libuv users are only supposed to directly include uv.h. In v1.21.0, all
the uv-*.h headers were renamed to uv/*.h, which caused the unit tests
to fail with
[123/125] Generating post/uv-errno.h
FAILED: test/includes/post/uv-errno.h
cd «SRCDIR»/src/neovim/build/test/includes && /usr/bin/clang -std=c99 -E -P «SRCDIR»/src/neovim/test/includes/pre/uv-errno.h -I/usr/include -I/usr/include -o «SRCDIR»/neovim/build/test/includes/post/uv-errno.h
«SRCDIR»/src/neovim/test/includes/pre/uv-errno.h:1:10: error: 'uv-errno.h' file not found with <angled> include; use "quotes" instead
#include <uv-errno.h>
^~~~~~~~~~~~
"uv-errno.h"
The intention of the file is to extend libuv's error constants with more
values used by the unit tests. This can just as easily be achieved
without poking into pseudo-private header files.
closes#8466closes#8664
Regression by 0d7daaad98.
- Fix length comparison.
- Fix loop(s) which iterated over all fields of array `pcc` even if it
was not filled up (try unicode 0x9f as statusline character).
Note about the tests:
- To input unicode with more than two hex digits you can use <C-v>U...:
a + U+fe20: a︠
a + U+fe20 + U+fe21: a︠︡
Use LuaJIT FFI to create char pointer.
Validate output with utf_ptr2char(), vim_iswordc() and vim_iswordp().
Use const for LuaJIT string-to-char conversion.
closes#7383closes#7715
This implements the compromise described in #7383:
* low-priority CursorLine if foreground is not set
* high-priority ("same as Vim" priority) CursorLine if foreground is set
ref d1874ab282
ref 56eda2aa17
DWIM: avoid empty buffer 1 when stdin was empty. If other files were
specified at startup, we assume that stdin is only accidentally
not-a-TTY: user did not intend to send text from it.
ref #8560
ref #8561
If stdin is not a TTY we read it into buffer 1, as text. But if the
stdin pipe is empty, Nvim was most likely invoked for some other reason.
DWIM: select buffer 2 (if it exists). Example:
echo file1 | xargs nvim
closes#8560closes#8561
ref https://github.com/equalsraf/neovim-qt/issues/417
Enabling CMake's USE_FOLDERS option and adding the FOLDER property to
targets allows some IDEs to list the targets in an organized
hierarchy of folders.
Before this change, -E/-Es without `-u NONE` reads stdin as Ex commands.
It should always read stdin as text (into buffer 1), like this:
echo foo | nvim -Es +'%p'
foo
echo foo | nvim -Es -u NORC +'%p'
foo
This changes Ex mode (Q, -e) to work like Vim's "improved Ex mode"
(gQ, -E). That brings some small behavior differences, but should not
impact most Ex scripts (unless, for example, they depend on mappings
being disabled--but that can be solved for -e by skipping user config).
Before this change:
* the screen test hangs.
After this change:
* Q acts like gQ.
* -e/-es differs from -E/-Es only in its treatment of stdin.
This moves towards potentially removing getexmodeline().
(HINT: That does NOT mean "removing Ex mode", it means removing the
Vi-compatible Ex mode, which differs from Vim's "improved Ex mode" only
in some minor details (e.g. mappings are disabled).)
ref #1089 :-)~
Problem: For some people the hint about quitting is not sufficient.
Solution: Put <Enter> separately. Also use ":qa!" to get out even when
there are changes.
28a8193e31
According to POSIX[0], only octal escapes are supported by the printf
command. GNU coreutils' printf and some shells' builtin printf versions
which support hex escapes, but dash and non-GNU printf do not.
[0]: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/printf.html
Problem: When using an assert function one can either specify a message or
get a message about what failed, not both.
Solution: Concatenate the error with the message.
c7b831ca15
Fixes 2 failing tests in startup_spec.lua.
The Windows-only `--literal` option complicates support of "stdin-as-text
+ file-args" (#7679). Could work around it, but it's not worth
the trouble:
- users have a reasonable (and englightening) alternative: nvim +"n *"
- "always literal" is more consistent/predictable
- avoids platform-specific special-case
Unrelated changes:
- Replace fileno(stdxx) with STDXX_FILENO for consistency (not motivated
by any observed technical reason).
silent-mode (-es/-Es) has been broken for years. The workaround up to
now was to include --headless. But --headless is not equivalent because
it prints all messages, not the limited subset defined by silent-mode.
Treat stdin as text by default (so the "-" file is not needed):
echo foo | nvim
It works with file args (implemented in next commit), too:
echo foo | nvim file1.txt file2.txt
Why? Because:
- Execution of input is (1) almost always unintentional/confusing,
and (2) potentially destructive.
- Avoids the need for time-delayed warning. #7659
- The _common_ case is to open text in a buffer, not send commands.
Note:
- Not for Ex-mode (-es) because it is used by scripts. But maybe `-Es`?
- Not for --headless, because stdio may be a protocol stream and may be
used for any purpose by stdioopen().
To treat stdin as Normal-mode commands, use `-s -` instead:
echo ifoo | nvim -s -
Other alternatives:
- Replay a register. E.g. the following mostly works, except @q aborts
on any "beep" (e.g. if the cursor can't move).
nvim -c '%d q|norm @q' -
- Future: Let `:%source` work with unsaved buffer contents?
closes#2087closes#7659