runtime(ruby): Update syntax, indent and ftplugin files
While making changes to the ruby ftplugin, slightly change the exepath()
conditional from patch 9.0.1833 and move it after the :cd invocation.
closes: 12981
closes: 12994
da16a1b471
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Pope <code@tpope.net>
Problem: runtime files may execute code in current dir
Solution: only execute, if not run from current directory
The perl, zig and ruby filetype plugins and the zip and gzip autoload
plugins may try to load malicious executable files from the current
working directory. This is especially a problem on windows, where the
current directory is implicitly in your $PATH and windows may even run a
file with the extension `.bat` because of $PATHEXT.
So make sure that we are not trying to execute a file from the current
directory. If this would be the case, error out (for the zip and gzip)
plugins or silently do not run those commands (for the ftplugins).
This assumes, that only the current working directory is bad. For all
other directories, it is assumed that those directories were
intentionally set to the $PATH by the user.
816fbcc262
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
runtime: cleanup :Sman command via the undo_ftplugin mechanism (vim/vim#12967)
Regards to @dkearns as noticed in
2ac708b5489d8ef7cc43
Co-authored-by: Enno <Konfekt@users.noreply.github.com>
runtime: Remove Brams name from a few more runtime files (vim/vim#12780)
syntax/model.vim: minor wording improvement
e8d6f03f6a
Use the updated "Last Change" date for all.
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Adri Verhoef <a3@a3.xs4all.nl>
runtime(haskell): Add single quote to `iskeyword` in ftplugin (vim/vim#8191)
The single quote `'` is a valid character in variable names, so it should be included in `iskeyword`; this, for instance, makes the <kbd>*</kbd> command behave predictably
5e6e4042b1
Co-authored-by: Enrico Maria De Angelis <enricomaria.dean6elis@gmail.com>
Problem: Runtime: Missing QML support
Solution: Add QML support to Vim
closes: vim/vim#12810bedc69f9d6
Co-authored-by: ChaseKnowlden <haroldknowlden@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>
feat(heex): borrow matchit support from html (vim/vim#12717)
* feat(heex): borrow matchit support from html
Makes % support behave the same in heex as in html. For example, quickly moving the cursor between opening and closing tags.
* Remove unnecessary line; define b:undo_ftplugin first
* Remove b:html_set_match_words
8967f6c4b9
Co-authored-by: Chris Vincent <chris.vincent@hey.com>
Update runtime files
10e8ff9b26
Also:
- fix a missing `<` in builtin.txt.
- edit `:function` `{name}` wording to match the change made for the docs above
by Justin in #10619.
- link to `*vimrc*` rather than `*init.vim*` in repeat.txt change (as `init.lua`
may also be used).
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
The options 'path', 'include', and 'define' all use C-specific default
values. This may have made sense a long time ago when Vim was mostly
used just for writing C, but this is no longer the case, and we have
ample support for filetype specific configuration. Make the default
values of these options empty and move the C-specific values into a
filetype plugin where they belong.
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
Problem: No commentstring is set for C# buffers after removing the
default C-style commentstring
Solution: Add `ftplugin/cs.lua` with C-style commentstring
This variable was only meant for easy testing during the development
cycle for treesitter highlighting while Lua was the only parser useable
for daily driving. Now that we have a good vimdoc parser, this approach
simply doesn't scale and should be removed sooner rather than later.
Instead of setting this variable, people for now should add the autocommand
directly to their config:
```lua
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd('FileType', {
pattern = 'lua', -- or { 'lua', 'help' }
callback = function() vim.treesitter.start() end,
})
```
(or put `vim.treesitter.start()` in an `ftplugin`).
Update runtime files
86b4816766
vim-patch:9.0.1029: autoload directory missing from distribution
Problem: Autoload directory missing from distribution.
Solution: Add the autoload/zig directory to the list of distributed files.
84dbf855fb
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
- If Nvim was just started, don't create a new tab.
- Name the buffer "health://".
- Use "help" syntax instead of "markdown". It fits better, and
eliminates various workarounds.
- Simplfy formatting, avoid visual noise.
- Don't print a "INFO" status, it is noisy.
- Drop the ":" after statuses, they are already UPPERCASE and highlighted.
* Add vim.treesitter.start() for starting treesitter highlighting via
ftplugin or autocommand (can be extended later for fold, indent,
matchpairs, ...)
* Add vim.treesitter.stop() for manually stopping treesitter
highlighting
* Enable treesitter highlighting for Lua if
`vim.g.ts_highlight_lua = true` is set in `init.lua`
Problem:
q in "$MANPAGER mode" does not quit Nvim. This is because
ftplugin/man.vim creates its own mapping:
nnoremap <silent> <buffer> <nowait> q :lclose<CR><C-W>c
which overrides the one set by the autoload file when using :Man!
("$MANPAGER mode")
Solution:
Set b:pager during "$MANPAGER mode" so that ftplugin/man.vim can set the
mapping correctly.
Fixes#18281
Ref #17791
Helped-by: Gregory Anders <8965202+gpanders@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem:
"set filetype=man" assumes the user wants :Man features, this does extra
stuff like renaming the buffer as "man://".
Solution:
- old entrypoint was ":set filetype=man", but this is too presumptuous #15487
- make the entrypoints more explicit:
1. when the ":Man" command is run
2. when a "man://" buffer is opened
- remove the tricky b:man_sect checks in ftplugin/man.vim and syntax/man.vim
- MANPAGER is supported via ":Man!", as documented.
fixes#15487
Update runtime files.
cb80aa2d53
Omit runtime/doc/tabpage.txt.
Patch v8.2.1401 is not ported yet.
Port optwin.vim changes without gettext().
Patch v8.2.1544 is not ported yet.
Not sure why this was added in 94f4469638
It doesn't seem to do anything and I can't reproduce the linked issue
with this patch so I think it's all working now.
cc @justinmk
Update runtime files.
fc65cabb15
---
vim-patch:8.0.1279: initializing menus can be slow
Problem: Initializing menus can be slow, especially when there are many
keymaps, color schemes, etc.
Solution: Do the globbing for runtime files lazlily. (Ken Takata)
Update runtime files.
b5b7562475
---
NA patch (Nvim does not ship with spell files):
vim-patch:3ad8772ef02e
Include Serbian spell input files
3ad8772ef0
This should handle most cases where Nvim was invoked as $MANPAGER.
Ultimately the stakes are low: :quit will prompt if there are unsaved
changes.
fix#7873
Many people have `runtime ftplugin/man.vim` in their init file, as was
required in Vim to have the `:Man` command generally available.
7a4d069b removed the &filetype check, which caused these setups to
always create a blank `man://` buffer.
When a file is opened by nvim with ft=man already set, and
"has('vim_starting')", ftplugin/man.vim calls
'execute 'file man://'.ref', this causes nvim to display something like
this:
````
"<name of original file>" 977, 41017C
"man://foo(1)" [Not edited] 977 lines --0%--
Press ENTER or type command to continue
````
This is annoying, because nothing of note has actually happened.
Use cases why you might want to read a man page from a file:
`MANPAGER='bash -c "nvim -c \"set ft=man\" </dev/tty <(col -bx)"' man git`
`nvim -c 'set ft=man' <(man -P cat git)`
- fix synopsis highlighting in other locales. Cannot always rely on the first
line for the section in some locales; instead, use the file path and
explicitly set b:man_sect to the actual section.
- eliminate separate s:man_args function
- simplify logic: do not reuse buffer content
- introduce b:man_default_sects Fixes#5233
- introduce <Plug>(man_vsplit), <Plug>(man_tab)
- simplify regexps
This is necessary incase the buffer was previously opened in a different
tab, in which the window options there do not carry over. It is not
explicitly documented in ':help local-options' but that is how it works.
- Weird tab+space combination used for alignment. All spaces now
- Added back <C-T> mapping (somehow we missed that completely)
- Fixed mistake that <Plug>(Man) opens in a new tab. Also added note at
top on how the window is chosen/opened.
- Clarified q local mapping
- Removed section that shows an example autocmd to add desired folding
style.
- Removed random line in `usr_12.txt` about `<Leader>` and backslash.
- :Man supports completion, not auto-completion.
Closes#5171
- Smart autocomplete. It's automatically sorted, filtered for duplicates
and even formats the candidates based on what is needed. For example,
`:Man 1 printf<TAB>` will show the pages that are in section 1m as
'page(sect)' to let you know they are in a more specific section.
- Instead of trying to unset $MANPAGER we use the -P flag to set the
pager to cat
- Always use the section arg '-s', it makes the code much simpler
(see comment in s:man-args).
- A manpage name starting with '-' is invalid. It's fine for sections
because of the use of '-s'.
- The tagstack is an actual stack now, makes it much simpler.
- By using v:count and v:count1, the plugin can explicitly check whether
the user set a count, instead of relying on a default value (0) that
is actually a real manpage section.
- Extraction of a manpage reference is much more simple. No giant long
complicated regexes. Now, the plugin lets `man` handle the actual
validation. We merely extract the section and page. Syntax regexes are
a bit more specific though to prevent highlighting everything.
- Multilingual support in the syntax file. Removed the cruft that was only
relevent to vim. Also simplified and improved many of the regexes.
- Using shellescape when sending the page and sect as arguments
- In general, the code flow is much more obvious.
- man#get_page has been split up into smaller functions with explicit
responsibilties
- ':help' behavior in opening splits and manpages
- Comments explaining anything that needs explaining and isn't
immediately obvious.
- If a manpage has already been loaded but if it were to reloaded at the
current width which is the same as the width at which it was loaded at
previously, it is not reloaded.
- Use substitute to remove the backspaced instead of `col -b`, as the
latter doesn't work with other languages.
- Open paths to manpages
- It uses cWORD instead of cword to get the manpage under the cursor, this
helps with files that do not have (,) in iskeyword. It also means the
plugin does not set iskeyword locally anymore.
- <Plug>(Man) mapping for easy remapping
- Switched to single quotes wherever possible.
- Updated docs in $VIMRUNTIME/doc/filetype.txt (still need to update
user-manual)
- Always call tolower on section name. See comment in
s:extract_page_and_sect_fpage
- Formatting/consistency cleanup
- Automatically map q to ':q<CR>' when invoked as $MANPAGER
- It also fully supports being used as $MANPAGER. Setting the name and
stuff automatically.
- Split up the setlocals into multiple lines for easier readability
- Better detection of errors by redirecting stderr to /dev/null. If an
error occured, stdout will be empty.
- Functions return [sect, page] not [page, sect]. Makes more sense with
how man takes the arguments as sect and then page.
- Pretty prints errors on a single line.
- If no section is given, automatically finds the correct section for
the buffer name. It also gets the correct page. See the comment in
s:get_page
- If $MANWIDTH is not set, do not assign directly to $MANWIDTH because
then $MANWIDTH will always stay set to the same value as we only use
winwidth(0) when the global $MANWIDTH is empty. Instead we set it
locally for the command.
- Maintainer notes on all files.
Updated runtime files.
77cdfd1038
Ignore changes to:
* doc/channel.txt, doc/eval.txt: Channel related docs
* doc/options.txt: GUI related docs
* doc/tags: Generated at build time
* doc/todo.txt: Irrelevant for Neovim
Updated runtime files.
acb4f221c7
Ignored changes to:
* doc/eval.txt since alloc_fail isn't relevant for neovim
* doc/index.txt for unmerge :smile command
* doc/tags, syntax/vim.vim since they're generated at build time
* doc/todo.txt
Updated runtime files.
256972a984
Missing files in runtime/doc: todo.txt, tags. Patch to runtime/doc/syntax.txt
was applied manually in part, for no discernible reason.
Update runtime files.
d042dc825c
Missing in runtime/doc: hangulin.txt, tags, todo.txt. The changes to options.txt
do not apply for nvim. man.vim is very different in nvim, some changes applied
manually, others discarded.
- Define a collection of legal characters when parsing page and section
in `s:parse_page_and_section()` instead of relying on 'iskeyword',
which is unreliable.
- Allow non-numeric section names (e.g., `3c`).
- Simplify argument handling in `man#get_page()` to accommodate
non-numeric section names.
Fixes#4165.