fixes: vim/vim#15961
while at it, remove the Decho comments in the s:NetrwOptionsRestore()
function
aa2ce6f580
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
It did not work very well, at least on Debian 12, and I am not sure Git
Bash and WSL, for example, were taken care of as maintenance stalled.
The whole logic was somewhat convoluted with some parts repeatedly invoking
failed commands.
The file handling was outdated, for example, nowadays Netscape is rarely
used, and also opinionated, for example mainly Microsoft Paint and Gimp for
Image files.
Instead, let's use (xdg-)open and similar commands on other systems
which respects the user's preferences.
closes: vim/vim#157213d7e567ea7
Co-authored-by: Konfekt <Konfekt@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Luca Saccarola <96259932+saccarosium@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: Some runtime files no longer spark joy.
Solution: Kondo the place up.
Still sparks _some_ joy (moved to new `runtime/scripts` folder):
* `macros/less.*`
* `mswin.vim`
* `tools/emoji_list.lua`
No longer sparks joy (removed):
* `macmap.vim` (gvimrc file; not useful in Nvim)
* `tools/check_colors.vim` (no longer useful with new default colorscheme and treesitter)
* `macros/editexisting.vim` (throws error on current Nvim)
* `macros/justify.vim` (obsolete shim for `packadd! justify`)
* `macros/matchit.vim` (same)
* `macros/shellmenu.vim` (same)
* `macros/swapmous.vim` (same)
Complement "g:java_ignore_javadoc" with "g:java_ignore_html"
and "g:java_ignore_markdown" to allow selectively disabling
the recognition of HTML and CommonMark respectively.
(Note that this is not a preview feature.)
======================== LIMITATION ========================
According to the syntactical details of JEP 467:
> Any leading whitespace and the three initial / characters
> are removed from each line.
>
> The lines are shifted left, by removing leading whitespace
> characters, until the non-blank line with the least
> leading whitespace has no remaining leading whitespace.
>
> Additional leading whitespace and any trailing whitespace
> in each line is preserved, because it may be significant.
the following example:
------------------------------------------------------------
/// A summary sentence.
/// A list:
/// - Item A.
/// - Item B.
///
/// Some code span, starting here `
/// 1 + 2 ` and ending at the previous \`.
------------------------------------------------------------
should be interpreted as if it were written thus:
------------------------------------------------------------
///A summary sentence.
/// A list:
/// - Item A.
/// - Item B.
///
/// Some code span, starting here `
/// 1 + 2 ` and ending at the previous \`.
------------------------------------------------------------
Since automatic line rewriting will not be pursued, parts of
such comments having significant whitespace may be ‘wrongly’
highlighted. For convenience, a &fex function is defined to
‘correct’ it: g:javaformat#RemoveCommonMarkdownWhitespace()
(:help ft-java-plugin).
References:
https://openjdk.org/jeps/467https://spec.commonmark.org/0.31.2closes: vim/vim#1574085f054aa3f
Co-authored-by: Aliaksei Budavei <0x000c70@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Pope <code@tpope.net>
Fixes E872 too many '(' in highlight pattern for `mf` selection
fixup for vim/vim#15551closes: vim/vim#15700c18a9d5835
Co-authored-by: yasuda <yasuda@kyoto-sr.co.jp>
Problem: zip-plugin has problems with special characters
(user202729)
Solution: escape '*?[\' on Unix and handle those chars
a bit differently on MS-Windows, add a test, check
before overwriting files
runtime(zip): small fixes for zip plugin
This does the following:
- verify the unzip plugin is executable when loading the autoload plugin
- handle extracting file names with '[*?\' in its name correctly by
escaping those characters for the unzip command (and handle those
characters a bit differently on MS-Windows, since the quoting is different)
- verify, that the extract plugin is not overwriting a file (could cause
a hang, because unzip asking for confirmation)
- add a test zip file which contains those special file names
fixes: vim/vim#15505closes: vim/vim#155197790ea0c68
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Otherwise, if the executable to be verified does not exist,
this would cause a false-positive in the 'IsSafeExecutable()' check,
because 'exepath(executable)' returns an empty string and
'fnamemodify('', ':p:h')' returns the current directory and as a result
the 'IsSafeExecutable()' returns false (for the wrong reason).
8e25d91cb7
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: g:netrw_use_errorwindow=2 does not work
without +balloon_eval.
Solution: Check for popup_atcursor().
related: vim/vim#15501b4d1164425
Co-authored-by: Damien <141588647+xrandomname@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: RestoreOpts() plugin called too often
Solution: use :defer to have the RestoreOpts() function
called when the function returns automatically
afea6b9468
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: the zip plugin duplicates a lot of code for displaying
warnings/errors
Solution: refactor common code into a generic Mess() function
8d52926857
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: zip plugin has no way to set/restore option values
Solution: Add the SetSaneOpts() and RestoreOpts() functions,
so options that cause issues are set to sane values
and restored back to their initial values later on.
(this affects the 'shellslash' option on windows, which also
changes how the shellescape() function works)
19636be55e
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: zip plugin tests for fnameescape() function
Solution: Remove the check, fnameescape() has been available since
7.1.299, it should nowadays always be available
33836d38b8
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: zip plugin uses :echo which does not store messages
Solution: use :echomsg instead of :echo so that messages are stored in
the message history
120c0dd815
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: zip plugin contains a lot of comments from the decho plugin
Solution: Clean up and remove un-used comments
a63f66e953
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: Cannot browse zipfiles with the unzip program found
on FreeBSD.
Solution: Adjust command arguments.
Unzip found on FreeBSD complain about missing argument with the
zipinfo modifier '-Z -1'. Joining arguments seems to work
for both implementations.
Also change `:sil!` to `:sil` so that error messages are properly
reported (per review of Christian Brabandt).
related: vim/vim#15411f0e9b72c8f
Co-authored-by: Damien <141588647+xrandomname@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: After 6f1cbfc9ab fnameescape()
is no longer called on the name of the file to be extracted.
However, while spaces indeed don't need to be escaped, unzip
treats '[' as a wildcard character, so it need to be escaped.
Solution: Escape '[' on both MS-Windows and Unix.
From the docs it seems '*' and '?' also need escaping, but they seem to
actually work without escaping.
fixes: neovim/neovim#29977closes: vim/vim#15427c5bdd66558
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
Make `:Sexplore` / `:Hexplore` / `:Vexplore` commands honor the user
`&split{right,below}` settings (or netrw-specific `g:netrw_alt{o,v}`)
instead of hardcoding a split direction. Similarly, update banged
variants of the two latter commands to follow the inverted preference.
closes: vim/vim#15417c527d90fae
Co-authored-by: Ivan Shapovalov <intelfx@intelfx.name>
Problem: Opening a zipfile from HTTP gives an empty buffer.
Solution: Ensure that the magic bytes check does not
skip protocol processing.
Also use readblob() and remove commented out lines.
closes: vim/vim#15396c4be066817
Co-authored-by: Damien <141588647+xrandomname@users.noreply.github.com>
This is safer because we don't invoke the shell.
closes: vim/vim#153352cad941dc0
Co-authored-by: Damien <141588647+xrandomname@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: Enter 'x' in zip browser fail with E121
Solution: Fix typo in zip#Extract()
closes: vim/vim#1532138ce71c1c3
Co-authored-by: Damien <141588647+xrandomname@users.noreply.github.com>
This is a breaking change which will make refactor of typval and shada
code a lot easier. In particular, code that would use or check for
v:msgpack_types.binary in the wild would be broken. This appears to be
rarely used in existing plugins.
Also some cases where v:msgpack_type.string would be used to represent a
binary string of "string" type, we use a BLOB instead, which is
vimscripts native type for binary blobs, and already was used for BIN
formats when necessary.
msgpackdump(msgpackparse(data)) no longer preserves the distinction
of BIN and STR strings. This is very common behavior for
language-specific msgpack bindings. Nvim uses msgpack as a tool to
serialize its data. Nvim is not a tool to bit-perfectly manipulate
arbitrary msgpack data out in the wild.
The changed tests should indicate how behavior changes in various edge
cases.
This was wrongly included as of patch 1c6734291295bf8aa39577840b40bb
because apparently I messed up the use of git apply :/
52f2ff0363
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
This change does the following 3 things:
1) non need to quote the file to be extracted
The zipfile plugin used to quote and fnameescape() the path to the
file to be extracted. However testing with unzip showed, that while this
works on Linux on Windows you shall not escape the blanks in filenames.
As long as the pathname is properly quoted, this words on Linux and
Windows.
2) reset shellslash (MS-Windows only)
When shellslash is set, filenames to the zip archive will be forward
quoted. However since the filename is eventually handed over to the
unzip command, we need to make sure to use native paths so that the
command will understand what file to open. Therefore, if shellslash is
set (and the shell is cmd.exe), replace any forward slashes by the
expected backslashes
3) style:
Use tabs for the Header, remove a few comments in the s:Escape() and
zip#read() functions
fixes: vim/vim#149981c67342912
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>