to "apply all changes so far" would be useful if there are a lot of errors to go through - didn't see if it tells you that upfront
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You mean an option that stops the decision selection?
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The terminal is still the best interface isn't it.
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Not really. I had to invent my own string markup format to properly format ANSI codes.
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What's the overhead of the loading indicator :)https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/11283#issuecomment-175246823 …
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Depends! If you're connected to a daemon then the progress bar is rendered in the CLI process which isn't doing anything besides streaming output from the master. There is proper update scheduling regardless.
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What would be the difference between `rome init` vs `rome init --defaults`? Wouldn't the first one use the defaults already?
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`rome init` has an interactive prompt that asks you some questions and allows you to disable things like formatting. `rome init --defaults` doesn't ask any questions and just uses some defaults. Rome has some configuration options but we've tried to keep it extremely minimal.
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