Problem:
Nvim version string typically has a "build" component
but vim.version() doesn't report it.
Solution:
Add the "build" field to vim.version().
Closes#23863
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>
Problem: Visual area not shown when using 'showbreak' and start of line is
not visible. (Jaehwang Jung)
Solution: Adjust "fromcol" for the space taken by 'showbreak'.
(closesvim/vim#12514)
f578ca2c8f
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: Filetype name t32 is a bit obscure.
Solution: Rename t32 to trace32. (Christoph Sax, closesvim/vim#12512)
740df76c90
Co-authored-by: Christoph Sax <christoph.sax@mailbox.org>
Problem: FILETYPE_FILE is defined to the same value multiple times. Same
for a few similar macros.
Solution: Define FILETYPE_FILE and others in feature.h only
c81dfaa69c
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: charidx() and utf16idx() result is not consistent with byteidx().
Solution: When the index is equal to the length of the text return the
lenght of the text instead of -1. (Yegappan Lakshmanan,
closesvim/vim#12503)
577922b917
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
`client.messages` could grow unbounded because the default handler only
added new messages, never removing them.
A user either had to consume the messages by calling
`vim.lsp.util.get_progress_messages` or by manually removing them from
`client.messages.progress`. If they didn't do that, using LSP
effectively leaked memory.
To fix this, this deprecates the `messages` property and instead adds a
`progress` ring buffer that only keeps at most 50 messages. In addition
it deprecates `vim.lsp.util.get_progress_messages` in favour of a new
`vim.lsp.status()` and also promotes the `LspProgressUpdate` user
autocmd to a regular autocmd to allow users to pattern match on the
progress kind.
Also closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/20327
Problem: Nix files are not recognized from the hashbang line.
Solution: Add a hashbang check. (issue vim/vim#12507)
19548c6a74
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: Trace32 files are not recognized.
Solution: Add patterns for the t32 filetype. (Christoph Sax, closesvim/vim#12505)
7fbcee6f92
Co-authored-by: Christoph Sax <christoph.sax@mailbox.org>
Problem: Quickfix text field is truncated.
Solution: Fix output of text field after pattern field in quickfix buffer.
(Shane Harper, closesvim/vim#12498)
5bf042810b
Co-authored-by: Shane Harper <shane@shaneharper.net>
Problem: URL shortcut files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern for URL shortcut files. (closesvim/vim#12474)
cdb7b4c508
Co-authored-by: ObserverOfTime <chronobserver@disroot.org>
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.
`option_get_valid_types()` currently uses a comma separator for
multi-type options which does not fit well with the changed error
message for invalid option value type. A slash seperator is much more
suited for its current use-case.
Removes the `getoption_T` struct and also introduces the `OptVal` struct
to unify the methods of getting/setting different option value types.
This is the first of many PRs to reduce code duplication in the Vim
option code as well as to make options easier to maintain. It also
increases the flexibility and extensibility of options. Which opens the
door for things like Array and Dictionary options.
Neovim QT was originally bundled on Windows as a response to the then
lackluster terminal options. The situation has dramatically changed,
with viable options such as Windows terminal, Alacritty and Wezterm to
name a few. The Windows build no longer needs this special treatment for
neovim to be usable.
Pros:
- Release builds will be smaller.
- Less maintenance burden.
- Clearer separation of responsibility (neovim issues go to the neovim
repo and neovim-qt issues to the neovim-qt repo).
- More consistent treatment between platforms.
Cons:
- Users who've come to expect neovim-qt to be bundled with nvim will
need to adjust and download neovim-qt from
https://github.com/equalsraf/neovim-qt instead.
- Similarly, build scripts will need to be adjusted to reflect this
change.
Closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/21209.
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:
"playground" is new jargon that overlaps with existing concepts:
"dev" (`:help dev`) and "view" (also "scratch" `:help scratch-buffer`) .
Solution:
We should consistently use "dev" as the namespace for where "developer
tools" live. For purposes of a "throwaway sandbox object", we can use
the name "view".
- Rename `TSPlayground` => `TSView`
- Rename `playground.lua` => `dev.lua`