runtime(racket): undo some indent options only when vim9script is available (vim/vim#13935)
This copies commit 64edf95 (indent: only reset some options when has
vim9, 2024-01-30) from https://github.com/benknoble/vim-racket.
26b0176a98
Co-authored-by: D. Ben Knoble <ben.knoble+github@gmail.com>
Problem: UX of visual highlighting can be improved
Solution: Improve readibility of visual highlighting,
by setting better foreground and background
colors
The default visual highlighting currently is nice in that it overlays
the actual syntax highlighting by using a separate distinct background
color.
However, this can cause hard to read text, because the contrast
between the actual syntax element and the background color is way too
low. That is an issue, that has been bothering colorschemes authors for
quite some time so much, that they are defining the Visual highlighting
group to use a separate foreground and background color, so that the
syntax highlighting vanishes, but the text remains readable (ref:
vim/colorschemesvim/vim#250)
So this is an attempt to perform the same fix for the default Visual
highlighting and just use a default foreground and background color
instead of using reverse.
I also removed the hard-coded changes to the Visual highlighting in
init_highlight. It's not quite clear to me, why those were there and not
added directly to the highlighting_init_<dark|light> struct.
closes: vim/vim#13663
related: vim/colorschemes#250e6d8b4662d
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
runtime(vim): Update syntax and ftplugin files (vim/vim#13924)
Improve matching of line-continuations and interspersed comments.
These are now also matched in multiline syntax command patterns,
dictionary literals, and parenthesised expressions and argument lists.
21ce159e05
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
The "priority" field of extmarks can be used to set priorities of
extmarks which dictates which highlight group a range will actually have
when there are multiple extmarks applied. However, when multiple
extmarks have the same priority, the only way to enforce an actual
priority is through the order in which the extmarks are set.
It is not always possible or desirable to set extmarks in a specific
order, however, so we add a new "subpriority" field that explicitly
enforces the ordering of extmarks that have the same priority.
For now this will be used only to enforce priority of treesitter
highlights. A single node in a treesitter tree may match multiple
captures, in which case that node will have multiple extmarks set. The
order in which captures are returned from the treesitter API is not
_necessarily_ in the same order they are defined in a query file, so we
use the new subpriority field to force that ordering.
For now subpriorites are not documented and are not meant to be used by
external code, and it only applies to ephemeral extmarks. We indicate
the "private" nature of subpriorities by prefixing the field name with
an "_".
Problem:
If `neovim` module is not installed, python and ruby healthchecks fail:
- ERROR Failed to run healthcheck for "provider.python" plugin. Exception:
.../runtime/lua/provider/python/health.lua:348: attempt to concatenate local 'pyname' (a nil value)
- ERROR Failed to run healthcheck for "provider.ruby" plugin. Exception:
.../runtime/lua/provider/ruby/health.lua:25: attempt to index local 'host' (a nil value)
Solution:
Check for non-nil.
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
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>
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: 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.).
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.
runtime(doc): change "VIsual mode" to "Visual mode" in :h SafeState (vim/vim#13901)
"Visual mode" is used everywhere else in the help when not referring to
something in the source code.
e13b665a6e
Problem: vim.diagnostic.{underline,float,virtual_text...}.severity
will have a type warning on list-like or table (min-max) inputs,
e.g. `vim.diagnostic.config { float = { severity = { min = INFO } } }`.
Solution: Correct the typing as documented in |diagnostic-severity|.
runtime(sh): Add handling for ksh93 shared-state comsubs and mksh valsubs (vim/vim#13884)
This commit adds support for ksh93 shared-state command
substitutions (syntax: ${ command; }) and mksh's value
substitutions (syntax: ${|command;}) in the sh syntax script.
Also add a syntax test for ksh subshares with dumps included
to make sure it doesn't regress.
fixes: vim/vim#9514add31baeda
Co-authored-by: Johnothan King <johnothanking@protonmail.com>
runtime(chuck): include ChucK syntax file (vim/vim#13895)
3b2c27415d
Co-authored-by: Andrea C from The App <3269984+gacallea@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: gacallea <gacallea@users.noreply.github.com>
runtime(go): update Go syntax file (vim/vim#13896)
Update the Go syntax file with some recent changes made to vim-go.
ea9a93e5b0
Co-authored-by: Billie Cleek <bhcleek@users.noreply.github.com>
'foldtext' can be set to an empty string to disable and render the
line with:
- extmark highlight
- syntax highlighting
- search highlighting
- no line wrapping
- spelling
- conceal
- inline virtual text
- respects `fillchars:fold`
Currently normal virtual text is not displayed
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
perf: make screen size and position calculations more efficient
N/A patches for version.c:
vim-patch:9.1.0037: Calling get_breakindent_win() repeatedly when computing virtcol
vim-patch:9.1.0038: Unnecessary loop in getvcol()
When computing on-screen size or position, the size 'breakindent' and 'showbreak' is now cached,
and checks for whether a faster character size function can be used are performed only once at the start.
Multibyte characters are not decodes multiple times anymore, and character decoding functions are more efficient.
Additionally, the amount of trailing spaces for pasted blockwise text is now calculated correctly for multibyte characters.
Internal lisp formatting now doesn't erroneously use inline virtual text from a different line.
- Problem: One cannot easily write something like, for example:
`version_current >= {0, 10, 0}`; writing like
`not vim.version.lt(version_current, {0, 10, 0})` is verbose.
- Solution: add {`le`,`ge`} in addition to {`lt`,`gt`}.
- Also improve typing on the operator methods: allow `string` as well.
- Update the example in `vim.version.range()` docs: `ge` in place of
`gt` better matches the semantics of `range:has`.
Problem: Sharing queries with upstream and Helix is difficult due to
different capture names.
Solution: Define and document a new set of standard captures that
matches tree-sitter "standard captures" (where defined) and is closer to
Helix' Atom-style nested groups.
This is a breaking change for colorschemes that defined highlights based
on the old captures. On the other hand, the default colorscheme now
defines links for all standard captures (not just those used in bundled
queries), improving the out-of-the-box experience.
This distinction is important for correct dependency management, as the
nvim binary is used to create some runtime files. The nvim binary (and
the target to build it) is thus called `nvim_bin` and the target to
build all of nvim (binary+runtime) is called `nvim`.
When an embedded Nvim instance changes its current directory a "chdir"
UI event is emitted. Attached UIs can use this information however they
wish. In the TUI it is used to synchronize the cwd of the TUI process
with the cwd of the embedded Nvim process.
Problem:
On devel(nightly) versions, deprecation warnings for hard-deprecated
features are not being displayed. E.g.,
- to be removed in: 0.11
- hard-deprecation since 0.10
- soft-deprecation since 0.9
then 0.10-nightly (0.10.0-dev) versions as well as 0.10.0 (stable)
should display the deprecation warning message.
Solution:
Improve the code and logic on `vim.deprecate()`, and improve
test cases with mocked `vim.version()`.
Problem: Parsed language annotations can be random garbage so
`nvim_get_runtime_file` throws an error.
Solution: Validate that `alias` is a valid language name before trying
to find a parser for it.
runtime(i3config): remove always from `focus_follows_mouse`
The always option does not exist in i3, only sway.
From https://i3wm.org/docs/userguide.html:
`focus_follows_mouse yes|no`
Version number incremented by 2 because the last commit did not
increment the version.
a39af02904
Co-authored-by: James Eapen <james.eapen@vai.org>
runtime(netrw): minor changes to fix move cmd on windows (vim/vim#13823)
6e5a6c9965
Co-authored-by: MiguelBarro <45819833+MiguelBarro@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: too vague errors for 'listchars'/'fillchars'
Solution: Include the field name in error message.
(zeertzjq)
related: #27050closes: vim/vim#138776a8d2e1634
Co-authored-by: Cole Frankenhoff <cole.nhf@gmail.com>
Translate the Vim9 script Godot files to legacy.
`<scriptcmd>` is not ported yet, so replace it with `<Cmd>` and `<SID>`.
If it's ported, `<scriptcmd>call s:` can be used instead.
Includes changes from:
vim-patch:0daafaa7d99e (was partial, but is now pretty much fully ported)
vim-patch:9712ff1288f9
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
runtime(odin): include ftplugin, syntax and indent script (vim/vim#13867)
211211052d
Translate the files from Vim9 script to legacy Vim script. Notably:
- Prefer case-matching comparisons where needed.
- Save and restore `&cpo`.
- Make the functions script-local. (Pretty easy to use these in expr options now
since Vim 9.0 anyways)
Add a note after the header for each file stating that they're manually
translated.
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
This function is used only in the `workspace/configuration` handler,
and does not warrant a public API because of its confusing return types.
The only caller `vim.lsp.handlers["workspace.configuration"]` is also
refactored to use `vim.tbl_get()` instead.
Problem: Modula2 filetype support lacking
Solution: Improve the Modula-2 runtime support, add additional modula2
dialects, add compiler plugin, update syntax highlighting,
include syntax tests, update Makefiles (Doug Kearns)
closes: vim/vim#6796closes: vim/vim#811568a8947069
- Luaify the detection script:
- Split the `(*!m2foo*)` and `(*!m2foo+bar*)` detection into two Lua patterns,
as Lua capture groups cannot be used with `?` and friends (as they only work
on character classes).
- Use `vim.api.nvim_buf_call()` (ew) to call `modula2#SetDialect()` to ensure
`b:modula2` is set for the given bufnr.
- Skip the syntax screendump tests. (A shame as they test some of the detection
from `(*!m2foo+bar*)` tags, but I tested this locally and it seems to work)
- Port the synmenu.vim changes from Vim9 script. (Also tested this locally)
- (And also add the missing comma for `b:browsefilter` from earlier.)
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
runtime(fortran): update fortran syntax (vim/vim#13870)
Support most remaining features of Fortran 2018/2023
Small improvements to folding etc,
Code cleanup: use \? instead of mix of \= and \?
ef79c57837
Co-authored-by: Ajit-Thakkar <142174202+Ajit-Thakkar@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: Vim is missing a foreach() func
Solution: Implement foreach({expr1}, {expr2}) function,
which applies {expr2} for each item in {expr1}
without changing it (Ernie Rael)
closes: vim/vim#12166e79e207760
Partial port as this doesn't handle non-materialized range() lists.
vim-patch:c92b8bed1fa6
runtime(help): delete duplicate help tag E741 (vim/vim#13861)
c92b8bed1f
Co-authored-by: Ernie Rael <errael@raelity.com>
Problem: Cannot easily get the list of matches
Solution: Add the matchstrlist() and matchbufline() Vim script
functions (Yegappan Lakshmanan)
closes: vim/vim#13766
Omit CHECK_LIST_MATERIALIZE(): it populates a List with numbers only,
and there is a check for strings below.
f93b1c881a
vim-patch:eb3475df0d92
runtime(doc): Replace non-breaking space with normal space (vim/vim#13868)
eb3475df0d
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <4298407+yegappan@users.noreply.github.com>
The motivation for this update is Issue #15365, where background=light
is not properly set for Nvim running from an Nvim :terminal. This can be
encountered when e.g., opening a terminal to make git commits, which
opens EDITOR=nvim in the nested terminal.
Under the implementation of this commit, the OSC response always
indicates a black or white foreground/background. While this may not
reflect the actual foreground/background color, it permits 'background'
to be retained for a nested Nvim instance running in the terminal
emulator. The behaviour matches Vim.
runtime(ftplugin): Use "*" browsefilter pattern to match "All Files"
Problem: The "*.*" browsefilter pattern only matches all files on
Windows (Daryl Lee)
Solution: Use "*" to filter on all platforms but keep "*.*" as the label
text on Windows. (Fixesvim/vim#12685, Doug Kearns)
The *.* browsefilter pattern used to match "All Files" on Windows is a
legacy of the DOS 8.3 filename wildcard matching algorithm. For reasons
of backward compatibility this still works on Windows to match all
files, even those without an extension.
However, this pattern only matches filenames containing a dot on other
platforms. This often makes files without an extension difficult to
access from the file dialog, e.g., "Makefile"
On Windows it is still standard practice to use "*.*" for the filter
label so ftplugins should use "All Files (*.*)" on Windows and "All
Files (*)" on other platforms. This matches Vim's default browsefilter
values.
This commit also normalises the browsefilter conditional test to check
for the Win32 and GTK GUI features and an unset b:browsefilter.
closes: vim/vim#1275993197fde0f
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
- Add section `VIM.LPEG` and `VIM.RE` to docs/lua.txt.
- Add `_meta/re.lua` which adds luadoc and type annotations, for the
vendored `vim.re` package.
- Fix minor style issues on `_meta/lpeg.lua` luadoc for better vimdocs
generation.
- Fix a bug on `gen_vimdoc` where non-helptags in verbatim code blocks
were parsed as helptags, affecting code examples on `vim.lpeg.Cf`,
etc.
- Also move the `vim.regex` section below so that it can be located
closer to `vim.lpeg` and `vim.re`.
Typings introduced in #26032 and #26552 have a few conflicts, so we
merge and clean them up. We also fix some incorrect type annotation in
the `vim.lsp.rpc` package. See the associated PR for more details.
Summary:
- vim.rpc.Dispatchers -> vim.lsp.rpc.Dispatchers
- vim.lsp.rpc.Error -> lsp.ResponseError
- Revise docs
Problem: Current values of `StatusLine` and `StatusLineNC` are currently
designed to be visually distinctive while being not intrusive.
However, the compromise was more shifted towards "not intrusive".
After the feedback, statusline highlight groups should be designed to:
- Make current window clearly noticeable. Meaning `StatusLine` and
`StatusLineNC` should obviously differ.
- Make non-current windows clearly separable. Meaning `StatusLineNC`
and `Normal`/`NormalNC` should obviously differ.
Solution:
- Update `StatusLineNC` to have more visible background.
- Update `StatusLine` to be inverted variant of `StatusLineNC`.
- Update `WinBar` and `WinBarNC` to not link to `StatusLine` and
`StatusLineNC` because it makes two goals harder to achieve.
- Update `TabLine` to link to `StatusLineNC` instead of `StatusLine`
to not be very visually intrusive.
Problem: i_CTRL-R- no longer works in replace mode
Solution: delete characters in replace mode before putting, add a test,
add a bit warning into the documentation, that i_CTRL-R-P/O
is not supported in Replace mode for now
fixes: vim/vim#13792closes: vim/vim#138165d5cbb2b9a
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
runtime(netrw): Decode multibyte percent-encoding filename correctly (vim/vim#13842)
Use `printf("%c")` instead of `nr2char()` to handle '%xx' as a byte.
Closevim/vim#137872357765304
Co-authored-by: K.Takata <kentkt@csc.jp>
runtime(colorschemes): Add initial support for Added/Removed/Changed highlight groups (vim/vim#13830)
For some of the colorschemes where diffAdded and diffRemoved were explicitly set up.
5f4cc8ea65
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
Problem: default diff highlighting is too noisy
Solution: Link diff highlighting groups to new
Added/Removed/Changed, revert previous change
(Romain Lafourcade)
Remove diff* links added in vim/vim#13776 and doc added in commit b1392be
The links added in vim/vim#13776 are way too noisy for the contexts in which
the `diff` syntax is applied (git commits, patches, etc.).
This commit:
- removes those links
- adds new default highlighting groups Added, Changed and
Removed
- links the diff highlighting groups to those new defaults
- removes the doc changes
- adjusts the syntax_completion test for those newly added group
names
Note: Changes to the default color schemes will be handled separately,
by adding links to those newly created Added/Removed/Changed
highlighting groups.
related: vim/vim#13776closesvim/vim#13825124371c5a1
Co-authored-by: Romain Lafourcade <romain.lafourcade@razorfish.fr>
runtime(tar): fix a few problems with the tar plugin
From: vim/vim#138331:
- Updating .tar.zst files was broken. Fixesvim/vim#12639.
- Extracting files from .tar.zst / .tzs files was also broken and
works now.
From: vim/vim#12637:
- Fixes variable assignment and typo
From: vim/vim#8109:
- Rename .tzs to the more standard .tzst
fixes: vim/vim#12639fixes: vim/vim#8105closes: vim/vim#8109closes: vim/vim#12637closes: vim/vim#138313a5b3df776
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Martin Rys <martin@rys.pw>
Co-authored-by: Eisuke Kawashima <e-kwsm@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Carlo Teubner <carlo@cteubner.net>
This commit implements a new TermRequest autocommand event and has Neovim
emit this event when children of terminal buffers emit an OSC or DCS sequence
libvterm does not handle.
The TermRequest autocommand event has additional data in the
v:termrequest variable.
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
Problem: Some lines in the generated vim doc are overflowing, not
correctly wrapped at 78 characters. This happens when docs body contains
several consecutive 'inline' elements generated by doxygen.
Solution: Take into account the current column offset of the last line,
and prepend some padding before doc_wrap().
Improve error messages for `:InspectTree`, when no parsers are available
for the current buffer and filetype. We can show more informative and
helpful error message for users (e.g., which lang was searched for):
```
... No parser available for the given buffer:
+... no parser for 'custom_ft' language, see :help treesitter-parsers
```
Also improve the relevant docs for *treesitter-parsers*.
Problem: can select empty inner text blocks
(laurentalacoque)
Solution: make selecting empty inner text blocks an error
textobjects: Make selecting inner empty blocks an error
fixes: vim/vim#13514closes: vim/vim#13523ad4d7f446d
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: Keymap completion is not available
Solution: Add keymap completion (Doug Kearns)
Add keymap completion to the 'keymap' option, user commands and builtin
completion functions.
closes: vim/vim#1369281642d9d6f
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
tmux indicates its RGB support via setrgbb and setrgbf. In modern tmux
code, Tc and RGB just set setrgbb and setrgbf, so we can just check for
them.
Link: 7eb496c00c
Problem: The maximum 'statuscolumn' width and grow behavior is undocumented.
Solution: Define, use and document the maximum 'statuscolumn' width and grow behavior.
Problem:
Many decoration providers (treesitter injection highlighting, semantic
token highlighting, inlay hint) rely on the correctness of the `botline`
argument of `on_win` callback. However, `botline` can be smaller than
the actual line number of the last displayed line if some lines are
folded. In such cases, some decorations will be missing in the lines not
covered by `botline`.
Solution:
Validate `botline` when invoking `on_win`.
NOTE:
It seems that the old code was deliberately avoiding this presumably due
to performance reasons. However, I haven't experienced noticeable lag
after this change, and I believe the cost of botline computation would
be much smaller than the cost of decoration providers.
runtime(vim): Add support for <ScriptCmd> syntax (vim/vim#10686)
Adding `<ScriptCmd>` to list of angle-bracket notation syntax, just like `<Cmd>`
`<Cmd>` is already highlighted.
```vim
nnoremap <leader>o <Cmd>Oldfiles()<CR>
```
`<ScriptCmd>` is not.
80beeef0c6
Co-authored-by: dezza <402927+dezza@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: reloading colorscheme when not changing 'background'
Solution: Check, if the background option value actually changed,
if not, return early.
Only reload colorscheme when bg is changed
Currently the highlight groups are re-initialized and the colorscheme
(if any) is reloaded anytime 'background' is set, even if it is not
changed. This is unnecessary, because if the value was not changed then
there is no need to change highlight groups or do anything with the
colorscheme. Instead, only reload the colorscheme if the value of
'background' was actually changed.
closes: vim/vim#1370083ad2726ff
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
Problem:
Currently `deepcopy` hashes every single tables it copies so it can be
reused. For tables of mostly unique items that are non recursive, this
hashing is unnecessarily expensive
Solution:
Port the `noref` argument from Vimscripts `deepcopy()`.
The below benchmark demonstrates the results for two extreme cases of
tables of different sizes. One table that uses the same table lots of
times and one with all unique tables.
| test | `noref=false` (ms) | `noref=true` (ms) |
| -------------------- | ------------------ | ----------------- |
| unique tables (50) | 6.59 | 2.62 |
| shared tables (50) | 3.24 | 6.40 |
| unique tables (2000) | 23381.48 | 2884.53 |
| shared tables (2000) | 3505.54 | 14038.80 |
The results are basically the inverse of each other where `noref` is
much more performance on tables with unique fields, and `not noref` is
more performant on tables that reuse fields.
Problem:
For function definitions to be included in the vimdoc (formatted) and
to be exported as mpack data (unformatted), we had two internal
representations of the same function/API metadata in duplicate;
one is FunctionDoc (which was previously a dict), and the other is
doxygen XML DOM from which vimdoc (functions sections) was generated.
Solution:
We should have a single path and unified data representation
(i.e. FunctionDoc) that contains all the metadata and information about
function APIs, from which both of mpack export and vimdoc are generated.
I.e., vimdocs are no longer generated directly from doxygen XML nodes,
but generated via:
(XML DOM Nodes) ------------> FunctionDoc ------> mpack (unformatted)
Recursive Internal |
Formatting Metadata +---> vimdoc (formatted)
This refactoring eliminates the hacky and ugly use of `fmt_vimhelp` in
`fmt_node_as_vimhelp()` and all other helper functions! This way,
`fmt_node_as_vimhelp()` can simplified as it no longer needs to handle
generating of function docs, which needs to be done only in the topmost
level of recursion.
runtime(dist/ft): improve filetype detection for *.v (V/Verilog/Coq)
Patch provided by Dan Alt
closes: vim/vim#1379310b4f75d4c
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
runtime(sh): Update sh syntax and add local keyword for bash (vim/vim#13806)
add `local` in shStatement
b16fc98055
Co-authored-by: Lucien Grondin <grondilu@yahoo.fr>
feat(diagnostic): add `vim.diagnostic.count()`
Problem: Getting diagnostic count based on the output of
`vim.diagnostic.get()` might become costly as number of diagnostic
entries grows. This is because it returns a copy of diagnostic cache
entries (so as to not allow users to change them in place).
Getting information about diagnostic count is frequently used in
statusline, so it is important to be as fast as reasonbly possible.
Solution: Add `vim.diagnostic.count()` which computes severity
counts without making copies.
- Use `#pragma once` for `cmake.config/config.h.in`
- Remove unused variable `CACHED_GENERATED_DIR`
- Reorganize and sort variables
- Introduce `STYLUA_DIRS` variable to ensure the `formatlua` and
`lintlua-stylua` operates on the same files.
- Adjust variable scope to avoid using hacky directory properties.
- Add more necessary runtime files as test dependencies
There is no reason for this file to be in project root, which is crowded
as is. This also fits nicely part of the ongoing work towards gathering
as much of the documentation as possible into one place.