previously we just threw them out and wasn't sure whether it was the
right answer. this violates the principle of least surprise - even
though it hard to see the value of attaching multiple empty $cuff notes
to an arm, we shouldn't stop the programmer from doing it without any
indication or explanation as to why. its the behaviour you'd expect
given how doccords is structured.
it is desirable for both apex:docs and apse:docs to parse into an
intermediate representation that never ends up in an AST so that it is
clear that these parsed representations may be altered in the future
without worrying about old types nesting with new types. this was
already the case for $whit, but apse:docs parsed directly as a $help,
which is used in ASTs. so apse:docs now parses as a $whiz, which is
simply a cord. in the future, if postfix comments are used for something
like invariants, or allow $links, we may want to change this.
this also changes $whit to remove .use, which was unused. similarly,
+glom is removed since its not used anywhere.
this might actually be undesirable, don't want to leave this as a trap
for somebody in the future thinking we knew it was definitely the right
answer. having batch comments follow the chapter declaration does make a
certain amount of sense, stylistically
For blocked kelvin updates, we clarified the copy, including deleting a
broken link and reference to a system preferences button that doesn't
exist, and standardized on "suspend" instead of "archive" (as in the
rest of the UI).
Also don't delete OTA source when dismissing the notification.
future-proofing %gist specs by putting a %help tag on the $help. this
looks pointless at first glance, but it allows the opportunity for %gist
specs to have a $% in the future in a way such that the old type nests
with the new one, eliding the need for a typo->type migration
some small issues and debugging tools. also puts some more doccords on dprint types.
also adds use the language server pretty printer to print the types of arms