As a first option, `publish_code_suggestions` will try to post all review comments in a single GitHub review. This is preferred because it will group all comments together in the GitHub UI under the same review, and will trigger just one notification for any viewers of the PR.
If just one of the comments is malformed, the entire API request will fail and none of the comments will be posted to the PR. In the current implementation, the fallback mechanism is to just post each comment separately with `try/except` and skip the invalid comments. This works, but potentially creates a lot of noise in the PR as each comment is posted as in a separate review, creating multiple notifications.
This suggested fallback is based on a similar idea, but without creating multiple review notifications. The it works is by iterating over the potential comments, and starting a PENDING review for the current comment. The review is not submitted and does not trigger a notification, but it is verified against the GitHub API, and so we can verify if the comment is valid. After checking all comments we then submit a single review with all the verified comments which is guaranteed to succeed.
The end result is having the exact same comments posted to the PR as with the current fallback method, but the downside is having twice as many API calls (for each comment we have 1 extra API call to delete the pending review).
- Update `create_inline_comment` method in various git providers to include `absolute_position` parameter
- Remove `create_inline_comment` method from providers that do not support inline comments
- Enhance `find_line_number_of_relevant_line_in_file` function to handle absolute position
- Modify `pr_code_suggestions.py` to handle improved code inclusion in suggestions
- Add `include_improved_code` configuration option in `configuration.toml` and update documentation accordingly
When getting the last commit in `/review -i` consider also the last __incremental__ review, not just the last __full__ review
Full disclosure I'm not really sure the `/review -i` feature work very well - I might be wrong but it seemed like the actual review in fact addressed all the changes in the PR, and not just the ones from the last review (even though it adds a link to the commit of the last review).
I think the commit list gathered in `/review -i` doesn't propagate the actual list the reviewer uses. Again, I might be wrong, just took a brief glance at it.