Problem: Unable to customize the column next to a window ('gutter').
Solution: Add 'statuscolumn' option that follows the 'statusline' syntax,
allowing to customize the status column. Also supporting the %@
click execute function label. Adds new items @C and @s which
will print the fold and sign columns. Line numbers and signs
can be clicked, highlighted, aligned, transformed, margined etc.
This is cherry-picked from these Vim patches:
Only applicable change outside vi_diff.txt in patch 8.1.1226:
6c60f47fb9
Most changes outside starting.txt and vi_diff.txt in patch 8.1.1280:
25c9c680ec
Missing docs for 'mousemoveevent':
cbaff5e06e
Problem: CTRL-Z at end of file is always dropped.
Solution: Add the 'endoffile' option, like the 'endofline' option.
(closesvim/vim#11408, closesvim/vim#11397)
Cherry-pick test_fixeol.vim changes from patch 8.2.1432.
Cherry-pick 'endoffile' changes from latest Vim runtime update.
fb0cf2357e
vim-patch:f0b567e32a46
Revert unintended Makefile change
f0b567e32a
vim-patch:72c8e3c070b3
Fix wrong struct access for member.
72c8e3c070
vim-patch:3f68a4136eb9
Add missing entry for the 'endoffile' option.
3f68a4136e
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
vim-patch:9.0.0445: when opening/closing window text moves up/down
Problem: When opening/closing window text moves up/down.
Solution: Add the 'splitscroll' option. When off text will keep its
position as much as possible.
29ab524358
vim-patch:9.0.0455: a few problems with 'splitscroll'
Problem: A few problems with 'splitscroll'.
Solution: Fix 'splitscroll' problems. (Luuk van Baal, closesvim/vim#11117)
5ed391708a
vim-patch:9.0.0461: 'scroll' is not always updated
Problem: 'scroll' is not always updated.
Solution: Call win_init_size() at the right place.
470a14140b
vim-patch:9.0.0465: cursor moves when cmdwin is closed when 'splitscroll' is off
Problem: Cursor moves when cmdwin is closed when 'splitscroll' is off.
Solution: Temporarily set 'splitscroll' when jumping back to the original
window. (closesvim/vim#11128)
e697d48890
vim-patch:9.0.0469: cursor moves if cmdwin is closed when 'splitscroll' is off
Problem: Cursor moves if cmdwin is closed when 'splitscroll' is off.
Solution: Skip win_fix_cursor if called when cmdwin is open or closing.
(Luuk van Baal, closesvim/vim#11134)
3735f11050
vim-patch:9.0.0478: test for 'splitscroll' takes too much time
Problem: Test for 'splitscroll' takes too much time.
Solution: Only test some of the combinations. (Luuk van Baal, closesvim/vim#11139)
594f9e09cd
vim-patch:9.0.0486: text scrolled with 'nosplitscroll', autocmd win and help
Problem: Text scrolled with 'nosplitscroll', autocmd win opened and help
window closed.
Solution: Skip win_fix_scroll() in more situations. (Luuk van Baal,
closesvim/vim#11150)
d5bc762dea
vim-patch:9.0.0505: various problems with 'nosplitscroll'
Problem: Various problems with 'nosplitscroll'.
Solution: Fix 'nosplitscroll' problems. (Luuk van Baal, closesvim/vim#11166)
faf1d412f5
vim-patch:9.0.0555: scrolling with 'nosplitscroll' in callback changing curwin
Problem: Scrolling with 'nosplitscroll' in callback changing curwin.
Solution: Invalidate w_cline_row in the right place. (Luuk van Baal,
closesvim/vim#11185)
20e58561ab
vim-patch:9.0.0603: with 'nosplitscroll' folds are not handled correctly
Problem: With 'nosplitscroll' folds are not handled correctly.
Solution: Take care of closed folds when moving the cursor. (Luuk van Baal,
closesvim/vim#11234)
7c1cbb6cd4
vim-patch:9.0.0605: dump file missing
Problem: Dump file missing.
Solution: Add the missing dump file. (issue vim/vim#11234)
439a2ba174
vim-patch:9.0.0647: the 'splitscroll' option is not a good name
Problem: The 'splitscroll' option is not a good name.
Solution: Rename 'splitscroll' to 'splitkeep' and make it a string option,
also supporting "topline". (Luuk van Baal, closesvim/vim#11258)
13ece2ae1d
vim-patch:9.0.0667: ml_get error when 'splitkeep' is "screen"
Problem: ml_get error when 'splitkeep' is "screen". (Marius Gedminas)
Solution: Check the botline is not too large. (Luuk van Baal,
closesvim/vim#11293, closesvim/vim#11292)
346823d3e5
Add 'mousescroll' option to control how many lines to scroll by when a
mouse wheel keycode is received. The mousescroll option controls both
horizontal and vertical scrolling. The option is a string in the format:
set mousescroll=direction:count,direction:count
Where direction is either "ver" or "hor", and count is a non negative
integer. If a direction is omitted, a default value is used. The default
values remain unchanged, that is 3 for vertical scrolling, and 6 for
horizontal scrolling. As such, the mousescroll default is "ver:3,hor:6".
Add mousescroll documentation
- Add option documentation in options.txt
- Add brief summary in quickref.txt
Update :help scroll-mouse-wheel
- Mention mousescroll option as a means of controlling scrolling.
- Remove obsolete suggestion to map scroll wheel keys to <C-U> to
scroll by a single line -- users should prefer the mousescroll option.
- Add some information about the consequences of remapping scroll wheel
keys (they lose their magic ability to affect inactive windows).
Update :help vim-differences
- Add brief mousescroll summary under Options
Add mousescroll tests
- Test option validation
- Test default mousescroll value and behavior
- Test fallback to default values
- Test mouse vertical and horizontal scrolling in normal mode
- Test mouse vertical and horizontal scrolling in insert mode
Neovim already removed `evim` (or any similar flags). The 'insertmode'
option is a weird remnant, so get rid of it.
The 'insertmode' option is replaced with a script that closely emulates
the option. This script is documented at :help 'insertmode'
docs(reg_recorded): add links to relevant docs
docs(Recording): update docs to match implementation
docs(Q) update references of Q to be gQ
docs(autocmd) add description about state of reg_record{ing,ed} for RecordingLeave
docs(vim_diff) add Recording{Enter,Leave} to features
docs(index) removed duplicate gQ
docs(options) removed line about gQ erroring in visual mode
Update runtime/doc/vim_diff.txt
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
docs(vim_diff) removed double mention of Q
- remove redundant autocmd list
This "grouped" list is useless, it only gets in the way when searching
for event names.
- intro.txt: cleanup
- starting.txt: update, revisit
- doc: `:help bisect`
- mbyte.txt: update aliases 1656367b90. closes#11960
- options: remove 'guifontset'. Why:
- It is complicated and is used by almost no one.
- It is unlikely to be implemented by Nvim GUIs (complicated to parse,
specific to Xorg...).
Traditionally, when navigating to a specific location from the middle of
the jumplist results in shifting the current location to the bottom of
the list and adding the new location after it. This behavior is not
desireable to all users--see, for example
https://vi.stackexchange.com/questions/18344/how-to-change-jumplist-behavior.
Here, another jumplist behavior is introduced. When jumpoptions (a new
option set added here) includes stack, the jumplist behaves like the
tagstack or like history in a web browser. That is, when navigating to
a location from the middle of the jumplist
2 first
1 second
0 third <-- current location
1 fourth
2 fifth
to a new location the locations after the current location in the jump
list are discarded
2 first
1 second
0 third
<-- current location
The result is that when moving forward from that location, the new
location will be appended to the jumplist:
3 first
2 second
1 third
0 new
If the new location is the same
new == second
as some previous (but not immediately prior) entry in the jumplist,
2 first
1 second
0 third <-- current location
1 fourth
2 fifth
both occurrences preserved
3 first
2 second
1 third
0 second (new)
when moving forward from that location.
It would be desireable to go farther and, when the new location is the
same as the location that is currently next in the jumplist,
new == fourth
make the result of navigating to the new location by jumping (e.g. 50gg)
be the same as moving forward in the jumplist
2 first
1 second
0 third
1 new <-- current location
2 fifth
and simply increment the jumplist index. That change is NOT part of
this patch because it would require passing the new cursor location to
the function (setpcmark) from all of its callees. That in turn would
require those callees to know *before* calling what the new cursor
location is, which do they do not currently.
closes#990closes#9295
- Support for multiple auto-adjusted sign columns.
With this change, having more than one sign on a line, and with the
'auto' setting on 'signcolumn', extra columns will shown automatically
to accomodate all the existing signs.
For example, suppose we have this view:
5147 }
5148
5149 return sign->typenr;
5150 }
5151 }
5152 return 0;
5153 }
5154
We have GitGutter installed, so it tells us about modified lines that
are not commmited. So let's change line 5152:
5147 }
5148
5149 return sign->typenr;
5150 }
5151 }
~ 5152 return 0;
5153 }
5154
Now we add a mark over line 5152 using 'ma' in normal mode:
5147 }
5148
5149 return sign->typenr;
5150 }
5151 }
a ~ 5152 return 0;
5153 }
5154
Previously, Vim/Nvim would have picked only one of the signs,
because there was no support for having multiple signs in a line.
- Remove signs from deleted lines.
Suppose we have highlights on a group of lines and we delete them:
+ 6 use std::ops::Deref;
--+ 7 use std::borrow::Cow;
--+ 8 use std::io::{Cursor};
9 use proc_macro2::TokenStream;
10 use syn::export::ToTokens;
--+ 11 use std::io::Write;
>> 12 use std::ops::Deref;
Without this change, these signs will momentarily accumulate in
the sign column until the plugins wake up to refresh them.
+ --+ --+ --+ >> 6
Discussion: It may be better to extend the API a bit and allow this
to happen for only certain types of signs. For example, VIM marks
and vim-gitgutter removal signs may want to be presreved, unlike
line additions and linter highlights.
- 'signcolumn': support 'auto:NUM' and 'yes:NUM' settings
- sort signs according to id, from lowest to highest. If you have
git-gutter, vim-signature, and ALE, it would appear in this order:
git-gutter - vim-signature - ALE.
- recalculate size before screen update
- If no space for all signs, prefer the higher ids (while keeping the
rendering order from low to high).
- Prevent duplicate signs. Duplicate signs were invisible to the user,
before using our extended non-standard signcolumn settings.
- multi signcols: fix bug related to wrapped lines.
In wrapped lines, the wrapped parts of a line did not include the extra
columns if they existed. The result was a misdrawing of the wrapped
parts. Fix the issue by:
1. initializing the signcol counter to 0 when we are on a wrap boundary
2. allowing for the draw of spaces in that case.
Problem: It is not so easy to write a script that works with both Python 2 and Python 3, even when the Python code works with both.
Solution: Add 'pyxversion', :pyx, etc. (Marc Weber, Ken Takata)
f42dd3c390
After this change we never release blocks from memory (in practice it
never happened because the memory limits are never reached). Let the OS
take care of that.
---
On today's systems the 'maxmem' and 'maxmemtot' values are huge (4+ GB)
so the limits are never reached in practice, but Vim wastes a lot of
time checking if the limit was reached.
If the limit is reached Vim starts saving pieces of the swap file that were in
memory to the disk. Said in a different way: Vim implements its own
memory-paging mechanism. This is unnecessary and inefficient since the
operating system already has virtual memory and will swap to the disk if
programs start using too much memory.
This change does...
1. Reduce the number of config options and need for documentation.
2. Make the code more efficient as we don't have to keep track of memory
usage nor check if the memory limits were reached to start swapping
to disk every time we need memory for buffers.
3. Simplify the code. Once memfile.c is simple enough it could be
replaced by actual operating system memory mapping (mmap,
MemoryViewOfFile...). This change does not prevent Vim to recover
changes from swap files since the swapping code is never triggered
with the huge limits set by default.
Problem: When running :make the output may be in the system encoding,
different from 'encoding'.
Solution: Add the 'makeencoding' option. (Ken Takata)
2c7292dc5b