Problem: statusline may look different than expected
Solution: do not check for highlighting of stl and stlnc characters
statusline fillchar may be different than expected
If the highlighting group for the statusline for the current window
|hl-StatusLine| or the non-current window |hl-StatusLineNC| are cleared
(or do not differ from each other), than Vim will use the hard-coded
fallback values '^' (for the non-current windows) or '=' (for the
current window). I believe this was done, to make sure the statusline
will always be visible and be distinguishable from the rest of the
window.
However, this may be unexpected, if a user explicitly defined those
fillchar characters just to notice that those values are then not used
by Vim.
So, let's assume users know what they are doing and just always return
the configured stl and stlnc values. And if they want the statusline to
be non-distinguishable from the rest of the window space, so be it. It
is their responsibility and Vim shall not know better what to use.
fixes: vim/vim#13366closes: vim/vim#134886a650bf696
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: No way to have extmarks automatically removed when the range it
is attached to is deleted.
Solution: Add new 'invalidate' property that will hide a mark when the
entirety of its range is deleted. When "undo_restore" is set
to false, delete the mark from the buffer instead.
When the terminal emulator sends an OSC sequence to Nvim (as a response
to another OSC sequence that was first sent by Nvim), populate the OSC
sequence in the v:termresponse variable and fire the TermResponse event.
The escape sequence is also included in the "data" field of the
autocommand callback when the autocommand is defined in Lua.
This makes use of the already documented but unimplemented TermResponse
event. This event exists in Vim but is only fired when Vim receives a
primary device attributes response.
Fixes: https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/25856
It is a design goal of extmarks that they allow precise tracking
of changes across undo/redo, including restore the exact positions
after a do/undo or undo/redo cycle. However this behavior is not useful
for all usecases. Many plugins won't keep marks around for long after
text changes, but uses them more like a cache until some external source
(like LSP semantic highlights) has fully updated to changed text and
then will explicitly readjust/replace extmarks as needed.
Add a "undo_restore" flag which is true by default (matches existing
behavior) but can be set to false to opt-out of this behavior.
Delete dead u_extmark_set() code.
connection from any channel or stdio will unblock
remote_ui_wait_for_attach. Wait on stdio only if
only —embed specified, if both —embed and
—listen then wait on any channel.
Problem: Currently there is no way of customizing behavior of
`declaration`, `definition`, `typeDefinition`, and `implementation`
methods in `vim.lsp.buf` when LSP server returns `Location`. Instead,
cursor jumps to that location directly.
Solution: Normalize LSP response to be `Location[]` for those four cases.
While the interfaces for setting number and boolean options are now unified by #25394, there is still a separate `set_string_option` function that is used for setting a string option. This PR removes that function and merges it with set_option.
BREAKING CHANGE: `v:option_old` is now the old global value for all global-local options, instead of just string global-local options. Local value for a global-local number/boolean option is now unset when the option is set (e.g. using `:set` or `nvim_set_option_value`) without a scope, which means they now behave the same way as string options.
Ref: #25672
runtime(doc): all secure options should note this restriction in the documentation (vim/vim#13448)
Problem: Not all secure options document their status
Solution: Describe secure context :set restrictions in each help entry
8ebdbc9e6d
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
The prefix option of the diagnostic virtual text can be a function,
but previously it was only a function of diagnostic.
This function should also have additional parameters index and total,
more consistently and similarily as in the prefix function for
`vim.diagnostic.open_float()`.
These additional parameters will be useful when there are too many
number of diagnostics in a single line.
Problem: cannot use buffer-number for errorformat
Solution: add support for parsing a buffer number using '%b' in
'errorformat'
closes: vim/vim#13419b731800522
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
matchparen: do not use hard-coded match id (vim/vim#13393)
* matchparen: do not use hard-coded match id
Instead of using the hard-coded match id 3, which may also be used by
other plugins, let the matchparen plugin use whatever ids are
automatically returned when calling matchaddpos().
For backwards-compatibility, keep the `:3match` call, which will still
use the hard-coded id 3 (as mentioned in :h :3match).
closes: vim/vim#13381d3e277f279
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: no digraph for quadruple prime
Solution: add quadruple prime digraph using 4'
closes: vim/vim#1338047416d1a74
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Wright <quaggy@gmail.com>
Problem: trim(): hard to use default mask (partly revert v9.0.2040)
Solution: use default mask when it is empty
The default 'mask' value is pretty complex, as it includes many
characters. Yet, if one needs to specify the trimming direction, the
third argument, 'trim()' currently requires the 'mask' value to be
provided explicitly.
Currently, an empty 'mask' will make 'trim()' call return 'text' value
that is passed in unmodified. It is unlikely that someone is using it,
so the chances of scripts being broken by this change are low.
Also, this reverts commit 9.0.2040 (which uses v:none for the default
and requires to use an empty string instead).
closes: vim/vim#133588079917447
vim-patch:9.0.2040: trim(): hard to use default mask
Problem: trim(): hard to use default mask
Solution: Use default 'mask' when it is v:none
The default 'mask' value is pretty complex, as it includes many
characters. Yet, if one needs to specify the trimming direction, the
third argument, 'trim()' currently requires the 'mask' value to be
provided explicitly.
'v:none' is already used to mean "use the default argument value" in
user defined functions. See |none-function_argument| in help.
closes: vim/vim#133636e6386716f
Co-authored-by: Illia Bobyr <illia.bobyr@gmail.com>
Problem: [security] use-after-free with wildmenu
Solution: properly clean up the wildmenu when exiting
Fix wildchar/wildmenu/pum memory corruption with special wildchar's
Currently, using `wildchar=<Esc>` or `wildchar=<C-\>` can lead to a
memory corruption if using wildmenu+pum, or wrong states if only using
wildmenu. This is due to the code only using one single place inside the
cmdline process loop to perform wild menu clean up (by checking
`end_wildmenu`) but there are other odd situations where the loop could
have exited and we need a post-loop clean up just to be sure. If the
clean up was not done you would have a stale popup menu referring to
invalid memory, or if not using popup menu, incorrect status line (if
`laststatus=0`).
For example, if you hit `<Esc>` two times when it's wildchar, there's a
hard-coded behavior to exit command-line as a failsafe for user, and if
you hit `<C-\><C-\><C-N>` it will also exit command-line, but the clean
up code would not have hit because of specialized `<C-\>` handling.
Fix Ctrl-E / Ctrl-Y to not cancel/accept wildmenu if they are also
used for 'wildchar'/'wildcharm'. Currently they don't behave properly,
and also have potentially memory unsafe behavior as the logic is
currently not accounting for this situation and try to do both.
(Previous patch that addressed this: vim/vim#11677)
Also, correctly document Escape key behavior (double-hit it to escape)
in wildchar docs as it's previously undocumented.
In addition, block known invalid chars to be set in `wildchar` option,
such as Ctrl-C and `<CR>`. This is just to make it clear to the user
they shouldn't be set, and is not required for this bug fix.
closes: vim/vim#133618f4fb007e4
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
BREAKING CHANGE: This breaks the OptionSet autocommand, as the `v:` values associated with it (`v:option_new`, `v:option_old`, `v:option_oldlocal` and `v:option_oldglobal`) are now the same type as the option, instead of all option values being converted to strings.
Problem: Cannot accurately get mouse clicking position when clicking on
a TAB or with virtual text.
Solution: Add a "coladd" field to getmousepos() result.
closes: vim/vim#13335f5a94d5165
Problem: no max callback recursion limit
Solution: bail out, if max call recursion for callback functions
has been reached.
This checks the 'maxfuncdepth' setting and throws E169 when a callback
function recursively calls itself.
closes: vim/vim#13337closes: vim/vim#1333947510f3d65
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
runtime(doc): Improve command-line completion docs (vim/vim#13331)
* Improve command-line completion docs
Add more details about 'ignorecase' and its effect on cmdline
completion.
Make sure keys used in wildmenu are properly documented and linked in the
keys' documentation entries, and in `:h index` for proper
cross-referencing, as wildmenu popup is slightly different from
insert-mode popup menu.
* Fix docs typos
2bbd0d30ee
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Problem: When clicking in the middle of a TAB, getmousepos() returns
the column of the next char instead of the TAB.
Solution: Break out of the loop when the vcol to find is inside current
char. Fix invalid memory access when calling virtcol2col() on
an empty line.
closes: vim/vim#13321b583eda703
Follw up to 63b3408551
`is_pull` should be optional, otherwise it is an API change that
introduces warnings in consumers.
Also fixes the type annotation of `_client_pull_namespaces` where the
key is a string.
Problem: Certain compilers (primarily GCC) do not recognize an exhaustive enum switch statement as being exhaustive. This manifests in the form of compiler errors in exhaustive switch statements where each case has a return statement but there isn't a catch-all return statements. These compiler errors are spurious in the context of the Neovim codebase. So #25533 added the `UNREACHABLE` macro to denote apart of the code that's unreachable, which was used after every such switch statement to tell the compiler to treat the switch statement as exhaustive. However, the macro is mentioned nowhere in the style guide,and new contributors would not have any natural way of learning about it as it stands now. This would lead to confusion when they inevitably encounter one of these compiler errors.
Solution: Add a style guideline which shows how to use the `UNREACHABLE` macro to fix these compiler errors.
Problem: The style guide states that all switch statements that are not conditional on an enum must have a `default` case, but does not give any explicit guideline for switch statements that are conditional on enums. As a result, a `default` case is added in many enum switch statements, even when the switch statement is exhaustive. This is not ideal because it removes the ability to have compiler errors to easily detect unchanged switch statements when a new possible value for an enum is added.
Solution: Add explicit guidelines for switch statements that are conditional on an enum, clarifying that a `default` case is not necessary if the switch statement is exhaustive. Also refactor pre-existing code with unnecessary `default` cases.
Problem: cmdline-completion for comma-separated options wrong
Solution: Fix command-line expansions for options with filenames with
commas
Fix command-line expansions for options with filenames with commas
Cmdline expansion for option values that take a comma-separated list
of file names is currently not handling file names with commas as the
commas are not escaped. For such options, the commas in file names need
to be escaped (to differentiate from a comma that delimit the list
items). The escaped comma is unescaped in `copy_option_part()` during
option parsing.
Fix as follows:
- Cmdline completion for option values with comma-separated file/folder
names will not start a new match when seeing `\\,` and will instead
consider it as one value.
- File/folder regex matching will strip the `\\` when seeing `\\,` to
make sure it can match the correct files/folders.
- The expanded value will escape `,` with `\\,`, similar to how spaces
are escaped to make sure the option value is correct on the cmdline.
This fix also takes into account the fact that Win32 Vim handles file
name escaping differently. Typing '\,' for a file name results in it
being handled literally but in other platforms '\,' is interpreted as a
simple ',' and commas need to be escaped using '\\,' instead.
Also, make sure this new logic only applies to comma-separated options
like 'path'. Non-list options like 'set makeprg=<Tab>' and regular ex
commands like `:edit <Tab>` do not require escaping and will continue to
work.
Also fix up documentation to be clearer. The original docs are slightly
misleading in how it discusses triple slashes for 'tags'.
closes: vim/vim#13303
related: vim/vim#1330154844857fd
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Problem: The style guide currently recommends having a `default:` case for switch statements that are not conditional on an enumerated value. Additionally, it recommends using `assert(false)` if `default:` is unreachable. This is problematic because `assert()` only runs on debug builds, which may lead to confusing breakages in release builds. Moreover, this suggestion is followed nowhere in the C code and `abort()` is used everywhere instead.
Solution: Suggest using `abort()` instead of `assert(false)`, that way the program always terminates if a logically unreachable case is reached.
Problem: strange error number
Solution: change error number,
add doc tag for E1507
closes: vim/vim#13270ea746f9e86
Co-authored-by: Christ van Willegen <cvwillegen@gmail.com>
Problem:
On Windows, "gf" fails on a filepath that has a line:column suffix.
Example:
E447: Can't find file "src/app/core/services/identity/identity.service.ts:64:23"
Solution:
- Remove ":" from 'isfname' on Windows. Colon is not a valid filename
character (except for the drive-letter).
- Handle drive letters specially in file_name_in_line().
Fixes#25160
Problem:
The swapfile "E325: ATTENTION" dialog is displayed when editing a file
already open in another (running) Nvim. Usually this behavior is
annoying and irrelevant:
- "Recover" and the other options ("Open readonly", "Quit", "Abort") are
almost never wanted.
- swapfiles are less relevant for "multi-Nvim" since 'autoread' is
enabled by default.
- Even less relevant if user enables 'autowrite'.
Solution:
Define a default SwapExists handler which does the following:
1. If the swapfile is owned by a running Nvim process, automatically
chooses "(E)dit anyway" (caveat: this creates a new, extra swapfile,
which is mostly harmless and ignored except by `:recover` or `nvim -r`.
2. Shows a 1-line "ignoring swapfile..." message.
3. Users can disable the default SwapExists handler via `autocmd! nvim_swapfile`.
Problem: win32: missing '**' expansion test (after v9.0.1947)
Solution: Add test for MS-Windows
win32: Add "**" test
Vim supports "**" on MS-Windows. However, it is not tested by
`Test_glob_extended_bash`.
Unlike Unix, it doesn't use 'shell' and doesn't support {,} expansion.
So, I added as a separate test.
related: vim/vim#13205closes: vim/vim#132504a1ad55564
Co-authored-by: Ken Takata <kentkt@csc.jp>
runtime(doc): mention how to disable folding in diff mode (vim/vim#13242)
20f48d5b2d
Co-authored-by: dundargoc <33953936+dundargoc@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: cannot complete option values
Solution: Add completion functions for several options
Add cmdline tab-completion for setting string options
Add tab-completion for setting string options on the cmdline using
`:set=` (along with `:set+=` and `:set-=`).
The existing tab completion for setting options currently only works
when nothing is typed yet, and it only fills in with the existing value,
e.g. when the user does `:set diffopt=<Tab>` it will be completed to
`set diffopt=internal,filler,closeoff` and nothing else. This isn't too
useful as a user usually wants auto-complete to suggest all the possible
values, such as 'iblank', or 'algorithm:patience'.
For set= and set+=, this adds a new optional callback function for each
option that can be invoked when doing completion. This allows for each
option to have control over how completion works. For example, in
'diffopt', it will suggest the default enumeration, but if `algorithm:`
is selected, it will further suggest different algorithm types like
'meyers' and 'patience'. When using set=, the existing option value will
be filled in as the first choice to preserve the existing behavior. When
using set+= this won't happen as it doesn't make sense.
For flag list options (e.g. 'mouse' and 'guioptions'), completion will
take into account existing typed values (and in the case of set+=, the
existing option value) to make sure it doesn't suggest duplicates.
For set-=, there is a new `ExpandSettingSubtract` function which will
handle flag list and comma-separated options smartly, by only suggesting
values that currently exist in the option.
Note that Vim has some existing code that adds special handling for
'filetype', 'syntax', and misc dir options like 'backupdir'. This change
preserves them as they already work, instead of converting to the new
callback API for each option.
closes: vim/vim#13182900894b09a
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Problem: No support for writing extended attributes
Solution: Add extended attribute support for linux
It's been a long standing issue, that if you write a file with extended
attributes and backupcopy is set to no, the file will loose the extended
attributes.
So this patch adds support for retrieving the extended attributes and
copying it to the new file. It currently only works on linux, mainly
because I don't know the different APIs for other systems (BSD, MacOSX and
Solaris). On linux, this should be supported since Kernel 2.4 or
something, so this should be pretty safe to use now.
Enable the extended attribute support with normal builds.
I also added it explicitly to the :version output as well as make it
able to check using `:echo has("xattr")`, to have users easily check
that this is available.
In contrast to the similar support for SELINUX and SMACK support (which
also internally uses extended attributes), I have made this a FEAT_XATTR
define, instead of the similar HAVE_XATTR.
Add a test and change CI to include relevant packages so that CI can
test that extended attributes are correctly written.
closes: vim/vim#306closes: vim/vim#13203e085dfda5d
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Use `tic -x` instead of `tic` to include any unknown capabilities in a modern `terminfo.src` as user-defined ones, instead of dropping them. Modern ncurses behavior with `tic -x` will not change.
Problem: Vim9: error codes spread out
Solution: group them together and reserve 100
more for future use
Reserve 100 error codes for future enhancements to the Vim9 class
support
closes: vim/vim#13207413f83990f
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: filename expansion using ** in bash may fail
Solution: Try to enable the globstar setting
Starting with bash 4.0 it supports extended globbing using the globstar
shell option. This makes matching recursively below a certain directory
using the ** pattern work as expected nowadays. However, we need to
explicitly enable this using the 'shopt -s globstar' bash command.
So let's check the bash environment variable $BASH_VERSINFO (which is
supported since bash 3.0 and conditionally enable the globstar option,
if the major version is at least 4. For older bashs, this at least
shouldn't cause errors (unless one is using really ancient bash 2.X or
something).
closes: vim/vim#13002closes: vim/vim#131449eb1ce5315
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Recommend adding a space after i.e. `--- @see`.
The "space" variant is common for the vast majority of docstring formats
such as doxygen, javadoc and typescript.
Problem:
NVIM_APPNAME does not allow path separators in the name, so relative
paths can't be used:
NVIM_APPNAME="neovim-configs/first-config" nvim
NVIM_APPNAME="neovim-configs/second-config" nvim
Solution:
Let NVIM_APPNAME be a relative path. Absolute paths are not supported.
fix#23056fix#24966
A lot of updated places in the docs were already incorrect since long
since they did not reflect the default behaviour.
"[dos format]" could've been argued being better for discoverability
but that ship has already sailed as it is no longer displayed by default.
runtime(doc): Add a missing '<' to the help of strutf16len() (vim/vim#13168)
790f9a890c
Co-authored-by: a5ob7r <12132068+a5ob7r@users.noreply.github.com>
The "f" flag was removed in f7da472257.
The value of the "f" flag is no longer listed in the 'shortmess'
description and it cannot be disabled, so having it in the default value
is pointless and confusing.
Oldtests clean up after themselves, and the options that need operators
to align with Vim all deny duplicates, so there is no need to set them
to default.
Also make the variable name that test_listchars.vim uses to align with
Vim more obvious.
Not everything needs to be crazy overconfigurable.
Also fixes a warning in latest clang which didn't approve of
the funky math switch statement in append_arg_number
- Remove the usage of the term "defer" to avoid confusion with
`vim.defer_fn`, which also calls `vim.schedule_wrap` internally.
- Explicitly state that `vim.schedule_wrap` returns a function in the
text.
- Mention that arguments are passed along.
- Include a usage example.
- Rename param to `fn`.
Problem: r_CTRL-C works differently in visual mode
Solution: Make r_CTRL-C behave consistent in visual mode
in terminal and Windows GUI
in visual mode, r CTRL-C behaves strange in Unix like environments. It
seems to end visual mode, but still is waiting for few more chars,
however it never seems to replace it by any characters and eventually
just returns back into normal mode.
In contrast in Windows GUI mode, r_CTRL-C replaces in the selected area
all characters by a literal CTRL-C.
Not sure why it behaves like this. It seems in the Windows GUI, got_int
is not set and therefore behaves as if any other normal character has
been pressed.
So remove the special casing of what happens when got_int is set and
make it always behave like in Windows GUI mode. Add a test to verify it
always behaves like replacing in the selected area each selected
character by a literal CTRL-C.
closes: vim/vim#13091closes: vim/vim#13112476733f3d0
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem:
With incremental injection parsing, injected languages' parsers parse
only the relevant regions and stores the result in _trees with the index
of the corresponding region. Therefore, there can be holes in _trees.
Solution:
* Use generic table functions where appropriate.
* Fix type annotations and docs.
Problem
---
If a highlighter query returns a significant number of predicate
non-matches, the highlighter will scan well past the end of the window.
Solution
---
In the iterator returned from `iter_captures`, accept an optional
parameter `end_line`. If no parameter provided, the behavior is
unchanged, hence this is a non-invasive tweak.
Fixes: #25113nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter#5057
The name for_each_child is misleading and caused bugs.
After #25111, #25115, there are no more usages of `for_each_child` in Nvim.
In the future if we want to restore this functionality we can consider a
generalized vim.traverse(node, key, visitor) function.
The removes the previous restriction that nvim_buf_set_extmark()
could not be used to highlight arbitrary multi-line regions
The problem can be summarized as follows: let's assume an extmark with a
hl_group is placed covering the region (5,0) to (50,0) Now, consider
what happens if nvim needs to redraw a window covering the lines 20-30.
It needs to be able to ask the marktree what extmarks cover this region,
even if they don't begin or end here.
Therefore the marktree needs to be augmented with the information covers
a point, not just what marks begin or end there. To do this, we augment
each node with a field "intersect" which is a set the ids of the
marks which overlap this node, but only if it is not part of the set of
any parent. This ensures the number of nodes that need to be explicitly
marked grows only logarithmically with the total number of explicitly
nodes (and thus the number of of overlapping marks).
Thus we can quickly iterate all marks which overlaps any query position
by looking up what leaf node contains that position. Then we only need
to consider all "start" marks within that leaf node, and the "intersect"
set of that node and all its parents.
Now, and the major source of complexity is that the tree restructuring
operations (to ensure that each node has T-1 <= size <= 2*T-1) also need
to update these sets. If a full inner node is split in two, one of the
new parents might start to completely overlap some ranges and its ids
will need to be moved from its children's sets to its own set.
Similarly, if two undersized nodes gets joined into one, it might no
longer completely overlap some ranges, and now the children which do
needs to have the have the ids in its set instead. And then there are
the pivots! Yes the pivot operations when a child gets moved from one
parent to another.
runtime(doc): documentation updates
This is a collection of various improvements to the help pages
closesvim/vim#12790596ad66d1d
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Houl <anwoku@yahoo.de>
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Adri Verhoef <a3@a3.xs4all.nl>
Problem:
* The guessed botline might be smaller than the actual botline e.g. when
there are folds and the user is typing in insert mode. This may result
in incorrect treesitter highlights for injections.
* botline can be larger than the last line number of the buffer, which
results in errors when placing extmarks.
Solution:
* Take a more conservative approximation. I am not sure if it is
sufficient to guarantee correctness, but it seems to be good enough
for the case mentioned above.
* Clamp it to the last line number.
Co-authored-by: Lewis Russell <me@lewisr.dev>
Problem: Various Typos
Solution: Fix Typos
This is a collection of typo related commits.
closes: vim/vim#12753closes: vim/vim#13016ee17b6f70d
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Adri Verhoef <a3@a3.xs4all.nl>
Co-authored-by: Viktor Szépe <viktor@szepe.net>
Co-authored-by: nuid64 <lvkuzvesov@proton.me>
Co-authored-by: Meng Xiangzhuo <aumo@foxmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Dominique Pellé <dominique.pelle@gmail.com>
runtime(tohtml): Update TOhtml to version 9.0v2 (vim/vim#13050)
Modified behavior:
- Change default value of g:html_use_input_for_pc from "fallback" to
"none". This means with default settings, only the standards-based
method to make special text unselectable is used. The old method
relying on unspecified browser behavior for <input> tags is now only
used if a user specifically enables it.
- Officially deprecate g:use_xhtml option (in favor of
g:html_use_xhtml) by issuing a warning message when used.
Bugfixes:
- Fix issue vim/vim#8547: LineNr and other special highlight groups did not
get proper style rules defined when using "hi link".
- Fix that diff filler was not properly added for deleted lines at the
end of a buffer.
Other:
- Refactored function definitions from long lists of strings to use
:let-heredoc variable assignment instead.
- Corrected deprecated "." string concatenation operator to ".."
operator in more places.
86cfb39030
Co-authored-by: fritzophrenic <fritzophrenic@gmail.com>
runtime: don't execute external commands when loading ftplugins
This is a followup to 816fbcc262687b81fc46f82f7bbeb1453addfe0c (patch
9.0.1833: [security] runtime file fixes)
It basically disables that external commands are run on loading of the
filetype plugin, **unless** the user has set the `g:plugin_exec = 1`
global variable in their configuration or for a specific filetype the
variable g:<filetype>_exec=1.
There are a few more plugins, that may execute system commands like
debchangelog, gitcommit, sh, racket, zsh, ps1 but those do at least
do not run those commands by default during loading of the filetype plugin
(there the command is mostly run as convenience for auto-completion or
to provide documentation lookup).
closes: vim/vim#13034f7ac0ef509
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Tim Pope <vim@tpope.org>
Problem: Now way to show text at the bottom part of floating window
border (a.k.a. "footer").
Solution: Allows `footer` and `footer_pos` config fields similar to
`title` and `title_pos`.
runtime(termdebug): more termdebug fixes and improvements (vim/vim#12892)
- Fix and attempt to simplify :Frame/:Up/:Down documentation.
- Accept a count instead for :Up/:Down/+/-.
- Update the "Last Change" dates.
- Fix a missing :let (caused an error if gdb fails to start).
- Wipe the prompt buffer when ending prompt mode (if it exists and wasn't wiped
by the user first). Avoids issues with stale prompt buffers (such as E95 when
starting a new prompt mode session).
- Kill the gdb job if the prompt buffer is unloaded (similar to what's done for
a terminal buffer). Fixes not being able to start a new termdebug session if
the buffer was wiped by the user, for example.
3d3a9152fa
runtime(termdebug): add frame related commands (vim/vim#12511)
implementing `:Frame`, `:Up` and `:Down'
2ae7ffe0bc
Use maparg() for saving K as it's since been ported (and supports Lua callbacks
and the other API fields).
Use the 3 argument variant of mapset(), as the single argument one isn't ported
yet (v8.2.4861).
Co-authored-by: Simon Sobisch <simonsobisch@web.de>
Runtime(termdebug): Add support to view local and argument variables
closes: 12403
9f29621415
Rename the existing "s:running" (#16790) to "s:gdb_running" to not clash with
the "s:running" introduced in this patch (which instead relates to whether the
debugged program is currently running in gdb).
Keep the file `:retab`bed as before.
Co-authored-by: laburnumT <flo.striker@gmail.com>
The on_detect functions returned by filetype.lua set buffer local
variables which are often used by filetype plugins. For example, the
on_detect function for shell buffers sets variables such as b:is_bash or
b:is_sh, which are used by the sh ftplugin.
When called after setting the buffer's filetype, these variables cannot
be used by the ftplugin (because they are not yet defined). Instead,
call on_detect before setting the buffer filetype so that any buffer
variables set by on_detect can be used in the ftplugin.
Problem: cannot distinguish Forth and Fortran *.f files
Solution: Add Filetype detection Code
Also add *.4th as a Forth filetype
closes: vim/vim#1225119a3bc3add
Don't remove filetype files from Vim patches:
- filetype.vim, script.vim, ft.vim usually contain useful changes
- script.vim and ft.vim don't even have their paths spelled correctly
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Problem: sidescrolloff and scrolloff options work slightly
different than other global-local options
Solution: Make it behave consistent for all global-local options
It was noticed, that sidescrolloff and scrolloff options behave
differently in comparison to other global-local window options like
'listchars'
So make those two behave like other global-local options. Also add some
extra documentation for a few special local-window options.
Add a few tests to make sure all global-local window options behave
similar
closes: vim/vim#12956closes: vim/vim#126434a8eb6e7a9
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: SafeStateAgain not triggered if callback uses feedkeys().
Solution: Check for safe state in the input loop. Make log messages easier
to find. Add 'S' flag to state().
d103ee7843
Include misc1.c change from patch 8.1.2062.
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: SafeState may be triggered at the wrong moment.
Solution: Move it up higher to after where messages are processed. Add a
SafeStateAgain event to tigger there.
69198cb8c0
SafeStateAgain is N/A.
Move SafeState functions to state.c.
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: No easy way to process postponed work. (Paul Jolly)
Solution: Add the SafeState autocommand event.
8aeec40207
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: '.-' no allowed in highlight group names
Solution: Allow dot and hyphen characters in highlight group names
Allow dots and hyphens in group names. There does not seem
to be any reason for these to be disallowed.
closes: vim/vim#12807d4376dc3eb
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
Co-authored-by: Sean Dewar <seandewar@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: no support for custom cmdline completion
Solution: Add new vimscript functions
Add the following two functions:
- getcmdcompltype() returns custom and customlist functions
- getcompletion() supports both custom and customlist
closes: vim/vim#1222892997dda78
Co-authored-by: Shougo Matsushita <Shougo.Matsu@gmail.com>
Problem: can't move to last non-blank char
Solution: Make g<end> behave like that
Make it possible to move to last non-blank char on a line
We can distinguish between g0 and g^ to move to the very first character
and the first non-blank char.
And while we can move to the last screen char, we cannot go to the last
non-blank screen char.
Since I think g$ is the more widely used and known movement command (and
g<end> is synonymous to it) change the behaviour of g<end> to move to
last non-screen char instead and don't have this be the same command as
the g$ command anymore.
If you want to keep the old behaviour, you can use:
```
nnoremap g<end> g$
```
Add a test to verify the behaviour.
closes: vim/vim#12593b5f6fe9ca2
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: reverse() does not work for a String.
Solution: Implement reverse() for a String. (Yegappan Lakshmanan,
closesvim/vim#12179)
03ff1c2dde
vim-patch:9.0.1738: Duplicate code to reverse a string
Problem: Duplicate code to reverse a string
Solution: Move reverse_text() to strings.c and remove string_reverse().
closes: vim/vim#128474dd266cb66
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: missing winid argument for virtcol()
Solution: Add a {winid} argument to virtcol()
Other functions col(), charcol() and virtcol2col() support a {winid}
argument, so it makes sense for virtcol() to also support than.
Also add test for virtcol2col() with 'showbreak' and {winid}.
closes: vim/vim#12633825cf813fa
Problem: Accepting one and zero for the second sort() argument is strange.
Solution: Disallow using one and zero in Vim9 script.
2007dd49f5
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: Functions implementing reduce and map are too long.
Solution: Use a function for each type of value. Add a few more test cases
and add to the help. (Yegappan Lakshmanan, closesvim/vim#9370)
389b72196e
Partial port as this doesn't include handling for non-materialized List.
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: Cannot use reduce() for a string.
Solution: Make reduce() work with a string. (Naruhiko Nishino, closesvim/vim#9366)
0ccb5842f5
Omit tv_get_first_char() as it doesn't really save much code.
Co-authored-by: rbtnn <naru123456789@gmail.com>
Problem: Cannot filter or map characters in a string.
Solution: Make filter() and map() work on a string. (Naruhiko Nishino,
closesvim/vim#9327)
c479ce032f
Co-authored-by: rbtnn <naru123456789@gmail.com>
Problem: virtcol2col returns last byte of a multi-byte char
Solution: Make it return the first byte for a multi-byte char
closes: vim/vim#12786closes: vim/vim#12799b209b86e66
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: Cannot use positional arguments for printf()
Solution: Support positional arguments in string formatting
closes: vim/vim#121400c6181fec4
Co-authored-by: Christ van Willegen <cvwillegen@gmail.com>
Farewell to Bram and dedicate upcoming Vim 9.1 to him (vim/vim#12749)
e978b4534a
Also update the header for the following files that were converted to Vim9
script upstream:
- autoload/ccomplete.lua (vim9jitted)
- ftplugin.vim
- ftplugof.vim
- indent.vim
- indent/vim.vim
- makemenu.vim
This also updates the "Last Change" dates, even if some changes (due to rewrites
to Vim9 script) were not ported.
There's still a few other places where Bram is still mentioned as a maintainer
in the files we and Vim have:
- ftplugin/bash.vim
- indent/bash.vim
- indent/html.vim
- indent/mail.vim
- macros/accents.vim
- macros/editexisting.vim
- syntax/bash.vim
- syntax/shared/typescriptcommon.vim
- syntax/tar.vim
- syntax/typescript.vim
- syntax/typescriptreact.vim
- syntax/zimbu.vim
Maybe future patches will address that.
Also exclude changes to .po files that didn't apply automatically (the
`:messages` maintainer string isn't used in Nvim anyway).
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem:
Treesitter highlighting is slow for large files with lots of injections.
Solution:
Only parse injections we are going to render during a redraw cycle.
---
- `LanguageTree:parse()` will no longer parse injections by default and
now requires an explicit range argument to be passed.
- `TSHighlighter` now parses injections incrementally during on_win
callbacks for the line range being rendered.
- Plugins which require certain injections to be parsed must run
`parser:parse({ start_row, end_row })` before using the tree.
Problem: Temporarily changing current window in a script causes
CursorMoved to be triggerd.
Solution: Don't trigger CursorMoved if neither curwin nor cursor
changed between two checks.
Problem: cannot store custom data in quickfix list
Solution: add `user_data` field for the quickfix list
closes: vim/vim#11818ca6ac99077
Co-authored-by: Tom Praschan <13141438+tom-anders@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: undotree() only works for the current buffer
Solution: Add an optional "buffer number" parameter to undotree(). If
omitted, use the current buffer for backwards compatibility.
closes: vim/vim#4001closes: vim/vim#122925fee111149
Co-authored-by: Devin J. Pohly <djpohly@gmail.com>
* feat(treesitter): add injection language fallback
Problem: injection languages are often specified via aliases (e.g.,
filetype or in upper case), requiring custom directives.
Solution: include lookup logic (try as parser name, then filetype, then
lowercase) in LanguageTree itself and remove `#inject-language`
directive.
Co-authored-by: Lewis Russell <me@lewisr.dev>
This is a collection of various PRs from github that all require a minor
patch number:
1) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12612
Do not conflate dictionary key with end of block
2) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12729:
When saving and restoring 'undolevels', the constructs `&undolevels` and
`:set undolevels` are problematic.
The construct `&undolevels` reads an unpredictable value; it will be the
local option value (if one has been set), or the global option value
(otherwise), making it unsuitable for saving a value for later
restoration.
Similarly, if a local option value has been set for 'undolevels',
temporarily modifying the option via `:set undolevels` changes the local
value as well as the global value, requiring extra work to restore both
values.
Saving and restoring the option value in one step via the construct
`:let &undolevels = &undolevels` appears to make no changes to the
'undolevels' option, but if a local option has been set to a different
value than the global option, it has the unintended effect of changing
the global 'undolevels' value to the local value.
Update the documentation to explain these issues and recommend explicit
use of global and local option values when saving and restoring. Update
some unit tests to use `g:undolevels`.
3) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12702:
Problem: Pip requirements files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern to match pip requirements files.
4) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12688:
Add indent file and tests for ABB Rapid
5) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12668:
Use Lua 5.1 numeric escapes in tests and add to CI
Only Lua 5.2+ and LuaJIT understand hexadecimal escapes in strings. Lua
5.1 only supports decimal escapes:
> A character in a string can also be specified by its numerical value
> using the escape sequence \ddd, where ddd is a sequence of up to three
> decimal digits. (Note that if a numerical escape is to be followed by a
> digit, it must be expressed using exactly three digits.) Strings in Lua
> can contain any 8-bit value, including embedded zeros, which can be
> specified as '\0'.
To make sure this works with Lua 5.4 and Lua 5.1 change the Vim CI to
run with Lua 5.1 as well as Lua 5.4
6) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12631:
Add hurl filetype detection
7) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12573:
Problem: Files for haskell persistent library are not recognized
Solution: Add pattern persistentmodels for haskell persistent library
closes: vim/vim#12612closes: vim/vim#12729closes: vim/vim#12702closes: vim/vim#12688closes: vim/vim#12668closes: vim/vim#12631closes: vim/vim#12573
Already ported but wasn't marked: vim-patch:ad34abee2583
6efb198033
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: lacygoill <lacygoill@lacygoill.me>
Co-authored-by: Michael Henry <drmikehenry@drmikehenry.com>
Co-authored-by: ObserverOfTime <chronobserver@disroot.org>
Co-authored-by: KnoP-01 <knosowski@graeffrobotics.de>
Co-authored-by: James McCoy <jamessan@jamessan.com>
Co-authored-by: Jacob Pfeifer <jacob@pfeifer.dev>
Co-authored-by: Borys Lykah <lykahb@fastmail.com>
Update the vimscript code for restoring cursor position
Using xxd(1) to filter and edit binary files causes the input files
to have dual nature, so to speak, which effectively makes restoring
the cursor position broken. Fix that by ignoring the "xxd" file type
in the code that restores the cursor position.
Interactive rebasing in git causes files to be edited in vim, which,
similarly to commit messages, are rarely the same as the last one
edited. Thus, also add "gitrebase" to the list of file types for
which the cursor position isn't restored.
While there, refactor the code a bit to possibly save a few CPU cycles
and to keep the line lengths in check, and use the long form of the
commands and variables, to make the code slightly more consistent and
more understandable to newcomers.
Update the relevant comments in the code and the associated parts of
the documentation, to keep them in sync with the updated code.
Remove some redundant trailing whitespace as well, as spotted.
81b8bf5b4a
Co-authored-by: Dragan Simic' via vim_dev <vim_dev@googlegroups.com>
Improve the vimscript code in ":h hex-editing"
Save and restore the view position before and after saving the buffer,
respectively, to keep the current view of the xxd(1)'s hex dump
unchanged after doing ":w", which previously caused the window to
scroll back to the very beginning of the buffer. I believe it's
needless to say how annoying and counterproductive that was.
Get rid of the "Press ENTER or type command to continue" message, which
was previously displayed after opening larger binary files. The use
of "silent" and "redraw" commands is tailored specifically to avoid
screen flickering, e.g. when doing ":w", which is caused by the buffer
being filtered by an external command.
Increase the number of octets per line, produced by xxd(1), from the
default value of 16 to 32. This puts bigger chunks of the hex dump
on the screen and makes the whole thing much more usable.
While there, reformat the code to make it more readable, and use the
long form of the commands and variables to make the code slightly more
consistent and more understandable to newcomers.
6a500661a9
Co-authored-by: Dragan Simic' via vim_dev <vim_dev@googlegroups.com>
Problem:
Nvim docs use "•" as a list item prefix but `gw{motion}` doesn't format
such lists by default.
Solution:
Change the 'comments' option to include "fb:•" by default.
If an iterator pipeline stage returns nil as its first return value, the
other return values are ignored and it is treated as if that stage
returned only nil (the semantics of returning nil are different between
different stages). This is consistent with how for loops work in Lua
more generally, where the for loop breaks when the first return value
from the function iterator is nil (see :h for-in for details).
Fix alignment in filetype.txt (vim/vim#12618)
There are three spaces because the "<" is concealed.
0401933a5b
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
Change "the" to "then" under ':help bufload()' (vim/vim#12662)
c2bd205254
N/A commits:
vim-patch:64dea84bb05a (we have our own manpager at home)
vim-patch:958e15bb1c7d (we have our own editorconfig syntax file)
vim-patch:c41b3c9f95ac (we don't have defaults.vim)
Co-authored-by: Daniel Steinberg <dstein64@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: luals returns stricter diagnostics with bundled luarc.json
Solution: Improve some function and type annotations:
* use recognized uv.* types
* disable diagnostic for global `vim` in shared.lua
* docs: don't start comment lines with taglink (otherwise LuaLS will interpret it as a type)
* add type alias for lpeg pattern
* fix return annotation for `vim.secure.trust`
* rename local Range object in vim.version (shadows `Range` in vim.treesitter)
* fix some "missing fields" warnings
* add missing required fields for test functions in eval.lua
* rename lsp meta files for consistency
These two functions seem to have previously had their docs start on the same
line as the signature, which I guess contributed to the lines being lost (though
I checked all other such functions from before again and these were the only
two).
* docs(options): take ownership of options.txt
- `src/nvim/options.lua` is now the source of truth
- generate runtime/lua/vim/_meta/options.lua
* fixup! zeer comments
* fixup! zeer comments (2)
* fixup! re-enable luacheck
* fixup! regen
PR #23689 assumes `client.config.capabilities.workspace.didChangeWatchedFiles`
exists when checking `dynamicRegistration`, but thats's true only if it was
passed to `vim.lsp.start{_client}`.
This caused #23806 (still an issue in v0.9.1; needs manual backport), but #23681
fixed it by defaulting `config.capabilities` to `make_client_capabilities` if
not passed to `vim.lsp.start{_client}`.
However, the bug resurfaces on HEAD if you provide a non-nil `capabilities` to
`vim.lsp.start{_client}` with missing fields (e.g: not made via
`make_client_capabilities`).
From what I see, the spec says such missing fields should be interpreted as an
absence of the capability (including those indicated by missing sub-fields):
https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#clientCapabilities
Also, suggest `vim.empty_dict()` for an empty dict in
`:h vim.lsp.start_client()` (`{[vim.type_idx]=vim.types.dictionary}`
no longer works anyway, probably since the cjson switch).
Now that we "own" builtin.txt, we cant remove the repetitive mention of
Vimscript's UFCS syntax. It's noisy to mention this for each function,
and it's also not a Vimscript feature that should be encouraged.
Also change the builtin.txt heading to "NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL", which
indicates when a help file is Nvim-owned.
Problem: cache paths are derived by replacing each reserved/filesystem-
path-sensitive char with a `%` char in the original path. With this
method, two different files at two different paths (each containing `%`
chars) can erroneously resolve to the very same cache path in certain
edge-cases.
Solution: derive cache paths by url-encoding the original (path) instead
using `vim.uri_encode()` with `"rfc2396"`. Increment `Loader.VERSION` to
denote this change.
- eval.lua is now the source of truth.
- Formatting is much more consistent.
- Fixed Lua type generation for polymorphic functions (get(), etc).
- Removed "Overview" section from builtin.txt
- Can generate this if we really want it.
- Moved functions from sign.txt and testing.txt into builtin.txt.
- Removed the *timer* *timers* tags since libuv timers via vim.uv should be preferred.
- Removed the temp-file-name tag from tempname()
- Moved lueval() from lua.txt to builtin.txt.
* Fix indent
* fixup!
* fixup! fixup!
* fixup! better tag formatting
* fixup: revert changes no longer needed
* fixup! CI
---------
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
This aligns its behaviour better with `nvim_win_close`.
Note that `:hide` is actually incapable of closing the cmdwin, unlike `:close`
and `:quit`, so this is a bit of a difference in behaviour.
Problem: As discussed on Matrix, there was some interest in having
`nvim_open_win` again be able to open floats in the cmdwin (e.g: displaying a
hover doc related to what's in the cmdwin). After #23228, this was disallowed.
Solution: Allow `nvim_open_win` in the cmdwin as long as `!enter` and
`buffer != curbuf` (the former can cause all sorts of issues, and the latter
can crash Nvim after closing cmdwin). Also allow `nvim_win_set_buf` in a similar
fashion.
Note that we're not *entirely* sure if this is 100% safe (cmdwin is a
global-state-using-main-loop-calling beast), but this seems to work OK..?
Also:
- Check the buffer argument of `nvim_open_win` earlier, and abort if it's
invalid (it used to still open a window in this case).
- Untranslate `e_cmdwin` errors in the API (other errors in the API are not
translated: although not detailed in the API contract yet, errors are
supposed to be stable).
Problem: No test for bad use of spaces in help files.
Solution: Add checks for use of spaces in help files. Ignore intentional
spaces. (Hirohito Higashi, closesvim/vim#11952)
d950984489
Cherry-pick changes from patch 9.0.1604.
Co-authored-by: h-east <h.east.727@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
* docs(lua): teach lua2dox how to table
* docs(lua): teach gen_vimdoc.py about local functions
No more need to mark local functions with @private
* docs(lua): mention @nodoc and @meta in dev-lua-doc
* fixup!
Co-authored-by: Justin M. Keyes <justinkz@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Justin M. Keyes <justinkz@gmail.com>
* perf(rtp): reduce rtp scans
Problem:
Scanning the filesystem is expensive and particularly affects
startuptime.
Solution:
Reduce the amount of redundant directory scans by relying less on glob
patterns and handle vim and lua sourcing lower down.