perf(lsp): load buffer contents once when processing semantic token responses
Using _get_line_byte_from_position() for each token's boundaries was a
pretty huge bottleneck, since that function would load individual buffer
lines via nvim_buf_get_lines() (plus a lot of extra overhead). So each
token caused two calls to nvim_buf_get_lines() (once for the start
position, and once for the end position).
For semantic tokens, we only attach to buffers that have already been
loaded, so we can safely just get all the lines for the entire buffer at
once, and lift the rest of the _get_line_byte_from_position()
implementation directly while bypassing the part that loads the buffer
line.
While I was looking at get_lines (used by _get_line_byte_from_position),
I noticed that we were checking for non-file URIs before we even looked
to see if we already had the buffer loaded. Moving the buffer-loaded
check to be the first thing done in get_lines() more than halved the
average time spent transforming the token list into highlight ranges vs
when it was still using _get_line_byte_from_position. I ended up
improving that loop more by not using get_lines, but figured the
performance improvement it provided was worth leaving in.
When injections are added or removed make sure to:
- invoke 'changedtree' callbacks for when new trees are added.
- invoke 'changedtree' callbacks for when trees are invalidated
- redraw regions when languagetree children are removed
Packing and unpacking return values impairs performance considerably.
In an attempt to avoid creating tables as much as possible we can
instead pass return values between functions (which does not require
knowing the number of values a function might return). This makes the
code more complex, but improves benchmark numbers non-trivially.
* vim-patch:9.0.1478: filetypes for *.v files not detected properly
Problem: Filetypes for *.v files not detected properly.
Solution: Use the file contents to detect the filetype. (Turiiya,
closesvim/vim#12281)
80406c2618
Co-authored-by: Turiiya <34311583+tobealive@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonas Strittmatter <40792180+smjonas@users.noreply.github.com>
This is a more robust method for tagging a packed table as it completely
eliminates the possibility of mistaking an actual table key as the
packed table tag.
Problem:
`vim.split('a:::', ':', {trimempty=true})` trims inner empty items.
Regression from 9c49c10470
Solution:
Set `empty_start=false` when first non-empty item is found.
close#23212
fix(treesitter playground): wrong range of a node displayed in playground
The call parameters order of the function `get_range_str` is flipped for the last two arguments compared to the declaration.
This was originally meant as a convenience but prevents possible
functionality. For example:
-- Get the keys of the table with even values
local t = { a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4 }
vim.iter(t):map(function(k, v)
if v % 2 == 0 then return k end
end):totable()
The example above would not work, because the map() function returns
only a single value, and cannot be converted back into a table (there
are many such examples like this).
Instead, to convert an iterator into a map-like table, users can use
fold():
vim.iter(t):fold({}, function(t, k, v)
t[k] = v
return t
end)
If pack() is called with a single value, it does not create a table; it
simply returns the value it is passed. When unpack is called with a
table argument, it interprets that table as a list of values that were
packed together into a table.
This causes a problem when the single value being packed is _itself_ a
table. pack() will not place it into another table, but unpack() sees
the table argument and tries to unpack it.
To fix this, we add a simple "tag" to packed table values so that
unpack() only attempts to unpack tables that have this tag. Other tables
are left alone. The tag is simply the length of the table.
Problem: Jenkinsfiles are not recognized as groovy.
Solution: Add a pattern for Jenkinsfiles. (closesvim/vim#12236)
142ffb024d
Co-authored-by: dundargoc <gocdundar@gmail.com>
vim.iter wraps a table or iterator function into an `Iter` object with
methods such as `filter`, `map`, and `fold` which can be chained to
produce iterator pipelines that do not create new tables at each step.
- vim.diagnostic.config() now accepts a function for the virtual_text.prefix
option, which allows for rendering e.g., diagnostic severities differently.
shell_error is a function, the code missed parentheses
The actual module for perl module version is App::cpanminus::script, not
App::cpanminus::fatscript.
Problem: C++ 20 modules are not recognized.
Solution: Add patterns to recognize C++ 20 modules as "cpp". (Ben Jackson,
closesvim/vim#12261)
732d69e191
Co-authored-by: Ben Jackson <puremourning@gmail.com>
feat(lua)!: add stricter vim.tbl_islist(), rename vim.tbl_isarray()
Problem: `vim.tbl_islist` allows gaps in tables with integer keys
("arrays").
Solution: Rename `vim.tbl_islist` to `vim.tbl_isarray`, add new
`vim.tbl.islist` that checks for consecutive integer keys that start
from 1.
* feat(lua): vim.tbl_contains supports general tables and predicates
Problem: `vim.tbl_contains` only works for list-like tables (integer
keys without gaps) and primitive values (in particular, not for nested
tables).
Solution: Rename `vim.tbl_contains` to `vim.list_contains` and add new
`vim.tbl_contains` that works for general tables and optionally allows
`value` to be a predicate function that is checked for every key.
The first argument which is non-nil is returned. This is useful when
using nested default values (e.g. in the EditorConfig plugin).
Before:
local enable = vim.F.if_nil(vim.b.editorconfig, vim.F.if_nil(vim.g.editorconfig, true))
After:
local enable = vim.F.if_nil(vim.b.editorconfig, vim.g.editorconfig, true)
Problem:
Codebase inconsistently binds vim.api onto a or api.
Solution:
Use api everywhere. a as an identifier is too short to have at the
module level.
Problem: .fs files are falsely recognized as forth files.
Solution: Check 100 lines for something that looks like forth. (Johan
Kotlinski, closesvim/vim#12219, closesvim/vim#11988)
065088d554
Co-authored-by: Johan Kotlinski <kotlinski@gmail.com>
Whenever we run fs_stat() on a path, save this information in the loader
so it can be re-used.
- Loader.loadfile: Remove arguments `hash` as it is no longer needed.
- Loader.loader: Use _G.loadstring instead of Loader.load
This allows plugins to wrap loadstring to inspection and profiling
- factor out read file logic
Problem: Livebook files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern for Livebook files. (Mathias Jean Johansen,
closesvim/vim#12203)
6400203517
Co-authored-by: Mathias Jean Johansen <mathias@mjj.io>
Problem:
LSP docs hover (textDocument/hover) doesn't handle HTML escape seqs in markdown.
Solution:
Convert common HTML escape seqs to a nicer form, to display in the float.
closees #22757
Signed-off-by: Kasama <robertoaall@gmail.com>
Problem: "wat" and "wast" files are one filetype.
Solution: Add a separate filetype for "wat" files. (Amaan Qureshi,
closesvim/vim#12165)
3ea62381c5
Co-authored-by: Amaan Qureshi <amaanq12@gmail.com>
Problem:
semver specifies that digit sequences in a prerelease string should be
compared as numbers, not lexically: https://semver.org/#spec-item-11
> Precedence for two pre-release versions with the same major, minor,
> and patch version MUST be determined by comparing each dot separated
> identifier from left to right until a difference is found as follows:
> 1. Identifiers consisting of only digits are compared numerically.
> 2. Identifiers with letters or hyphens are compared lexically in ASCII sort order.
> 3. Numeric identifiers always have lower precedence than non-numeric identifiers.
> 4. A larger set of pre-release fields has a higher precedence than a smaller set, if all of the preceding identifiers are equal.
Example:
1.0.0-alpha < 1.0.0-alpha.1 < 1.0.0-alpha.beta < 1.0.0-beta < 1.0.0-beta.2 < 1.0.0-beta.11 < 1.0.0-rc.1 < 1.0.0.
Solution:
cmp_prerel() treats all digit sequences in a prerelease string as
numbers. This doesn't _exactly_ match the spec, which specifies that
only dot-delimited digit sequences should be treated as numbers...
Problem:
- vim.split has more features than vim.gsplit.
- Cannot inspect the "separator" segments of vim.split or vim.gsplit.
Solution:
- Move common implementation from vim.split into vim.gsplit.
- TODO: deprecate vim.split in favor of vim.totable(vim.gsplit())?
- Introduce `keepsep` parameter.
Related: 84f66909e4
vim-patch:9.0.1419: Lean files are not recognized
Problem: Lean files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern for Lean files. (Amaan Qureshi, closesvim/vim#12177)
4a5c39fc52
vim-patch:9.0.1421: Nu files are not recognized
Problem: Nu files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern for Nu files. (Amaan Qureshi, closesvim/vim#12172)
8aa2a37f89
vim-patch:9.0.1422: Sage files are not recognized
Problem: Sage files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern for Sage files. (Amaan Qureshi, closesvim/vim#12176)
d0639d717b
vim-patch:9.0.1423: WebAssembly Interface Type files are not recognized
Problem: WebAssembly Interface Type files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern for WIT files. (Amaan Qureshi, closesvim/vim#12173)
890c772036
Problem:
"tmux 3.2a" (output from "tmux -V") is not parsed easily.
Solution:
With `strict=false`, discard everything before the first digit.
- rename Semver => Version
- rename vim.version.version() => vim.version._version()
- rename matches() => has()
- remove `opts` from cmp()
Problem:
vim.treesitter.inspect_tree() and :InspectTree does not respect 'splitright'.
Solution:
- Change the default `command` from `topleft 60vnew` to `60vnew`.
- Change :InspectTree to respect command mods (`:vertical`, count, etc.).
Closes#22656
Problem: ILE RPG files are not recognized.
Solution: Add patterns for ILE RPG files. (Andreas Louv, issue vim/vim#12152)
e202ec8a0c
Co-authored-by: Andreas Louv <andreas@louv.dk>
Problem:
vim.deprecate() shows ":help deprecated" for third-party plugins. ":help
deprecated" only describes deprecations in Nvim, and is unrelated to any
3rd party deprecations.
Solution:
If `plugin` is specified, don't show ":help deprecated".
fix#22235
Problem:
When LSP client renames a directory, opened buffers in the edfitor are not
renamed or closed. Then `:wall` shows errors.
https://github.com/neovim/neovim/blob/master/runtime/lua/vim/lsp/util.lua#L776
works correctly if you try to rename a single file, but doesn't delete old
buffers with `old_fname` is a dir.
Solution:
Update the logic in runtime/lua/vim/lsp/util.lua:rename()
Fixes#22617
Problem:
The function name `vim.pretty_print`:
1. is verbose, which partially defeats its purpose as sugar
2. does not draw from existing precedent or any sort of convention
(except external projects like penlight or python?), which reduces
discoverability, and degrades signaling about best practices.
Solution:
- Rename to `vim.print`.
- Change the behavior so that
1. strings are printed without quotes
2. each arg is printed on its own line
3. tables are indented with 2 instead of 4 spaces
- Example:
:lua ='a', 'b', 42, {a=3}
a
b
42
{
a = 3
}
Comparison of alternatives:
- `vim.print`:
- pro: consistent with Lua's `print()`
- pro: aligns with potential `nvim_print` API function which will
replace nvim_echo, nvim_notify, etc.
- con: behaves differently than Lua's `print()`, slightly misleading?
- `vim.echo`:
- pro: `:echo` has similar "pretty print" behavior.
- con: inconsistent with Lua idioms.
- `vim.p`:
- pro: very short, fits with `vim.o`, etc.
- con: not as discoverable as "echo"
- con: less opportunity for `local p = vim.p` because of potential shadowing.
Although using `buffer://` for unsaved file buffers fixes issues with
language servers like eclipse.jdt.ls or ansible-language-server, it
breaks completion and signature help for clangd.
A regression is worse than a fix for something else, so this reverts
commit 896d672736.
The spec change is also still in dicussion, see
https://github.com/microsoft/language-server-protocol/pull/1679#discussion_r1130704886
Never return the changes an only notify them using the `on_changedtree`
callback.
It is not guaranteed for a plugin that it'll be the first one to call
`tree:parse()` and thus get the changes.
Closes#19915
This commit replaces the usage of math.floor((lo + hi) / 2) with the faster and equivalent bit.rshift(lo + hi, 1) for calculating the midpoint in binary search.
* Also fix newly found type mismatch.
* Note that it generates new warnings about using @private client
methods. A proper fix would be to revamp the lsp client documentation
altogether.
Problem:
Some built-in ftplugins set omnifunc/tagfunc/formatexpr which causes
lsp.lua:set_defaults() to skip setup of defaults for those filetypes.
For example the C++ ftplugin has:
omnifunc=ccomplete#Complete
Last set from /usr/share/nvim/runtime/ftplugin/c.vim line 30
so the changes done in #95c65a6b221fe6e1cf91e8322e7d7571dc511a71
will always be skipped for C++ files.
Solution:
Overwrite omnifunc/tagfunc/formatexpr options that were set by stock
ftplugin.
Fixes#21001
Problem:
:Man command errors if given more than two arguments. Thus, it is
impossible to open man pages that contain spaces in their names.
Solution:
Adjust :Man so that it tries variants with spaces and underscores, and
uses the first found.
also make implicit submodules "uri" and "_inspector" work with completion
this is needed for `:lua=vim.uri_<tab>` wildmenu completion
to work even before uri or _inspector functions are used.
feat(lsp)!: change semantic token highlighting
Change the default highlights used, and add more highlights per token.
Add an LspTokenUpdate event and a highlight_token function.
:Inspect now shows any highlights applied by token highlighting rules,
default or user-defined.
BREAKING CHANGE: change the default highlight groups used by semantic
token highlighting.
Problem:
If major<major but minor>minor, cmp_version_core returns 1
Solution:
- Fix logic in cmp_version_core
- Delete most eq()/gt()/lt() tests, they are redundant.
- version.cmp(): assert valid version
- add test for loading vim.version (the other tests use shared.lua in
the test runner)
- reduce test scopes, reword test descriptions
Problem:
gen_vimdoc.py / lua2dox.lua does not support @defgroup or \defgroup
except for "api-foo" modules.
Solution:
Modify `gen_vimdoc.py` to look for section names based on `helptag_fmt`.
TODO:
- Support @module ?
https://github.com/LuaLS/lua-language-server/wiki/Annotations#module
Fixes:
Error SERVER_REQUEST_HANDLER_ERROR: "...di/dev/neovim/neovim/runtime/lua/vim/lsp/_watchfiles.lua
:200: bad argument #1 to 'ipairs' (table expected, got nil)"
Language servers can be started without root_dir or workspace_folders.
Problem:
Help tags like vim.treesitter.language.add() are confusing because
`vim.treesitter.language` is (thankfully) not a user-facing module.
Solution:
Ignore the "fstem" when generating "treesitter" tags.
When toggling anonymous nodes in the :InspectTree window, keep the
cursor fixed relative to the node within the tree. This prevents the
cursor from jumping.
Problem:
"show" is potentially a new verb that we can avoid (there is already
"open" and "echo"). Even if we can't avoid it, the behavior of
`show_tree` fits well in the "inspect" family of functions: a way for
users to introspect/reflect on the state of Nvim.
Existing "inspect" functions:
vim.inspect()
vim.inspect_pos()
vim.treesitter.inspect_language()
nvim__inspect_cell
Solution:
Rename `show_tree` to `inspect_tree`.
Problem:
No easy way to find files under certain directories (ex: grab all files under
`test/`) or exclude the content of certain paths (ex. `build/`, `.git/`)
Solution:
Pass the full `path` as an arg to the predicate.
If the LSP server fails to start then the client never initializes and
thus never calls its on_attach function and an LspAttach event is
never fired. However, the on_exit function still fires a LspDetach
event, so user autocommands that attempt to "clean up" in LspDetach may
run into problems if they assume that the buffer was already attached.
The solution is to only fire an LspDetach event if the buffer was
already attached in the first place.
redraw! redraws the entire screen instead of just the windows with
the buffer which were actually changed.
I considered trying to calculating the range for the delta
but it looks tricky. Could a follow-up.
Problem:
Treesitter injections are slow because all injected trees are invalidated on every change.
Solution:
Implement smarter invalidation to avoid reparsing injected regions.
- In on_bytes, try and update self._regions as best we can. This PR just offsets any regions after the change.
- Add valid flags for each region in self._regions.
- Call on_bytes recursively for all children.
- We still need to run the query every time for the top level tree. I don't know how to avoid this. However, if the new injection ranges don't change, then we re-use the old trees and avoid reparsing children.
This should result in roughly a 2-3x reduction in tree parsing when the comment injections are enabled.
This function replaces both vim.treesitter.get_node_at_pos() and
vim.treesitter.get_node_at_cursor(). These two functions are similar
enough that they don't need separate interfaces. Even worse,
get_node_at_pos() returns a TSNode while get_node_at_cursor() returns a
string, so the two functions behave slightly differently.
vim.treesitter.get_node() combines these two into a more streamlined
interface. With no arguments, it returns the node under the cursor in
the current buffer. Optionally, it can accept a buffer number or a
position to get the node at a given position in a given buffer.
Problem:
vim.treesitter does not know how to map a specific filetype to a parser.
This creates problems since in a few places (including in vim.treesitter itself), the filetype is incorrectly used in place of lang.
Solution:
Add an API to enable this:
- Add vim.treesitter.language.add() as a replacement for vim.treesitter.language.require_language().
- Optional arguments are now passed via an opts table.
- Also takes a filetype (or list of filetypes) so we can keep track of what filetypes are associated with which langs.
- Deprecated vim.treesitter.language.require_language().
- Add vim.treesitter.language.get_lang() which returns the associated lang for a given filetype.
- Add vim.treesitter.language.register() to associate filetypes to a lang without loading the parser.
If nothing matched in match_from_hashbang, also check the file extension table.
For a hashbang like '#!/bin/env foo', this will set the filetype to 'fooscript'
assuming the filetype for the 'foo' extension is 'fooscript' in the extension
table.
The original motivation for this change came from developping
https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/22159, which will require adding
more autocommand creation to Neovim's startup sequence.
This change requires lightly editing a test that expected no autocommand
to have been created from lua.
- Render node ranges as virtual text
- Set filettype=query. The virtual text is to avoid parsing errors.
- Make sure highlights text is always in view.
Problem: Move language files are not recognized.
Solution: Recognize Move language files. (Amaan Qureshi, closesvim/vim#11947)
6642982bea
Co-authored-by: Amaan Qureshi <amaanq12@gmail.com>
In a few places ipairs was used to iterate over elements of the array.
However, the first return value of ipairs was erronously used, which is
not the value, but rather the index. This would result in errors, for
instance when trying to retrieve a field from the value.
Problem: .clangd and .stylelintrc files don't get a filetype.
Solution: Use yaml for .clangd and json for .stylelintrc files. (Mark
Skelton, closesvim/vim#11916)
9c51798a1f
Co-authored-by: Mark Skelton <mdskelton99@gmail.com>
This value can not be relied on as it doesn't work for
multi-configuration generators. I don't think this undocumented option
is used much, if at all, so I think we should remove it.
Problem: NetworkManager connection files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern for NetworkManager connection files. (closesvim/vim#11893)
04e4f1d985
Co-authored-by: ObserverOfTime <chronobserver@disroot.org>
Problem: Some injections (like markdown) allow specifying arbitrary
language names for code blocks, which may be lead to errors when
looking for a corresponding parser in runtime path.
Solution: Validate that the language name only contains alphanumeric
characters and `_` (e.g., for `c_sharp`) and error otherwise.
`vim.lsp.buf.format()` silently did nothing if no servers supported
`textDocument/rangeFormatting` when formatting with a range.
Issue found by `@hwrd:matrix.org` in the Matrix chat.
Problem:
Build is not reproducible, because generated source files (.c/.h/) are not
deterministic, mostly because Lua pairs() is unordered by design (for security).
https://github.com/LuaJIT/LuaJIT/issues/626#issuecomment-707005671https://www.lua.org/manual/5.1/manual.html#pdf-next
> The order in which the indices are enumerated is not specified [...]
>
>> The hardening of the VM deliberately randomizes string hashes. This in
>> turn randomizes the iteration order of tables with string keys.
Solution:
- Update the code generation scripts to be deterministic.
- That is only a partial solution: the exported function
(funcs_metadata.generated.h) and ui event
(ui_events_metadata.generated.h) metadata have some mpack'ed
tables, which are not serialized deterministically.
- As a workaround, introduce `PRG_GEN_LUA` cmake setting, so you can
inject a modified build of luajit (with LUAJIT_SECURITY_PRN=0)
that preserves table order.
- Longer-term we should change the mpack'ed data structure so it no
longer uses tables keyed by strings.
Closes#20124
Co-Authored-By: dundargoc <gocdundar@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Arnout Engelen <arnout@bzzt.net>
According to the specification `workspace/applyEdit` must be called with
`ApplyWorkspaceEditParams`.
So far the client just returned, which could lead to a misleading error
on the server side because `workspace/applyEdit` must respond with a
`ApplyWorkspaceEditResult`.
This adds an assertion to clarify that the server is violating the
specification.
See https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/21925
Problem: On tmux v3.2+, the `terminal-features` option may be used to enable RGB
capabilities over `terminal-overrides`. However, `show-messages` cannot be used
to detect if RGB capabilities are enabled using `terminal-features`.
Solution: Try to use `display-message -p #{client_termfeatures}` instead.
The returned features include "RGB" if either "RGB" is set in
`terminal-features`, or if "Tc" or "RGB" is set in `terminal-overrides` (as
before).
Nothing is returned by tmux versions older than v3.2, so fallback to checking
`show-messages` in that case.
Also, un-Vimscriptify the previous logic a bit, and change the error message to
point to using the `terminal-features` option instead for newer tmux versions.
Regression from the health.vim to .lua changes.
Unlike Vim script, Lua does not implicitly convert strings to numbers, so this
comparison threw an error.
Problem: Some Bazel files are not recognized.
Solution: Add an extra Bazel pattern. (Keith Smily, closesvim/vim#11807)
3213952966
Co-authored-by: Keith Smiley <keithbsmiley@gmail.com>
This small changes just ensures that if you're using `convert_input_to_markdown_lines`
without `contents` you don't get a warning (when using something like neodev) that
there is an expected second param, since it can be nil.
Problem: go checksum files are not recognized.
Solution: Add the name of go checksum files. (Amaan Qureshi, closesvim/vim#11803)
043d7b2c84
Co-authored-by: Amaan Q <amaanq12@gmail.com>
Small, but I was getting warnings about my usage of
`vim.lsp.buf_notify(bufnr, method, {example = example})` since the docs
say that `params` must be a string, however this can really be anything
when it's passed to `rpc.notify` since we just end up calling
`vim.json.encode(payload)` on it. This fixes the docs in those two
places and regenerates them.
Problem: smithy files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern for Smithy files. (Chris Kipp, closesvim/vim#11804)
f68cddabff
Co-authored-by: Chris Kipp <ckipp@pm.me>
Problem:
No easy way to position a LSP hover window relative to mouse.
Solution:
Introduce another option to the `relative` key in `nvim_open_win()`.
With this PR it should be possible to override the handler and do something
similar to this https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/19481#issuecomment-1193248674
to have hover information displayed from the mouse.
Test case:
```lua
local util = require('vim.lsp.util')
local function make_position_param(window, offset_encoding)
window = window or 0
local buf = vim.api.nvim_win_get_buf(window)
local row, col
local mouse = vim.fn.getmousepos()
row = mouse.line
col = mouse.column
offset_encoding = offset_encoding or util._get_offset_encoding(buf)
row = row - 1
local line = vim.api.nvim_buf_get_lines(buf, row, row + 1, true)[1]
if not line then
return { line = 0, character = 0 }
end
if #line < col then
return { line = 0, character = 0 }
end
col = util._str_utfindex_enc(line, col, offset_encoding)
return { line = row, character = col }
end
local make_params = function(window, offset_encoding)
window = window or 0
local buf = vim.api.nvim_win_get_buf(window)
offset_encoding = offset_encoding or util._get_offset_encoding(buf)
return {
textDocument = util.make_text_document_params(buf),
position = make_position_param(window, offset_encoding),
}
end
local hover_timer = nil
vim.o.mousemoveevent = true
vim.keymap.set({ '', 'i' }, '<MouseMove>', function()
if hover_timer then
hover_timer:close()
end
hover_timer = vim.defer_fn(function()
hover_timer = nil
local params = make_params()
vim.lsp.buf_request(
0,
'textDocument/hover',
params,
vim.lsp.with(vim.lsp.handlers.hover, {
silent = true,
focusable = false,
relative = 'mouse',
})
)
end, 500)
return '<MouseMove>'
end, { expr = true })
```
For users using vim.lsp.start it can be useful to get an
overview of active client that is less verbose than a full `:lua
=vim.lsp.get_active_clients()`
This is the first PR featuring a conversion of an upstream vim9script file
into a Lua file.
The generated file can be found in `runtime/autoload/ccomplete.vim` in
the vim repository. Below is a limited history of the changes of that file
at the time of conversion.
```
❯ git log --format=oneline runtime/autoload/ccomplete.vim
c4573eb12dba6a062af28ee0b8938d1521934ce4 Update runtime files
a4d131d11052cafcc5baad2273ef48e0dd4d09c5 Update runtime files
4466ad6baa22485abb1147aca3340cced4778a66 Update runtime files
d1caa941d876181aae0ebebc6ea954045bf0da24 Update runtime files
20aac6c1126988339611576d425965a25a777658 Update runtime files.
30b658179962cc3c9f0a98f071b36b09a36c2b94 Updated runtime files.
b6b046b281fac168a78b3eafdea9274bef06882f Updated runtime files.
00a927d62b68a3523cb1c4f9aa3f7683345c8182 Updated runtime files.
8c8de839325eda0bed68917d18179d2003b344d1 (tag: v7.2a) updated for version 7.2a
...
```
The file runtime/lua/_vim9script.lua only needs to be updated when vim9jit is updated
(for any bug fixes or new features, like implementing class and interface, the latest in vim9script).
Further PRs will improve the DX of generated the converted lua and
tracking which files in the neovim's code base have been generated.
This is intentionally _not_ copied from Vim because our syntax file
makes use of Lua to dynamically generate a list of valid EditorConfig
properties. This requires the builtin editorconfig module, which Vim
does not have.
Currently once you retrieve the lenses you're pretty much stuck with
them as saving new lenses is additive.
Adding a dedicated method to reset lenses allows users to toggle lenses
on/off which can be useful for language servers where they are noisy or
expensive and you only want to see them temporary.
Fixes#21543
This should provide a better user experience when appending or prepending text to a word that has a semantic token extmark. More often than not, the appended/prepended text to the word will end up becoming part of the token anyway, so just use that extmark as the user types.
Problem: jq files are not recognized.
Solution: Add detection of Jq files. (David McDonald, closesvim/vim#11743)
b9a1edfc54
Co-authored-by: David McDonald <dgmcdona@uno.edu>
Problem: Some jsonc files are not recognized.
Solution: Add patterns for jsonc and move some from json to jsonc.
(closesvim/vim#11711)
104b2ff4d0
Co-authored-by: kylo252 <59826753+kylo252@users.noreply.github.com>