Before calling "attach" a screen object is just a dummy container for
(row, col) values whose purpose is to be sent as part of the "attach"
function call anyway.
Just create the screen in an attached state directly. Keep the complete
(row, col, options) config together. It is still completely valid to
later detach and re-attach as needed, including to another session.
Problem:
Tests have lots of exec_lua calls which input blocks of code
provided as unformatted strings.
Solution:
Teach exec_lua how to handle functions.
Specifically, functions that are run in the context of the test runner
are put in module `test/testutil.lua` while the functions that are run
in the context of the test session are put in
`test/functional/testnvim.lua`.
Closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/27004.
Problem: Text properties are wrong after "cc". (Axel Forsman)
Solution: Pass the deleted byte count to inserted_bytes(). (closesvim/vim#10412,
closesvim/vim#7737, closesvim/vim#5763)
d0b1a09f44
Co-authored-by: LemonBoy <thatlemon@gmail.com>
Problem:
With vim.treesitter.foldexpr, `o`-ing two lines above a folded region
opens the fold. This does not happen with legacy foldexprs. For example,
make a markdown file with the following text (without indentation),
enable treesitter fold, and follow the instruction in the text.
put cursor on this line and type zoo<Esc>
initially folded, revealed by zo
# then this fold will be opened
initially folded, revealed by o<Esc>
Analysis:
* `o` updates folds first (done in `changed_lines`), evaluating
foldexpr, and then invokes `on_bytes` (done in `extmark_splice`).
* Treesitter fold allocates the foldinfo for added lines (`add_range`)
on `on_bytes`.
* Therefore, when treesitter foldexpr is invoked while running `o`, it
sees outdated foldinfo.
Solution:
`extmark_splice`, and then `changed_lines`. This seems to be the
standard order in other places, e.g., `nvim_buf_set_lines`.
When tabstop and shiftwidth are not equal, tabs are inserted as individual
spaces and then rewritten as tab characters in a second pass. That second pass
did not call changed_bytes which resulted in events being omitted.
Fixes#25092
`nvim_(get|set)_option_value` pick the current buffer / window by default for buffer-local/window-local (but not global-local) options. So specifying `buf = 0` or `win = 0` in opts is unnecessary for those options. This PR removes those to reduce code clutter.
When a buffer update callback is called, textlock is active so buffer
text cannot be changed, but cursor can still be moved. This can cause
problems when the buffer update is in the middle of an operator, like
the one mentioned in #16729. The solution is to save cursor position and
restore it afterwards, like how cursor is saved and restored when
evaluating an <expr> mapping.
When :undo! was introduced to Nvim the implementation of 'inccommand'
preview callback hasn't been fully decided yet, so not notifying buffer
update callbacks made sense for 'inccommand' preview callback in case it
needs to undo the changes itself.
Now it turns out that the undo-and-forget is done automatically for
'inccommand', so it doesn't make sense for :undo! to avoid notifying
buffer update callbacks anymore.
There can be other places that access window buffer info (e.g.
`tabpagebuflist()`), so checking `w_closing` in `win_findbuf()` doesn't
solve the crash in all cases, and may also cause Nvim's behavior to
diverge from Vim.
Fix#14998