Problem: E95 is possible if a buffer called "[Command Line]" already
exists when opening the cmdwin. This can also happen if the
cmdwin's buffer could not be deleted when closing.
Solution: Un-name the cmdwin buffer, and give it a special name instead,
similar to what's done for quickfix buffers and for unnamed
prompt and scratch buffers. As a result, BufFilePre/Post are
no longer fired when opening the cmdwin. Add a "command" key
to the dictionary returned by getbufinfo() to differentiate
the cmdwin buffer instead. (Sean Dewar)
Cherry-pick test_normal changes from v9.0.0954.
1fb4103206
Problem: Autocmds triggered from opening the cmdwin (in win_split and
do_ecmd) can cause issues such as E199, as the current checks
are insufficient.
Solution: Commands executed from the cmdwin apply to the old curwin/buf,
so they should be kept in a "suspended" state; abort if
they've changed. Also abort if cmdwin/buf was tampered with,
and check that curwin is correct. Try to clean up the cmdwin
buffer (only if hidden and non-current to simplify things; the
same approach is used when closing cmdwin normally), and add a
beep. (Sean Dewar)
Rename the old Test_cmdwin_interrupted() like in the patch (can be moved to
test_cmdwin.vim when v9.0.0027 is ported).
Move the error message to `e_active_window_or_buffer_changed_or_deleted`.
43b395ec2e
Problem: Things that temporarily change/restore curwin/buf (e.g:
win_execute, some autocmds) may break assumptions that
curwin/buf is the cmdwin when "cmdwin_type != 0", causing
issues.
Solution: Expose the cmdwin's real win/buf and check that instead. Also
try to ensure these variables are NULL if "cmdwin_type == 0",
allowing them to be used directly in most cases without
checking cmdwin_type. (Sean Dewar)
Reset and save `cmdwin_old_curwin` in a similar fashion.
Apply suitable changes for API functions and add Lua tests.
988f74311c
strrchr returns null pointer if '.' is not present in file name. Notice
that filenames are filtered to match "doc/*.??[tx]" pattern earlier so
we shouldn't expect null pointer here. However later in code strrchr
return value is checked so it seems better and more consistent to do the
same here too.
runtime(ant): Update syntax file (vim/vim#13926)
Remove invalid display option from syn-keyword commands.
Take over maintenance of this file.
0cc6108fea
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
The data.sh.url field is valid only when item.kind is
kDecorKindHighlight. The `if` block just before this line already does
that check (as well as checking `active`) so move the access of
`data.sh.url` into that block.
Problem: Marks moved by undo may be lost to "b_signcols.count".
Solution: Count signs for each undo object separately instead of
once for the entire undo.
runtime(mail): fixvim/vim#13913 (vim/vim#13917)
switch to the DFA engine for the emoji collaction range
046a0f75d0
Co-authored-by: gi1242 <gi1242+github@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: GI <gi1242+vim@gmail.com>
Problem: Cannot map Super Keys in GTK UI
(Casey Tucker)
Solution: Enable Super Key mappings in GTK using <D-Key>
(Casey Tucker)
As a developer who works in both Mac and Linux using the same keyboard,
it can be frustrating having to remember different key combinations or
having to rely on system utilities to remap keys.
This change allows `<D-z>` `<D-x>` `<D-c>` `<D-v>` etc. to be recognized
by the `map` commands, along with the `<D-S-...>` shifted variants.
```vimrc
if has('gui_gtk')
nnoremap <D-z> u
nnoremap <D-S-Z> <C-r>
vnoremap <D-x> "+d
vnoremap <D-c> "+y
cnoremap <D-v> <C-R>+
inoremap <D-v> <C-o>"+gP
nnoremap <D-v> "+P
vnoremap <D-v> "-d"+P
nnoremap <D-s> :w<CR>
inoremap <D-s> <C-o>:w<CR>
nnoremap <D-w> :q<CR>
nnoremap <D-q> :qa<CR>
nnoremap <D-t> :tabe<CR>
nnoremap <D-S-T> :vs#<CR><C-w>T
nnoremap <D-a> ggVG
vnoremap <D-a> <ESC>ggVG
inoremap <D-a> <ESC>ggVG
nnoremap <D-f> /
nnoremap <D-g> n
nnoremap <D-S-G> N
vnoremap <D-x> "+x
endif
```
closes: vim/vim#1269892e90a1e10
Co-authored-by: Casey Tucker <dctucker@hotmail.com>
Problem: Incorrect number of trailing spaces inserted for multibyte
characters when pasting a blockwise register in blockwise visual
mode (VanaIgr)
Solution: Skip over trailing UTF-8 bytes when computing the number of trailing
spaces (VanaIgr)
When pasting in blockwise visual mode, and the register type is <CTRL-V>, Vim
aligns the text after the replaced area by inserting spaces after pasted
lines that are shorter than the longest line. When a shorter line contains
multibyte characters, each trailing UTF-8 byte's width is counted in addition
to the width of the character itself. Each trailing byte counts as being 4
cells wide (since it would be displayed as <xx>).
closes: vim/vim#139096638ec8afa
Co-authored-by: VanaIgr <vanaigranov@gmail.com>
Problem: 'linebreak' may still apply to leading whitespace
(VanaIgr)
Solution: Compare pointers instead of virtual columns.
(zeertzjq)
related: #27180closes: vim/vim#13915703f9bc943
Co-authored-by: VanaIgr <vanaigranov@gmail.com>
Problem: formatting long lines is slow
(kawaii-Code)
Solution: optimize gq (internal_format) for long
lines (kawaii-Code)
Implemented two workarounds that significantly reduce
the amount of pointless calls. Ideally the algorithm
would be rewritten not to be n^2, but it's too complicated
with too many corner cases.
closes: vim/vim#1391478019df645
Co-authored-by: kawaii-Code <nia.personal.0@gmail.com>
Problem: Currently default color scheme defines most of treesitter
highlight groups. This might be an issue for users defining their own
color scheme as it breaks the "fallback property" for some of groups.
Solution: Define less default treesitter groups; just enough for default
color scheme to be useful. That is:
- All first level groups (`@character`, `@string`, etc.).
- All `@xxx.builtin` groups as a most common subgroup.
- Some special cases (links/URLs, `@diff.xxx`, etc.).
Problem: Some core syntax highlight groups are cleared with intention to
always be shown without additional highlighting. This doesn't always
work as intended, especially with fallback mechanism of @-groups.
Example: `Statement`/`Keyword` group shown in help code blocks
(`@markup.raw`) is shown as bold (from `Statement`) cyan (from
`@markup.raw`) instead of bold grey.
Solution: Explicitly use normal grey foreground in syntax groups where
it was previously implicitly assumed.
Extmarks can contain URLs which can then be drawn in any supporting UI.
In the TUI, for example, URLs are "drawn" by emitting the OSC 8 control
sequence to the TTY. On terminals which support the OSC 8 sequence this
will create clickable hyperlinks.
URLs are treated as inline highlights in the decoration subsystem, so
are included in the `DecorSignHighlight` structure. However, unlike
other inline highlights they use allocated memory which must be freed,
so they set the `ext` flag in `DecorInline` so that their lifetimes are
managed along with other allocated memory like virtual text.
The decoration subsystem then adds the URLs as a new highlight
attribute. The highlight subsystem maintains a set of unique URLs to
avoid duplicating allocations for the same string. To attach a URL to an
existing highlight attribute we call `hl_add_url` which finds the URL in
the set (allocating and adding it if it does not exist) and sets the
`url` highlight attribute to the index of the URL in the set (using an
index helps keep the size of the `HlAttrs` struct small).
This has the potential to lead to an increase in highlight attributes
if a URL is used over a range that contains many different highlight
attributes, because now each existing attribute must be combined with
the URL. In practice, however, URLs typically span a range containing a
single highlight (e.g. link text in Markdown), so this is likely just a
pathological edge case.
When a new highlight attribute is defined with a URL it is copied to all
attached UIs with the `hl_attr_define` UI event. The TUI manages its own
set of URLs (just like the highlight subsystem) to minimize allocations.
The TUI keeps track of which URL is "active" for the cell it is
printing. If no URL is active and a cell containing a URL is printed,
the opening OSC 8 sequence is emitted and that URL becomes the actively
tracked URL. If the cursor is moved while in the middle of a URL span,
we emit the terminating OSC sequence to prevent the hyperlink from
spanning multiple lines.
This does not support nested hyperlinks, but that is a rare (and,
frankly, bizarre) use case. If a valid use case for nested hyperlinks
ever presents itself we can address that issue then.
runtime(netrw): Don't change global options (vim/vim#13910)
Originally reported at: https://github.com/vim-jp/issues/issues/1428
'isk' was unintentionally changed by netrw, regression
introduced in Commit: 71badf9547e8f89571b9a095183671cbb333d528
a262d3f41b
Co-authored-by: K.Takata <kentkt@csc.jp>
- remove "ran-" prefix from touch files as it's redundant since the
they're already in the directory named `touches`.
- Include `contrib` when formatting with `make formatlua`.
- Use TARGET_FILE generator expression instead of assuming the
executable location.
- reuse logic that determines whether to use lua or luajit.
- add translations to the `nvim` target.
Makefile improvements:
- rename variable `CMAKE_PRG` to `CMAKE` to make it more consistent with
the builtin `MAKE` variable.
- stop propagating flags to generator. Users should use cmake for
non-standard use cases.
- remove `+` prefix from targets. If the user for whatever reason wants
to dry-run a target then they should be able to.
runtime(vim): Update syntax file (vim/vim#13906)
Highlight :2match and :3match and add these to :help ex-cmd-index.
9c5b90db03
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Docs for treesitter would benefit from including more real-world and
practical examples of queries and usages, rather than hypothetical ones
(e.g. names such as "foo", "bar"). Improved examples should be more
user-friendly and clear to understand.
In addition, align the capture names in some examples with the actual
ones being used in the built-in query files or in the nvim-treesitter
plugin, e.g.:
- `@parameter` -> `@variable.parameter`
- `@comment.doc.java` -> `@comment.documentation.java`
- etc.