From dfe61cf96a544345fad6357f68cf7149ded9e596 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mathew Polzin Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2024 23:35:17 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] doc: update idris2 documentation on buildIdris --- doc/languages-frameworks/idris2.section.md | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/languages-frameworks/idris2.section.md b/doc/languages-frameworks/idris2.section.md index 47bcbf46aee9..f1f0277cc609 100644 --- a/doc/languages-frameworks/idris2.section.md +++ b/doc/languages-frameworks/idris2.section.md @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ In addition to exposing the Idris2 compiler itself, Nixpkgs exposes an `idris2Packages.buildIdris` helper to make it a bit more ergonomic to build Idris2 executables or libraries. -The `buildIdris` function takes a package set that defines at a minimum the `src` and `projectName` of the package to be built and any `idrisLibraries` required to build it. The `src` is the same source you're familiar with but the `projectName` must be the name of the `ipkg` file for the project (omitting the `.ipkg` extension). The `idrisLibraries` is a list of other library derivations created with `buildIdris`. You can optionally specify other derivation properties as needed but sensible defaults for `configurePhase`, `buildPhase`, and `installPhase` are provided. +The `buildIdris` function takes an attribute set that defines at a minimum the `src` and `ipkgName` of the package to be built and any `idrisLibraries` required to build it. The `src` is the same source you're familiar with and the `ipkgName` must be the name of the `ipkg` file for the project (omitting the `.ipkg` extension). The `idrisLibraries` is a list of other library derivations created with `buildIdris`. You can optionally specify other derivation properties as needed but sensible defaults for `configurePhase`, `buildPhase`, and `installPhase` are provided. Importantly, `buildIdris` does not create a single derivation but rather an attribute set with two properties: `executable` and `library`. The `executable` property is a derivation and the `library` property is a function that will return a derivation for the library with or without source code included. Source code need not be included unless you are aiming to use IDE or LSP features that are able to jump to definitions within an editor. @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ A simple example of a fully packaged library would be the [`LSP-lib`](https://gi ```nix { fetchFromGitHub, idris2Packages }: let lspLibPkg = idris2Packages.buildIdris { - projectName = "lsp-lib"; + ipkgName = "lsp-lib"; src = fetchFromGitHub { owner = "idris-community"; repo = "LSP-lib"; @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ A slightly more involved example of a fully packaged executable would be the [`i # Assuming the previous example lives in `lsp-lib.nix`: let lspLib = callPackage ./lsp-lib.nix { }; lspPkg = idris2Packages.buildIdris { - projectName = "idris2-lsp"; + ipkgName = "idris2-lsp"; src = fetchFromGitHub { owner = "idris-community"; repo = "idris2-lsp";