When tabstop and shiftwidth are not equal, tabs are inserted as individual
spaces and then rewritten as tab characters in a second pass. That second pass
did not call changed_bytes which resulted in events being omitted.
Fixes#25092
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>
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).
Currently (as of nvim 0.9), the behavior of boolean params in
vim.api lua wrappers is inconsistent for optional parameters
(part of an `opts` dict) compared to positional parameters.
This was inadvertently changed in #24524 . While cleaning up this
inconsistency is something we might want eventually, it needs
to be discussed separately and the impact of existing code considered.
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.
Problem:
On Windows, `rundll32` exits zero (success) even when given
a non-existent file.
Solution:
Mock vim.system() on Windows to force a "failure" case.
Problem:
helpers.tmpname() may create a local file, depending on circumstances.
Solution:
Only use helpers.tmpname() for its parent directory (the "temp root").
Use fs_mkdtemp() to actually get a unique name.
* 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.
Problem: Bashslashes added as regexp in runtime completion may be
treated as path separator with some 'isfname' value.
Solution: Make curly braces work for runtime completion and use it.
* feat(lua): allow vim.wo to be double indexed
Problem: `vim.wo` does not implement `setlocal`
Solution: Allow `vim.wo` to be double indexed
Co-authored-by: Christian Clason <c.clason@uni-graz.at>
Problem:
Showing an error via vim.notify() makes it awkward for callers such as
lsp/handlers.lua to avoid showing redundant errors.
Solution:
Return the message instead of showing it. Let the caller decide whether
and when to show the message.
---
Rejected experiment: move vim.ui.open() to vim.env.open()
Problem:
`vim.ui` is where user-interface "providers" live, which can be
overridden. It would also be useful to have a "providers" namespace for
platform-specific features such as "open", clipboard, python, and the other
providers listed in `:help providers`. We could overload `vim.ui` to
serve that purpose as the single "providers" namespace, but
`vim.ui.nodejs()` for example seems awkward.
Solution:
`vim.env` currently has too narrow of a purpose. Overload it to also be
a namespace for `vim.env.open`.
diff --git a/runtime/lua/vim/_meta.lua b/runtime/lua/vim/_meta.lua
index 913f1fe20348..17d05ff37595 100644
--- a/runtime/lua/vim/_meta.lua
+++ b/runtime/lua/vim/_meta.lua
@@ -37,8 +37,28 @@ local options_info = setmetatable({}, {
end,
})
-vim.env = setmetatable({}, {
- __index = function(_, k)
+vim.env = setmetatable({
+ open = setmetatable({}, {
+ __call = function(_, uri)
+ print('xxxxx'..uri)
+ return true
+ end,
+ __tostring = function()
+ local v = vim.fn.getenv('open')
+ if v == vim.NIL then
+ return nil
+ end
+ return v
+ end,
+ })
+ },
+ {
+ __index = function(t, k, ...)
+ if k == 'open' then
+ error()
+ -- vim.print({...})
+ -- return rawget(t, k)
+ end
local v = vim.fn.getenv(k)
if v == vim.NIL then
return nil
Enforce consistent terminology (defined in
`gen_help_html.lua:spell_dict`) for common misspellings.
This does not spellcheck English in general (perhaps a future TODO,
though it may be noisy).
Problem:
- `vim.json` exposes various global options which:
- affect all Nvim Lua plugins (especially the LSP client)
- are undocumented and untested
- can cause confusing problems such as: cc76ae3abe
- `vim.json` exposes redundant mechanisms:
- `vim.json.null` is redundant with `vim.NIL`.
- `array_mt` is redundant because Nvim uses a metatable
(`vim.empty_dict()`) for empty dict instead, which `vim.json` is
configured to use by default (see `as_empty_dict`).
Example:
```
:lua vim.print(vim.json.decode('{"bar":[],"foo":{}}'))
--> { bar = {}, foo = vim.empty_dict() }
```
Thus we don't need to also decorate empty arrays with `array_mt`.
Solution:
Remove the functions from the public vim.json interface.
Comment-out the implementation code to minimize drift from upstream.
TODO:
- Expose the options as arguments to `vim.json.new()`
Problem: Current implementation of "remove trailing /" doesn't
account for the case of literal '/' as path.
Solution: Remove trailing / only if it preceded by something else.
Co-authored by: notomo <notomo.motono@gmail.com>
feat(lua): add vim.system()
Problem:
Handling system commands in Lua is tedious and error-prone:
- vim.fn.jobstart() is vimscript and comes with all limitations attached to typval.
- vim.loop.spawn is too low level
Solution:
Add vim.system().
Partly inspired by Python's subprocess module
Does not expose any libuv objects.
vim.version.range() couldn't parse them correctly.
For example, vim.version.range('<0.9.0'):has('0.9.0') returned `true`.
fix: range:has() accepts vim.version()
So that it's possible to compare a range with:
vim.version.range(spec):has(vim.version())
This ensures that colorschemes in 'rtp' are tried before ones in 'pp',
because some colorschemes in 'pp' may not work if not added to 'rtp'.
This also match the current documentation better.
`nvim_(get|set)_option_value` pick the current buffer / window by default for buffer-local/window-local (but not global-local) options. So specifying `buf = 0` or `win = 0` in opts is unnecessary for those options. This PR removes those to reduce code clutter.