Problem: vim.diagnostic.{underline,float,virtual_text...}.severity
will have a type warning on list-like or table (min-max) inputs,
e.g. `vim.diagnostic.config { float = { severity = { min = INFO } } }`.
Solution: Correct the typing as documented in |diagnostic-severity|.
'foldtext' can be set to an empty string to disable and render the
line with:
- extmark highlight
- syntax highlighting
- search highlighting
- no line wrapping
- spelling
- conceal
- inline virtual text
- respects `fillchars:fold`
Currently normal virtual text is not displayed
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
- Problem: One cannot easily write something like, for example:
`version_current >= {0, 10, 0}`; writing like
`not vim.version.lt(version_current, {0, 10, 0})` is verbose.
- Solution: add {`le`,`ge`} in addition to {`lt`,`gt`}.
- Also improve typing on the operator methods: allow `string` as well.
- Update the example in `vim.version.range()` docs: `ge` in place of
`gt` better matches the semantics of `range:has`.
Problem:
On devel(nightly) versions, deprecation warnings for hard-deprecated
features are not being displayed. E.g.,
- to be removed in: 0.11
- hard-deprecation since 0.10
- soft-deprecation since 0.9
then 0.10-nightly (0.10.0-dev) versions as well as 0.10.0 (stable)
should display the deprecation warning message.
Solution:
Improve the code and logic on `vim.deprecate()`, and improve
test cases with mocked `vim.version()`.
Problem: Parsed language annotations can be random garbage so
`nvim_get_runtime_file` throws an error.
Solution: Validate that `alias` is a valid language name before trying
to find a parser for it.
Problem: too vague errors for 'listchars'/'fillchars'
Solution: Include the field name in error message.
(zeertzjq)
related: #27050closes: vim/vim#138776a8d2e1634
Co-authored-by: Cole Frankenhoff <cole.nhf@gmail.com>
This function is used only in the `workspace/configuration` handler,
and does not warrant a public API because of its confusing return types.
The only caller `vim.lsp.handlers["workspace.configuration"]` is also
refactored to use `vim.tbl_get()` instead.
Problem: Modula2 filetype support lacking
Solution: Improve the Modula-2 runtime support, add additional modula2
dialects, add compiler plugin, update syntax highlighting,
include syntax tests, update Makefiles (Doug Kearns)
closes: vim/vim#6796closes: vim/vim#811568a8947069
- Luaify the detection script:
- Split the `(*!m2foo*)` and `(*!m2foo+bar*)` detection into two Lua patterns,
as Lua capture groups cannot be used with `?` and friends (as they only work
on character classes).
- Use `vim.api.nvim_buf_call()` (ew) to call `modula2#SetDialect()` to ensure
`b:modula2` is set for the given bufnr.
- Skip the syntax screendump tests. (A shame as they test some of the detection
from `(*!m2foo+bar*)` tags, but I tested this locally and it seems to work)
- Port the synmenu.vim changes from Vim9 script. (Also tested this locally)
- (And also add the missing comma for `b:browsefilter` from earlier.)
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Problem: Vim is missing a foreach() func
Solution: Implement foreach({expr1}, {expr2}) function,
which applies {expr2} for each item in {expr1}
without changing it (Ernie Rael)
closes: vim/vim#12166e79e207760
Partial port as this doesn't handle non-materialized range() lists.
vim-patch:c92b8bed1fa6
runtime(help): delete duplicate help tag E741 (vim/vim#13861)
c92b8bed1f
Co-authored-by: Ernie Rael <errael@raelity.com>
Problem: Cannot easily get the list of matches
Solution: Add the matchstrlist() and matchbufline() Vim script
functions (Yegappan Lakshmanan)
closes: vim/vim#13766
Omit CHECK_LIST_MATERIALIZE(): it populates a List with numbers only,
and there is a check for strings below.
f93b1c881a
vim-patch:eb3475df0d92
runtime(doc): Replace non-breaking space with normal space (vim/vim#13868)
eb3475df0d
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <4298407+yegappan@users.noreply.github.com>
The motivation for this update is Issue #15365, where background=light
is not properly set for Nvim running from an Nvim :terminal. This can be
encountered when e.g., opening a terminal to make git commits, which
opens EDITOR=nvim in the nested terminal.
Under the implementation of this commit, the OSC response always
indicates a black or white foreground/background. While this may not
reflect the actual foreground/background color, it permits 'background'
to be retained for a nested Nvim instance running in the terminal
emulator. The behaviour matches Vim.
- Add section `VIM.LPEG` and `VIM.RE` to docs/lua.txt.
- Add `_meta/re.lua` which adds luadoc and type annotations, for the
vendored `vim.re` package.
- Fix minor style issues on `_meta/lpeg.lua` luadoc for better vimdocs
generation.
- Fix a bug on `gen_vimdoc` where non-helptags in verbatim code blocks
were parsed as helptags, affecting code examples on `vim.lpeg.Cf`,
etc.
- Also move the `vim.regex` section below so that it can be located
closer to `vim.lpeg` and `vim.re`.
Typings introduced in #26032 and #26552 have a few conflicts, so we
merge and clean them up. We also fix some incorrect type annotation in
the `vim.lsp.rpc` package. See the associated PR for more details.
Summary:
- vim.rpc.Dispatchers -> vim.lsp.rpc.Dispatchers
- vim.lsp.rpc.Error -> lsp.ResponseError
- Revise docs
This commit implements a new TermRequest autocommand event and has Neovim
emit this event when children of terminal buffers emit an OSC or DCS sequence
libvterm does not handle.
The TermRequest autocommand event has additional data in the
v:termrequest variable.
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
Problem: Some lines in the generated vim doc are overflowing, not
correctly wrapped at 78 characters. This happens when docs body contains
several consecutive 'inline' elements generated by doxygen.
Solution: Take into account the current column offset of the last line,
and prepend some padding before doc_wrap().
Improve error messages for `:InspectTree`, when no parsers are available
for the current buffer and filetype. We can show more informative and
helpful error message for users (e.g., which lang was searched for):
```
... No parser available for the given buffer:
+... no parser for 'custom_ft' language, see :help treesitter-parsers
```
Also improve the relevant docs for *treesitter-parsers*.
Problem: Keymap completion is not available
Solution: Add keymap completion (Doug Kearns)
Add keymap completion to the 'keymap' option, user commands and builtin
completion functions.
closes: vim/vim#1369281642d9d6f
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Problem: The maximum 'statuscolumn' width and grow behavior is undocumented.
Solution: Define, use and document the maximum 'statuscolumn' width and grow behavior.
Problem:
Many decoration providers (treesitter injection highlighting, semantic
token highlighting, inlay hint) rely on the correctness of the `botline`
argument of `on_win` callback. However, `botline` can be smaller than
the actual line number of the last displayed line if some lines are
folded. In such cases, some decorations will be missing in the lines not
covered by `botline`.
Solution:
Validate `botline` when invoking `on_win`.
NOTE:
It seems that the old code was deliberately avoiding this presumably due
to performance reasons. However, I haven't experienced noticeable lag
after this change, and I believe the cost of botline computation would
be much smaller than the cost of decoration providers.
Problem:
Currently `deepcopy` hashes every single tables it copies so it can be
reused. For tables of mostly unique items that are non recursive, this
hashing is unnecessarily expensive
Solution:
Port the `noref` argument from Vimscripts `deepcopy()`.
The below benchmark demonstrates the results for two extreme cases of
tables of different sizes. One table that uses the same table lots of
times and one with all unique tables.
| test | `noref=false` (ms) | `noref=true` (ms) |
| -------------------- | ------------------ | ----------------- |
| unique tables (50) | 6.59 | 2.62 |
| shared tables (50) | 3.24 | 6.40 |
| unique tables (2000) | 23381.48 | 2884.53 |
| shared tables (2000) | 3505.54 | 14038.80 |
The results are basically the inverse of each other where `noref` is
much more performance on tables with unique fields, and `not noref` is
more performant on tables that reuse fields.