Problem: the amount of available space (v:echospace) on the command
line is not correct when showcmdloc is drawn into the
statusline or tabline.
Solution: only add SHOWCMD_COLS to the shown command column when
'showcmdloc' is set to last (Sam-programs)
closes: vim/vim#14108062141b1a7
Co-authored-by: Sam-programs <130783534+Sam-programs@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: getregion() needs more tests
Solution: Run the getregion() test in both the legacy and Vim9 contexts
(Yegappan Lakshmanan)
closes: vim/vim#141144d55c54e30
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
runtime(doc,netrw): update "Last Change header", remove trailing whitespace
Update Last-Change Header for netrw and doc/indent.txt, fix a trailing
whitespace in indent.txt and make CI happy.
8fad5d5887
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
runtime(yaml): disable multiline_scalar detection by default
There have been many complaints about Yaml indenting too much, because
it considers values to be multi-line by default, which leads to
unintended indenting for (apparently most) users.
So let's hide this feature behind the new feature flag, keep it
simple and prefer single line value key pairs by default.
If you want the old behaviour, set the following value: >
:let g:yaml_indent_multiline_scalar = 1
If not set, it will indent the same as the previous line.
closesvim/vim#13845b4eb3f1e44
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
runtime(java): Recognise _when_ clauses in _switch_ blocks
Also:
- distinguish _yield_ when used as a contextual keyword from
when used qualified as a method or a method reference (as
can be seen in testdir/input/java_switch.java, variables
and method declarations named _yield_ will be recognised
as the namesake keyword--consider picking other names for
variables, and defining g:java_highlight_functions to have
method names painted; since _yield_ statements can have
trailing parens, they must be recognised as statements,
for only qualified _yield_ method calls are supported);
- recognise grouped _default_ _case_ labels;
- describe primitive types for _case_ labels (JLS, §14.11,
§3.10.1);
- recognise some non-ASCII identifiers (see javaLambdaDef,
javaUserLabel) (further improvement for better recognition
of identifiers will be arranged in a separate PR).
Because the arrow '->' is used in two kinds of expressions,
lambda (abstractions) and _switch_, necessary changes were
made for the recognition of either (and further improvement
touching lambda expressions will be separately arranged).
Because 'default' is used for instance method declarations
in interfaces and in _switch_ labels, necessary changes were
made for the recognition of either (and further improvement
touching method declarations will be separately arranged).
Finally, it deemed appropriate to put 'yield' in the syntax
group of javaOperator rather than javaStatement, for its
member 'var' is also another contextual keyword (e.g., this
is valid syntax: "var var = var(test.var);").
References:
https://openjdk.org/jeps/361 (Switch Expressions)
https://openjdk.org/jeps/440 (Record Patterns)
https://openjdk.org/jeps/441 (Pattern Matching for switch)
Also, add a Java specific filetype plugin for the syntax
test, so that no soft-wrapping of long indented lines occur.
Otherwise the syntax scripts would miss a few lines during
scrolling and verification of the screen dumps.
closes: vim/vim#141059ecf02cd5f
Co-authored-by: Aliaksei Budavei <0x000c70@gmail.com>
Problem: [security]: autocmd cause use-after-free in set_curbuf()
(kawarimidoll)
Solution: check side-effect of BufLeave autocommand, when the number
of windows changed, close windows containing buffers that will
be wiped, if curbuf changed unexpectedly make sure b_nwindows
is decremented otherwise it cannot be wiped
set_curbuf() already makes some efforts to ensure the BufLeave
autocommands do not cause issues. However there are still 2 issues
that are not taken care of:
1) If a BufLeave autocommand opens a new window containing the same
buffer as that is going got be closed in close_buffer() a bit later,
we suddenly have another window open, containing a free'd buffer. So we
must check if the number of windows changed and if it does (and the
current buffer is going to be wiped (according to the 'bufhidden'
setting), let's immediately close all windows containing the current
buffer using close_windows()
2) If a BufLeave autocommand changes our current buffer (displays it in
the current window), buf->b_nwindow will be incremented. As part of
set_curbuf() we will however enter another buffer soon, which means, the
newly created curbuf will have b_nwindows still have set, even so the
buffer is no longer displayed in a window. This causes later problems,
because it will no longer be possible to wipe such a buffer. So just
before entering the final buffer, check if the curbuf changed when
calling the BufLeave autocommand and if it does (and curbuf is still
valid), decrement curbuf->b_nwindows.
Both issues can be verified using the provided test (however the second
issue only because such an impacted buffer won't be wiped, causing
futher issues in later tests).
fixes: vim/vim#13839closes: vim/vim#1410455f8bba73b
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: getregion() can be improved (after v9.1.120)
Solution: change getregion() implementation to use pos as lists and
one optional {opt} dictionary (Shougo Matsushita)
Note: The following is a breaking change!
Currently, the getregion() function (included as of patch v9.1.120) takes
3 arguments: the first 2 arguments are strings, describing a position,
arg3 is the type string.
However, that is slightly inflexible, there is no way to specify
additional arguments. So let's instead change the function signature to:
getregion(pos1, pos2 [, {Dict}]) where both pos1 and pos2 are lists.
This is slightly cleaner, and gives us the flexibility to specify
additional arguments as key/value pairs to the optional Dict arg.
Now it supports the "type" key to specify the selection type
(characterwise, blockwise or linewise) and now in addition one can also
define the selection type, independently of what the 'selection' option
actually is.
Technically, this is a breaking change, but since the getregion()
Vimscript function is still quite new, this should be fine.
closes: vim/vim#1409019b718828d
Co-authored-by: Shougo Matsushita <Shougo.Matsu@gmail.com>
Problem: Put in Visual mode wrong if it replaces fold marker.
Solution: Temporarily disable folding during put in Visual mode.
(zeertzjq)
fixes: vim/vim#14097closes: vim/vim#141004e141c66b9
Problem: `:TOhtml` opens the generated HTML code in a split, meaning it
inherits the `help` filetype if a help buffer is to be converted.
Solution: Explicitly set the filetype to `html`.
Previously rename would unconditionally read the to-be-renamed file from the
disk and write it to the disk. This is redundant in some cases
If the file is not already loaded, it's not attached to lsp client, so nvim
doesn't need to care about this file.
If the file is loaded but has no change, it doesn't need to be written.
Then we can just load metadata in C as a single msgpack blob. Which also
can be used directly as binarly data, instead of first unpacking all the
functions and ui_events metadata to immediately pack it again, which was
a bit of a silly walk (and one extra usecase of `msgpack_rpc_from_object`
which will get yak shaved in the next PR)
runtime(sh): Update ftplugin, fixvim/vim#14101 (vim/vim#14102)
Add the 'b' flag to 'comments', so that the shebang line is not detected as comment.
Fixesvim/vim#14101.
e84d2d4432
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Problem: Some LSP servers return `textDocument/documentLink` responses
containing file URIs with line/column numbers in the fragment.
`vim.uri_to_fname` returns invalid file names for these URIs.
Solution: Remove the URI fragment from file URIs.
Problem: The cursor screen row was incorrectly being calculated when the
cursor follows a 1 character text_align 'below' virtual text line,
resulting in the cursor being shown on the wrong line.
This was caused by a cell size of 2 instead of 1 being used for the EOL
character, which propagated to the calculation of space for putting the
'below' virtual text on its own line. (rickhowe)
Solution: Fix the size used for the EOL character in calculating the
cursor's screen position (Dylan Thacker-Smith)
fixes: vim/vim#11959
related: vim/vim#12028closes: vim/vim#14096da0c9137d1
Co-authored-by: Dylan Thacker-Smith <dylan.ah.smith@gmail.com>
Problem:
The documentation flow (`gen_vimdoc.py`) has several issues:
- it's not very versatile
- depends on doxygen
- doesn't work well with Lua code as it requires an awkward filter script to convert it into pseudo-C.
- The intermediate XML files and filters makes it too much like a rube goldberg machine.
Solution:
Re-implement the flow using Lua, LPEG and treesitter.
- `gen_vimdoc.py` is now replaced with `gen_vimdoc.lua` and replicates a portion of the logic.
- `lua2dox.lua` is gone!
- No more XML files.
- Doxygen is now longer used and instead we now use:
- LPEG for comment parsing (see `scripts/luacats_grammar.lua` and `scripts/cdoc_grammar.lua`).
- LPEG for C parsing (see `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua`)
- Lua patterns for Lua parsing (see `scripts/luacats_parser.lua`).
- Treesitter for Markdown parsing (see `scripts/text_utils.lua`).
- The generated `runtime/doc/*.mpack` files have been removed.
- `scripts/gen_eval_files.lua` now instead uses `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua` directly.
- Text wrapping is implemented in `scripts/text_utils.lua` and appears to produce more consistent results (the main contributer to the diff of this change).
Validate the channel number before responding to an OSC 10/11 request.
When used with nvim_open_term, the channel number is unset (since there
is no process on the other side of the PTY).
Problems:
- Illegal bytes after valid UTF-8 char cause utf_cp_*_off() to fail.
- When stream isn't NUL-terminated, utf_cp_*_off() may go over the end.
Solution: Don't go over end of the char of end of the string.
writer is only ever used with FileDescriptor. We already have separate
code paths for serializing shada data into memory, see
shada_encode_regs() and friends
Functions like file_open_new() and file_open_fd_new() which just is a
wrapper around the real functions but with an extra xmalloc/xfree around
is an anti-pattern. If the caller really needs to allocate a
FileDescriptor as a heap object, it can do that directly.
FileDescriptor by itself is pretty much a pointer, or rather two:
the OS fd index and a pointer to a buffer. So most of the time an extra
pointer layer is just wasteful.
In the case of scriptin[curscript] in getchar.c, curscript used
to mean in practice:
N+1 open scripts when curscript>0
zero or one open scripts when curscript==0
Which means scriptin[0] had to be compared to NULL to disambiguate the
curscript=0 case.
Instead, use curscript==-1 to mean that are no script,
then all pointer comparisons dissappear and we can just use an array of
structs without extra pointers.