By default spell checking is enabled for all text, but adding
`contains=@Spell` to syntax rules restricts spell checking to those
syntax rules. See `:help spell-syntax` for full details.
Variable names and headers are far more likely than comments to contain
spelling errors, so only enable spell checking in comments.
Introduced in https://github.com/xuhdev/syntax-dosini.vim/pull/8
cc @tobinjt
closes: vim/vim#15655c0982f9f79
Co-authored-by: John Tobin <johntobin@johntobin.ie>
Previously these would be cached in buffer-local variables and
would not change on :compiler pandoc
closes: vim/vim#15642d30ffdca49
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Groff MOM (Macros for Manuscripts) is a macro package for the GNU
troff (groff) typesetting system, a light-weight alternative
to LaTeX for professional-quality documents.
closes: vim/vim#156467cc0e9145d
Co-authored-by: Konfekt <Konfekt@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem:
str_utfindex_enc could return an error if the index was longer than the
line length. This was handled in each of the calls to it individually
Solution:
* Fix the call at the source level so that if the index is higher than
the line length, utf length is returned
Problem: vim.tbl_deep_extend had an undocumented feature where arrays
(integer-indexed tables) were not merged but compared literally (used
for merging default and user config, where one list should overwrite the
other completely). Turns out this behavior was relied on in quite a
number of plugins (even though it wasn't a robust solution even for that
use case, since lists of tables (e.g., plugin specs) can be array-like
as well).
Solution: Revert the removal of this special feature. Check for
list-like (contiguous integer indices) instead, as this is closer to the
intent. Document this behavior.
Problem:
str_byteindex_enc could return an error if the index was longer than the
lline length. This was handled in each of the calls to it individually
Solution:
* Fix the call at the source level so that if the index is higher than
the line length, line length is returned as per LSP specification
* Remove pcalls on str_byteindex_enc calls. No longer needed now that
str_byteindex_enc has a bounds check.
Font-family names must be enclosed in quotation marks to ensure that
fonts are applied correctly when there are spaces in the name.
Fix an issue where multiple fonts specified in `vim.o.guifont` are
inserted as a single element, treating them as a single font.
Support for escaping commas with backslash and ignoring spaces
after a comma.
ref `:help 'guifont'`
while at it, also move the note about :wincmd
directly to :h :wincmd, it doesn't seem to belong to the buffer section.
closes: vim/vim#15636b584117b05
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: Wrong breakindentopt=list:-1 with multibyte chars or TABs in
text matched by 'formatlistpat' (John M Devin)
Solution: Use the width of the match text (zeertzjq)
fixes: vim/vim#15634closes: vim/vim#1563561a6ac4d00
- The exclusion of lists was never justified in the commit history and is
the wrong thing to do for a function that deals with tables.
- Move the error checks out of the recursive path.
Fixes#23654
Updated the `rpc.connect` function to support connecting to LSP servers
using hostnames, not just IP addresses. This change includes updates to
the documentation and additional test cases to verify the new
functionality.
- Modified `connect` function to resolve hostnames.
- Updated documentation to reflect the change.
- Added test case for connecting using hostname.
Added a TCP echo server utility function to the LSP test suite. This
server echoes the first message it receives and is used in tests to
verify LSP server connections via both IP address and hostname.
Refactored existing tests to use the new utility function.
Problem:
`nvim --listen` does not error on EADDRINUSE. #30123
Solution:
Now that `$NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS` is deprecated and input *only* (instead
of the old, ambiguous situation where it was both an input *and* an
output), we can be fail fast instead of trying to "recover". This
reverts the "recovery" behavior of
704ba4151e, but that was basically
a workaround for the fragility of `$NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS`.
- Match -addr and -keepscript attributes and generate -addr values.
- Match attribute errors where = is specified.
- Highlight attributes with Special like other Ex command options.
- Don't highlight user-specified completion function args.
- Match :delcommand -buffer attribute.
closes: vim/vim#155863c07eb0c67
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Recognize colon-delimited second part of Runas_Spec that specifies
permitted groups, e.g.:
alan ALL = (root, bin : operator, system) ALL
This implementation is sloppy because it accepts any amount of colons
delimiting further Runas_Lists, but for now that's better than bailing
out completely as soon as a colon is encountered (esp. given that the
default sudoers uses these colons, breaking highlighting OOTB).
Also, while at it, make Vim recognize all Tag_Spec items, not just
{,NO}PASSWD
closes: vim/vim#15607bd69b39514
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
For context, see https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/24738. Before
that PR, Nvim did not correctly handle captures with quantifiers. That
PR made the correct behavior opt-in to minimize breaking changes, with
the intention that the correct behavior would eventually become the
default. Users can still opt-in to the old (incorrect) behavior for now,
but this option will eventually be removed completely.
BREAKING CHANGE: Any plugin which uses `Query:iter_matches()` must
update their call sites to expect an array of nodes in the `match`
table, rather than a single node.
Match '(,'),'[,'],'{, and '} marks in Ex command ranges.
Thanks to Maxim Kim.
Fixesvim/vim#15332.
Closesvim/vim#15337.
d817609b87
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Problem: prefix can be a symbol like period, the fuzzy matching can't
handle it correctly.
Solution: when prefix is empty or a symbol add all lsp completion
result into matches.
Use the grapheme break algorithm from utf8proc to support grapheme
clusters from recent unicode versions.
Handle variant selector VS16 turning some codepoints into double-width
emoji. This means we need to use ptr2cells rather than char2cells when
possible.
Improving syntax highlighting by allowing numbers, - and a $ as suffix
in user constants and by allowing hwConstants in If-Then statements
closes: vim/vim#1505987c01d9561
Co-authored-by: Tom Crecelius <holly@net-eclipse.net>
Problem:
Things like underlines are always given a default foreground highlight
regardless of the value of `sp`.
Solution:
Check for `sp` first, and apply that color to the text decoration color if it
exists.
Limitations:
If there is no value of `sp`, vim applies a text decoration color that matches
the foreground of the text. This is still not implemented (and seems like a much
more complex problem): in TOhtml, the underline will still be given a default
foreground highlight.
Problem: "dvgo" is not always an inclusive motion
(Iain King-Speir)
Solution: initialize the inclusive flag to false
fixes: vim/vim#15580closes: vim/vim#15582f8702aeb8f
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Introduce a new API variable "g:java_syntax_previews" whose
value must be a list of syntax preview feature numbers.
Enumerate the currently supported numbers in a table at the
end of the documentation entry for "ft-java-syntax".
Also, disable the recognition of String Templates. Despite
the withdrawal of this preview feature in its proposed form
from the upcoming JDK 23 release and the fact that the JDK
22 release is coming to EOL this September, an earlier
iteration of this preview feature was included in JDK 21
(LTS) whose EOL is projected to fall due in late 2028 and,
therefore, retain the current implementation.
Define "g:java_syntax_previews" and include number 430 in
its list to enable the recognition of String Templates:
------------------------------------------------------------
let g:java_syntax_previews = [430]
------------------------------------------------------------
References:
https://openjdk.org/jeps/430 (Preview)
https://openjdk.org/jeps/459 (Second Preview)
https://openjdk.org/jeps/465 (Third Preview)
https://mail.openjdk.org/pipermail/amber-spec-experts/2024-April/004106.htmlcloses: vim/vim#155798556e23ee9
Co-authored-by: Aliaksei Budavei <0x000c70@gmail.com>
Problem: Installing treesitter parser is hard (harder than
climbing to heaven).
Solution: Add optional support for wasm parsers with `wasmtime`.
Notes:
* Needs to be enabled by setting `ENABLE_WASMTIME` for tree-sitter and
Neovim. Build with
`make CMAKE_EXTRA_FLAGS=-DENABLE_WASMTIME=ON
DEPS_CMAKE_FLAGS=-DENABLE_WASMTIME=ON`
* Adds optional Rust (obviously) and C11 dependencies.
* Wasmtime comes with a lot of features that can negatively affect
Neovim performance due to library and symbol table size. Make sure to
build with minimal features and full LTO.
* To reduce re-compilation times, install `sccache` and build with
`RUSTC_WRAPPER=<path/to/sccache> make ...`