is a nag that only exists in the Proparse Lite release. The design idea is, that the engine won't overheat during the time you need to parse the code that you are currently working on, i.e. your own code, but is likely to overheat when you need a lot of time to parse a large amounbt of code, i.e. a multi-programmer project for which the Proparse (not Lite) license is supposed be purchased. More details: ask John Green at Joanju.
Can Prolint run as a batch process.... not sure what the definition of "batch" is but we run Prolint each night, scheduled, unattended. It writes its results to a database and we look into that database some time the next day. If batch means the -b parameter then I don't know, never tried. If it means character mode, then yes that should work just fine.
Engine overheating
is a nag that only exists in the Proparse Lite release. The design idea is, that the engine won't overheat during the time you need to parse the code that you are currently working on, i.e. your own code, but is likely to overheat when you need a lot of time to parse a large amounbt of code, i.e. a multi-programmer project for which the Proparse (not Lite) license is supposed be purchased. More details: ask John Green at Joanju.
Can Prolint run as a batch process.... not sure what the definition of "batch" is but we run Prolint each night, scheduled, unattended. It writes its results to a database and we look into that database some time the next day. If batch means the -b parameter then I don't know, never tried. If it means character mode, then yes that should work just fine.