Coq now uses .mlg rather than .ml4 (since https://github.com/coq/coq/pull/8763), so we have to ignore its generated dependency files. The `native_compute_profile_*.data` files are generated by `Set NativeCompute Profiling` (see https://github.com/coq/coq/pull/950). Finally `.coq-native` is a directory that may be generated in any subdirectory, not only at top level, so we should not use absolute paths for it.
I added this .gitignore to a project that included a file named CoverageSearchModel.cs, and the file was wrongly ignored. This change fixes the incorrect use of the range operator on the Coverlet rules.
The problem here was two fold:
1. the folder "/target/" would be top-level of the repo only, it should be "target/" to properly exclude target folders anywhere in the repo
2. the default Rust/Cargo folder when compiling code is "debug/", which gets used perhaps more often that "target/", added that
First and foremost I think that requiring such a complicated gitignore for JetBrains IDEs is a failure on JetBrains part in structuring their project setting. I also feel that it should be included in the `Python.gitignore` due to its popularity and due to the frequency of requests. A quick search for `PyCharm` PRs shows 81 closed PRs requesting it be added and if searching for `.idea` you can see many more have been requested. However I understand the maintenance burden in including it when a user can manually merge the two files themselves so I understand why the maintainers have opted to maintain it seperately.
The main problem I see is that with many people adding the `Python.gitignore` at project creation through the Github UI and the `JetBrains.gitignore` being in the Global folder and makes it less discoverable than it should be.
This PR adds a comment for people adding the `Python.gitignore` directing them to the global `JetBrains.gitignore` which should solve this issue in a way that is acceptable for the maintainers, since comment-only sections already exist for `pyenv` and `pipenv`.
_ModuleInstall/TcFilter/TwinCAT CE7 (ARMV7)/TcFilterW32.dll
_ModuleInstall/TcFilter/TwinCAT CE7 (x86)/TcFilterW32.dll
_ModuleInstall/TcFilter/TwinCAT RT (x64)/TcFilter.sys
_ModuleInstall/TcFilter/TwinCAT RT (x86)/TcFilter.sys
After contacting Beckhoff support, it was concluded that the folder "_ModuleInstall" could be omitted from version control, thus this addition.
After running `yarn set version berry` and `yarn install`, the file `.yarn/install-state.gz` is created.
The documentation at https://yarnpkg.com/advanced/qa#which-files-should-be-gitignored mentions that this file should be ignored:
> .yarn/install-state.tgz is an optimization file that you shouldn't have to ever commit. It simply stores the exact state of your project so that the next commands can boot without having to resolve your workspaces again.
The documentation has a minor error; the generated file is `.gz` instead of `.tgz` (source: https://github.com/yarnpkg/berry/pull/998/files#diff-23dd4c2e823c25186f1107e88e962032R201)
pip generated this folder for a few versions, as part of it's initial
implementation of PEP 517.
pip has not generated this folder for a few versions now, so it should
be OK to remove this from the standard gitignore file.
Visual Studio .Net used Win32/ as one of the default output directories for C and C++ projects. Later, when 64-bit support was added to the toolchain (circa 2005), x64/ was used. The Gitignore files include x64/, but not Win32/. The commit adds support for both Win32/ and x64/.