neovim/runtime/autoload/man.vim

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" Maintainer: Anmol Sethi <hi@nhooyr.io>
if exists('s:loaded_man')
finish
endif
let s:loaded_man = 1
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let s:find_arg = '-w'
let s:localfile_arg = v:true " Always use -l if possible. #6683
let s:section_arg = '-S'
function! man#init() abort
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try
" Check for -l support.
call s:get_page(s:get_path('', 'man'))
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catch /command error .*/
let s:localfile_arg = v:false
endtry
endfunction
function! man#open_page(count, count1, mods, ...) abort
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
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if a:0 > 2
call s:error('too many arguments')
return
elseif a:0 == 0
let ref = &filetype ==# 'man' ? expand('<cWORD>') : expand('<cword>')
if empty(ref)
call s:error('no identifier under cursor')
return
endif
elseif a:0 ==# 1
let ref = a:1
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
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else
" Combine the name and sect into a manpage reference so that all
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
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" verification/extraction can be kept in a single function.
" If a:2 is a reference as well, that is fine because it is the only
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
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" reference that will match.
let ref = a:2.'('.a:1.')'
endif
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
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try
let [sect, name] = s:extract_sect_and_name_ref(ref)
if a:count ==# a:count1
" v:count defaults to 0 which is a valid section, and v:count1 defaults to
" 1, also a valid section. If they are equal, count explicitly set.
let sect = string(a:count)
endif
let path = s:verify_exists(sect, name)
let [sect, name] = s:extract_sect_and_name_path(path)
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
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catch
call s:error(v:exception)
return
endtry
let [l:buf, l:save_tfu] = [bufnr(), &tagfunc]
try
set tagfunc=man#goto_tag
let l:target = l:name . '(' . l:sect . ')'
if a:mods !~# 'tab' && s:find_man()
execute 'silent keepalt tag' l:target
else
execute 'silent keepalt' a:mods 'stag' l:target
endif
finally
call setbufvar(l:buf, '&tagfunc', l:save_tfu)
endtry
let b:man_sect = sect
endfunction
function! man#read_page(ref) abort
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
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try
let [sect, name] = s:extract_sect_and_name_ref(a:ref)
let path = s:verify_exists(sect, name)
let [sect, name] = s:extract_sect_and_name_path(path)
let page = s:get_page(path)
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
catch
call s:error(v:exception)
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
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return
endtry
let b:man_sect = sect
call s:put_page(page)
endfunction
" Handler for s:system() function.
function! s:system_handler(jobid, data, event) dict abort
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if a:event is# 'stdout' || a:event is# 'stderr'
let self[a:event] .= join(a:data, "\n")
else
let self.exit_code = a:data
endif
endfunction
" Run a system command and timeout after 30 seconds.
function! s:system(cmd, ...) abort
let opts = {
\ 'stdout': '',
\ 'stderr': '',
\ 'exit_code': 0,
\ 'on_stdout': function('s:system_handler'),
\ 'on_stderr': function('s:system_handler'),
\ 'on_exit': function('s:system_handler'),
\ }
let jobid = jobstart(a:cmd, opts)
if jobid < 1
throw printf('command error %d: %s', jobid, join(a:cmd))
endif
let res = jobwait([jobid], 30000)
if res[0] == -1
try
call jobstop(jobid)
throw printf('command timed out: %s', join(a:cmd))
2017-05-18 12:04:17 -07:00
catch /^Vim(call):E900:/
endtry
elseif res[0] == -2
throw printf('command interrupted: %s', join(a:cmd))
endif
if opts.exit_code != 0
throw printf("command error (%d) %s: %s", jobid, join(a:cmd), substitute(opts.stderr, '\_s\+$', '', &gdefault ? '' : 'g'))
endif
return opts.stdout
endfunction
function! s:get_page(path) abort
" Disable hard-wrap by using a big $MANWIDTH (max 1000 on some systems #9065).
" Soft-wrap: ftplugin/man.vim sets wrap/breakindent/….
" Hard-wrap: driven by `man`.
let manwidth = !get(g:, 'man_hardwrap', 1) ? 999 : (empty($MANWIDTH) ? winwidth(0) : $MANWIDTH)
" Force MANPAGER=cat to ensure Vim is not recursively invoked (by man-db).
" http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.editors.vim.devel/29085
2017-11-10 21:27:00 -07:00
" Set MAN_KEEP_FORMATTING so Debian man doesn't discard backspaces.
let cmd = ['env', 'MANPAGER=cat', 'MANWIDTH='.manwidth, 'MAN_KEEP_FORMATTING=1', 'man']
2017-05-18 12:04:17 -07:00
return s:system(cmd + (s:localfile_arg ? ['-l', a:path] : [a:path]))
endfunction
function! s:put_page(page) abort
setlocal modifiable
setlocal noreadonly
setlocal noswapfile
" git-ls-files(1) is all one keyword/tag-target
setlocal iskeyword+=(,)
silent keepjumps %delete _
silent put =a:page
while getline(1) =~# '^\s*$'
silent keepjumps 1delete _
endwhile
" XXX: nroff justifies text by filling it with whitespace. That interacts
" badly with our use of $MANWIDTH=999. Hack around this by using a fixed
" size for those whitespace regions.
silent! keeppatterns keepjumps %s/\s\{199,}/\=repeat(' ', 10)/g
1
2017-12-24 10:16:58 -07:00
lua require("man").highlight_man_page()
setlocal filetype=man
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
endfunction
function! man#show_toc() abort
let bufname = bufname('%')
let info = getloclist(0, {'winid': 1})
if !empty(info) && getwinvar(info.winid, 'qf_toc') ==# bufname
lopen
return
endif
let toc = []
let lnum = 2
let last_line = line('$') - 1
while lnum && lnum < last_line
let text = getline(lnum)
if text =~# '^\%( \{3\}\)\=\S.*$'
call add(toc, {'bufnr': bufnr('%'), 'lnum': lnum, 'text': text})
endif
let lnum = nextnonblank(lnum + 1)
endwhile
call setloclist(0, toc, ' ')
call setloclist(0, [], 'a', {'title': 'Man TOC'})
lopen
let w:qf_toc = bufname
endfunction
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
" attempt to extract the name and sect out of 'name(sect)'
" otherwise just return the largest string of valid characters in ref
function! s:extract_sect_and_name_ref(ref) abort
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
if a:ref[0] ==# '-' " try ':Man -pandoc' with this disabled.
throw 'manpage name cannot start with ''-'''
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
endif
let ref = matchstr(a:ref, '[^()]\+([^()]\+)')
if empty(ref)
let name = matchstr(a:ref, '[^()]\+')
if empty(name)
throw 'manpage reference cannot contain only parentheses'
endif
return ['', name]
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
endif
let left = split(ref, '(')
" see ':Man 3X curses' on why tolower.
" TODO(nhooyr) Not sure if this is portable across OSs
" but I have not seen a single uppercase section.
return [tolower(split(left[1], ')')[0]), left[0]]
endfunction
function! s:get_path(sect, name) abort
" Some man implementations (OpenBSD) return all available paths from the
" search command, so we get() the first one. #8341
if empty(a:sect)
return substitute(get(split(s:system(['man', s:find_arg, a:name])), 0, ''), '\n\+$', '', '')
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
endif
" '-s' flag handles:
" - tokens like 'printf(echo)'
" - sections starting with '-'
" - 3pcap section (found on macOS)
" - commas between sections (for section priority)
return substitute(get(split(s:system(['man', s:find_arg, s:section_arg, a:sect, a:name])), 0, ''), '\n\+$', '', '')
endfunction
" s:verify_exists attempts to find the path to a manpage
" based on the passed section and name.
"
" 1. If the passed section is empty, b:man_default_sects is used.
" 2. If manpage could not be found with the given sect and name,
" then another attempt is made with b:man_default_sects.
" 3. If it still could not be found, then we try again without a section.
" 4. If still not found but $MANSECT is set, then we try again with $MANSECT
" unset.
"
" This function is careful to avoid duplicating a search if a previous
" step has already done it. i.e if we use b:man_default_sects in step 1,
" then we don't do it again in step 2.
function! s:verify_exists(sect, name) abort
let sect = a:sect
if empty(sect)
let sect = get(b:, 'man_default_sects', '')
endif
try
return s:get_path(sect, a:name)
catch /^command error (/
endtry
if !empty(get(b:, 'man_default_sects', '')) && sect !=# b:man_default_sects
try
return s:get_path(b:man_default_sects, a:name)
catch /^command error (/
endtry
endif
if !empty(sect)
try
return s:get_path('', a:name)
catch /^command error (/
endtry
endif
if !empty($MANSECT)
try
let MANSECT = $MANSECT
unset $MANSECT
return s:get_path('', a:name)
catch /^command error (/
finally
let $MANSECT = MANSECT
endtry
endif
throw 'no manual entry for ' . a:name
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
endfunction
" Extracts the name/section from the 'path/name.sect', because sometimes the actual section is
" more specific than what we provided to `man` (try `:Man 3 App::CLI`).
" Also on linux, name seems to be case-insensitive. So for `:Man PRIntf`, we
" still want the name of the buffer to be 'printf'.
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
function! s:extract_sect_and_name_path(path) abort
let tail = fnamemodify(a:path, ':t')
if a:path =~# '\.\%([glx]z\|bz2\|lzma\|Z\)$' " valid extensions
let tail = fnamemodify(tail, ':r')
endif
let sect = matchstr(tail, '\.\zs[^.]\+$')
let name = matchstr(tail, '^.\+\ze\.')
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
return [sect, name]
endfunction
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
function! s:find_man() abort
let l:win = 1
while l:win <= winnr('$')
let l:buf = winbufnr(l:win)
if getbufvar(l:buf, '&filetype', '') ==# 'man'
execute l:win.'wincmd w'
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
return 1
endif
let l:win += 1
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
endwhile
return 0
endfunction
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
function! s:error(msg) abort
redraw
echohl ErrorMsg
echon 'man.vim: ' a:msg
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
echohl None
endfunction
" see s:extract_sect_and_name_ref on why tolower(sect)
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
function! man#complete(arg_lead, cmd_line, cursor_pos) abort
let args = split(a:cmd_line)
let cmd_offset = index(args, 'Man')
if cmd_offset > 0
" Prune all arguments up to :Man itself. Otherwise modifier commands like
" :tab, :vertical, etc. would lead to a wrong length.
let args = args[cmd_offset:]
endif
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
let l = len(args)
if l > 3
return
elseif l ==# 1
let name = ''
let sect = ''
elseif a:arg_lead =~# '^[^()]\+([^()]*$'
" cursor (|) is at ':Man printf(|' or ':Man 1 printf(|'
" The later is is allowed because of ':Man pri<TAB>'.
" It will offer 'priclass.d(1m)' even though section is specified as 1.
let tmp = split(a:arg_lead, '(')
let name = tmp[0]
let sect = tolower(get(tmp, 1, ''))
return s:complete(sect, '', name)
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
elseif args[1] !~# '^[^()]\+$'
" cursor (|) is at ':Man 3() |' or ':Man (3|' or ':Man 3() pri|'
" or ':Man 3() pri |'
return
elseif l ==# 2
if empty(a:arg_lead)
" cursor (|) is at ':Man 1 |'
let name = ''
let sect = tolower(args[1])
else
" cursor (|) is at ':Man pri|'
if a:arg_lead =~# '\/'
" if the name is a path, complete files
" TODO(nhooyr) why does this complete the last one automatically
return glob(a:arg_lead.'*', 0, 1)
endif
let name = a:arg_lead
let sect = ''
endif
elseif a:arg_lead !~# '^[^()]\+$'
" cursor (|) is at ':Man 3 printf |' or ':Man 3 (pr)i|'
return
else
" cursor (|) is at ':Man 3 pri|'
let name = a:arg_lead
let sect = tolower(args[1])
endif
return s:complete(sect, sect, name)
endfunction
function! s:get_paths(sect, name, do_fallback) abort
" callers must try-catch this, as some `man` implementations don't support `s:find_arg`
try
2017-05-18 12:04:17 -07:00
let mandirs = join(split(s:system(['man', s:find_arg]), ':\|\n'), ',')
let paths = globpath(mandirs, 'man?/'.a:name.'*.'.a:sect.'*', 0, 1)
try
" Prioritize the result from verify_exists as it obeys b:man_default_sects.
let first = s:verify_exists(a:sect, a:name)
let paths = filter(paths, 'v:val !=# first')
let paths = [first] + paths
catch
endtry
return paths
catch
if !a:do_fallback
throw v:exception
endif
" Fallback to a single path, with the page we're trying to find.
try
return [s:verify_exists(a:sect, a:name)]
catch
return []
endtry
endtry
2019-10-24 12:25:58 -07:00
endfunction
function! s:complete(sect, psect, name) abort
let pages = s:get_paths(a:sect, a:name, v:false)
" We remove duplicates in case the same manpage in different languages was found.
return uniq(sort(map(pages, 's:format_candidate(v:val, a:psect)'), 'i'))
endfunction
function! s:format_candidate(path, psect) abort
if a:path =~# '\.\%(pdf\|in\)$' " invalid extensions
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
return
endif
let [sect, name] = s:extract_sect_and_name_path(a:path)
if sect ==# a:psect
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
return name
elseif sect =~# a:psect.'.\+$'
man.vim: rewrite - Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example, `:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as 'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section. - Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the pager to cat - Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler (see comment in s:man-args). - A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections because of the use of '-s'. - The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler. - By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that is actually a real manpage section. - Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything. - Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes. - Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments - In general, the code flow is much more obvious. - man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit responsibilties - ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages - Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't immediately obvious. - If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at previously, it is not reloaded. - Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the latter doesn't work with other languages. - Open paths to manpages - It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore. - <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping - Switched to single quotes wherever possible. - Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update user-manual) - Always call tolower on section name. See comment in s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage - Formatting/consistency cleanup - Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER - It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and stuff automatically. - Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability - Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an error occured, stdout will be empty. - Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with how man takes the arguments as sect and then page. - Pretty prints errors on a single line. - If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in s:get_page - If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it locally for the command. - Maintainer notes on all files.
2016-03-14 02:05:28 -07:00
" We include the section if the user provided section is a prefix
" of the actual section.
return name.'('.sect.')'
endif
endfunction
function! man#init_pager() abort
" https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/6828
let og_modifiable = &modifiable
setlocal modifiable
if getline(1) =~# '^\s*$'
silent keepjumps 1delete _
else
keepjumps 1
endif
2017-12-24 10:16:58 -07:00
lua require("man").highlight_man_page()
" Guess the ref from the heading (which is usually uppercase, so we cannot
" know the correct casing, cf. `man glDrawArraysInstanced`).
let ref = substitute(matchstr(getline(1), '^[^)]\+)'), ' ', '_', 'g')
try
let b:man_sect = s:extract_sect_and_name_ref(ref)[0]
catch
let b:man_sect = ''
endtry
if -1 == match(bufname('%'), 'man:\/\/') " Avoid duplicate buffers, E95.
execute 'silent file man://'.tolower(fnameescape(ref))
endif
let &l:modifiable = og_modifiable
endfunction
2017-05-18 12:04:17 -07:00
function! man#goto_tag(pattern, flags, info) abort
let [l:sect, l:name] = s:extract_sect_and_name_ref(a:pattern)
let l:paths = s:get_paths(l:sect, l:name, v:true)
let l:structured = []
for l:path in l:paths
let l:n = s:extract_sect_and_name_path(l:path)[1]
let l:structured += [{ 'name': l:n, 'path': l:path }]
endfor
if &cscopetag
" return only a single entry so we work well with :cstag (#11675)
let l:structured = l:structured[:0]
endif
return map(l:structured, {
\ _, entry -> {
\ 'name': entry.name,
\ 'filename': 'man://' . entry.path,
\ 'cmd': '1'
\ }
\ })
endfunction
call man#init()