In vscode I experience sometimes I can click on build errors in the integrated terminal and sometimes it is not possible to do so. This has annoyed me for quite some time because I was not able to find a pattern, until today when I was editing tasks.json.
It looks to be related to defining a problemMatcher
in .vscode/tasks.json
. Removing the problemMatcher
section from the file and build errors in terminal were no longer clickable but putting it back did not re-enable them.
My vscode-project is located in a subfolder of the build tree and its build root for the entire project is two levels up ${workspaceFolder}/../..
which I believe maybe could confuse some build tools.
tasks.json
{
// See https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=733558
// for the documentation about the tasks.json format
"version": "2.0.0",
"problemMatcher": {
"fileLocation": "relative",
"severity": "error",
"pattern":{
"regexp": "^system/mytool/(.*):(\\d+):(\\d+):\\s+(warning|error):(.*)$",
"file": 1,
"location": 2,
"column": 3,
"severity": 4,
"message": 5
},
},
"tasks": [
{
"type": "shell",
"label": "android deploy",
"command": "cd ${workspaceFolder}/../..; source build/envsetup.sh ; lunch hikey960-userdebug ; m mytool",
"args": [
],
"options": {
},
"group": "build"
},
]
}
I have seen examples putting "problemMatcher" = "$gcc"
inside the task, should I define my problem matcher globally somewhere else and refer to it my name instead?
How to use it to parse the output when I build by typing make-commands in the integrated terminal?