Problem: Crash on exit with EXITFREE and using win_execute().
Solution: Also save and restore tp_topframe. (issue vim/vim#9374)
dab17a0689
Couldn't repro the crash in the test, but I only care about this patch so
switch_win sets topframe properly for win_split_ins in nvim_open_win and
nvim_win_set_config.
Add a test using nvim_win_call and :wincmd, as I couldn't repro the issue via
nvim_open_win or nvim_win_set_config (though it's clear they're affected by this
patch).
That said, at that point, could just use {un}use_tabpage inside switch_win
instead, which also updates tp_curwin (though maybe continue to not set it in
restore_win). That would also fix possible inconsistent behaviour such as:
:call win_execute(w, "let curwin_nr1 = tabpagewinnr(1)")
:let curwin_nr2 = tabpagewinnr(1)
Where it's possible for curwin_nr1 != curwin_nr2 if these commands are run from
the 1st tabpage, but window "w" is in the 2nd (as the 1st tabpage's tp_curwin
may still be invalid). I'll probably PR a fix for that later in Vim.
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
and for return value of nlua_exec/nlua_call_ref, as this uses
the same family of functions.
NB: the handling of luaref:s is a bit of a mess.
add api_luarefs_free_XX functions as a stop-gap as refactoring
luarefs is a can of worms for another PR:s.
as a minor feature/bug-fix, nvim_buf_call and nvim_win_call now preserves
arbitrary return values.
Problem:
On devel(nightly) versions, deprecation warnings for hard-deprecated
features are not being displayed. E.g.,
- to be removed in: 0.11
- hard-deprecation since 0.10
- soft-deprecation since 0.9
then 0.10-nightly (0.10.0-dev) versions as well as 0.10.0 (stable)
should display the deprecation warning message.
Solution:
Improve the code and logic on `vim.deprecate()`, and improve
test cases with mocked `vim.version()`.
As specified by MAINTAIN.md, features should be soft deprecated at first
(meaning no warnings) to give people a chance to adjust. The problem
with this approach is that deprecating a feature becomes harder than
usual as during the soft deprecation period you need to remember not to
issue a warning, and during the hard deprecation period you need to
remember to start issuing a warning.
This behavior is only enforced if the `plugin` parameter is `nil` as
plugins may not want this specific behavior.
This is the command invoked repeatedly to make the changes:
:%s/^\(.*\)|\%(\*\(\d\+\)\)\?$\n\1|\%(\*\(\d\+\)\)\?$/\=submatch(1)..'|*'..(max([str2nr(submatch(2)),1])+max([str2nr(submatch(3)),1]))/g
Problem: sidescrolloff and scrolloff options work slightly
different than other global-local options
Solution: Make it behave consistent for all global-local options
It was noticed, that sidescrolloff and scrolloff options behave
differently in comparison to other global-local window options like
'listchars'
So make those two behave like other global-local options. Also add some
extra documentation for a few special local-window options.
Add a few tests to make sure all global-local window options behave
similar
closes: vim/vim#12956closes: vim/vim#126434a8eb6e7a9
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
* feat(lua): allow vim.wo to be double indexed
Problem: `vim.wo` does not implement `setlocal`
Solution: Allow `vim.wo` to be double indexed
Co-authored-by: Christian Clason <c.clason@uni-graz.at>
`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.
This is a more robust method for tagging a packed table as it completely
eliminates the possibility of mistaking an actual table key as the
packed table tag.
Problem:
`vim.split('a:::', ':', {trimempty=true})` trims inner empty items.
Regression from 9c49c10470
Solution:
Set `empty_start=false` when first non-empty item is found.
close#23212
This was originally meant as a convenience but prevents possible
functionality. For example:
-- Get the keys of the table with even values
local t = { a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4 }
vim.iter(t):map(function(k, v)
if v % 2 == 0 then return k end
end):totable()
The example above would not work, because the map() function returns
only a single value, and cannot be converted back into a table (there
are many such examples like this).
Instead, to convert an iterator into a map-like table, users can use
fold():
vim.iter(t):fold({}, function(t, k, v)
t[k] = v
return t
end)
If pack() is called with a single value, it does not create a table; it
simply returns the value it is passed. When unpack is called with a
table argument, it interprets that table as a list of values that were
packed together into a table.
This causes a problem when the single value being packed is _itself_ a
table. pack() will not place it into another table, but unpack() sees
the table argument and tries to unpack it.
To fix this, we add a simple "tag" to packed table values so that
unpack() only attempts to unpack tables that have this tag. Other tables
are left alone. The tag is simply the length of the table.
vim.iter wraps a table or iterator function into an `Iter` object with
methods such as `filter`, `map`, and `fold` which can be chained to
produce iterator pipelines that do not create new tables at each step.
feat(lua)!: add stricter vim.tbl_islist(), rename vim.tbl_isarray()
Problem: `vim.tbl_islist` allows gaps in tables with integer keys
("arrays").
Solution: Rename `vim.tbl_islist` to `vim.tbl_isarray`, add new
`vim.tbl.islist` that checks for consecutive integer keys that start
from 1.
* feat(lua): vim.tbl_contains supports general tables and predicates
Problem: `vim.tbl_contains` only works for list-like tables (integer
keys without gaps) and primitive values (in particular, not for nested
tables).
Solution: Rename `vim.tbl_contains` to `vim.list_contains` and add new
`vim.tbl_contains` that works for general tables and optionally allows
`value` to be a predicate function that is checked for every key.
The first argument which is non-nil is returned. This is useful when
using nested default values (e.g. in the EditorConfig plugin).
Before:
local enable = vim.F.if_nil(vim.b.editorconfig, vim.F.if_nil(vim.g.editorconfig, true))
After:
local enable = vim.F.if_nil(vim.b.editorconfig, vim.g.editorconfig, true)
Problem:
Codebase inconsistently binds vim.api onto a or api.
Solution:
Use api everywhere. a as an identifier is too short to have at the
module level.
Problem:
- vim.split has more features than vim.gsplit.
- Cannot inspect the "separator" segments of vim.split or vim.gsplit.
Solution:
- Move common implementation from vim.split into vim.gsplit.
- TODO: deprecate vim.split in favor of vim.totable(vim.gsplit())?
- Introduce `keepsep` parameter.
Related: 84f66909e4
Problem:
vim.deprecate() shows ":help deprecated" for third-party plugins. ":help
deprecated" only describes deprecations in Nvim, and is unrelated to any
3rd party deprecations.
Solution:
If `plugin` is specified, don't show ":help deprecated".
fix#22235
Problem:
The function name `vim.pretty_print`:
1. is verbose, which partially defeats its purpose as sugar
2. does not draw from existing precedent or any sort of convention
(except external projects like penlight or python?), which reduces
discoverability, and degrades signaling about best practices.
Solution:
- Rename to `vim.print`.
- Change the behavior so that
1. strings are printed without quotes
2. each arg is printed on its own line
3. tables are indented with 2 instead of 4 spaces
- Example:
:lua ='a', 'b', 42, {a=3}
a
b
42
{
a = 3
}
Comparison of alternatives:
- `vim.print`:
- pro: consistent with Lua's `print()`
- pro: aligns with potential `nvim_print` API function which will
replace nvim_echo, nvim_notify, etc.
- con: behaves differently than Lua's `print()`, slightly misleading?
- `vim.echo`:
- pro: `:echo` has similar "pretty print" behavior.
- con: inconsistent with Lua idioms.
- `vim.p`:
- pro: very short, fits with `vim.o`, etc.
- con: not as discoverable as "echo"
- con: less opportunity for `local p = vim.p` because of potential shadowing.
also make implicit submodules "uri" and "_inspector" work with completion
this is needed for `:lua=vim.uri_<tab>` wildmenu completion
to work even before uri or _inspector functions are used.