I ran the `bin/console spdx --fix` with different strategies for
different files. For most of the core classes, since they've been
drastically rebuilt, I've run it with the `git-blame` strategy, for for
the `src/Validators`, in which the API changed completely but the logic
remains the same, I use the `git-log` strategy.
Improves SPDX header linting to ensure consistent license metadata across
the codebase.
Key changes:
- Enforce deterministic tag ordering (License-Identifier, FileCopyrightText,
FileContributor) to ensure consistency, prevent merge conflicts, and
simplify code reviews
- Add contributor alias mapping to consolidate contributors with multiple
emails or name variations (e.g., "nickl-" → "Nick Lombard")
- Add --contributions-strategy option with "blame" (current code authors)
and "log" (all historical contributors) to support different attribution
philosophies
- Add optional path argument to lint specific files or directories
- Add --fix option to automatically correct header issues
Assisted-by: Claude Code (claude-opus-4-5-20251101)
Introduces a Markdown linter for checking the Changelog format.
"See Also" was transformed into a section to make it easier to
handle it with the `Content` class. The "Related" linter was
simplified to reflect that change too.
An additional "alignment" parameter was added to markdown table
generators, allowing the padding and headers to be explicitly
marked with a specific left (-1), middle (0) or right(1)
alignment.
Existing files were fixed using the `fix` option after the
changes.
This commit introduces REUSE compliance by annotating all files
with SPDX information and placing the reused licences in the
LICENSES folder.
We additionally removed the docheader tool which is made obsolete
by this change.
The main LICENSE and copyright text of the project is now not under
my personal name anymore, and it belongs to "The Respect Project
Contributors" instead.
This change restores author names to several files, giving the
appropriate attribution for contributions.
The name "rule" has always been confusing to me. It can be when you talk
about "validation rules", but it’s a very verbose way to describe it,
and it doesn’t work all the time.
This commit will rename the interface `Rule` to `Validator`, but it will
also rename the concept of "rule" to "validator".
Since we have the ability to use `not` as a prefix, having rules that
validate negative behaviour makes them a bit inflexible, verbose, and
harder to understand.
This commit will refactor the `NotEmpty`, and rename it to `Falsy`. It
will no longer trim strings, because Blank does a much better job at it;
it only simulates the behaviour of PHP’s native `empty()` function.
Because `Falsy`, `Blank`, and `Undef` have similar behaviour, I created
a page to demonstrate the difference and show when the user should use
one or the other.
Assisted-by: Cursor (claude-4.5-opus-high)