Problem:
Showing an error via vim.notify() makes it awkward for callers such as
lsp/handlers.lua to avoid showing redundant errors.
Solution:
Return the message instead of showing it. Let the caller decide whether
and when to show the message.
---
Rejected experiment: move vim.ui.open() to vim.env.open()
Problem:
`vim.ui` is where user-interface "providers" live, which can be
overridden. It would also be useful to have a "providers" namespace for
platform-specific features such as "open", clipboard, python, and the other
providers listed in `:help providers`. We could overload `vim.ui` to
serve that purpose as the single "providers" namespace, but
`vim.ui.nodejs()` for example seems awkward.
Solution:
`vim.env` currently has too narrow of a purpose. Overload it to also be
a namespace for `vim.env.open`.
diff --git a/runtime/lua/vim/_meta.lua b/runtime/lua/vim/_meta.lua
index 913f1fe20348..17d05ff37595 100644
--- a/runtime/lua/vim/_meta.lua
+++ b/runtime/lua/vim/_meta.lua
@@ -37,8 +37,28 @@ local options_info = setmetatable({}, {
end,
})
-vim.env = setmetatable({}, {
- __index = function(_, k)
+vim.env = setmetatable({
+ open = setmetatable({}, {
+ __call = function(_, uri)
+ print('xxxxx'..uri)
+ return true
+ end,
+ __tostring = function()
+ local v = vim.fn.getenv('open')
+ if v == vim.NIL then
+ return nil
+ end
+ return v
+ end,
+ })
+ },
+ {
+ __index = function(t, k, ...)
+ if k == 'open' then
+ error()
+ -- vim.print({...})
+ -- return rawget(t, k)
+ end
local v = vim.fn.getenv(k)
if v == vim.NIL then
return nil
Followup to #20883
Related: #18144
This patch changes the behavior of the default `vim.ui.input` when the user
aborts with `<C-c>`. Currently, it produces an error message + stack and causes
`on_confirm` to not be called. With this patch, `<C-c>` will cause `on_confirm`
to be called with `nil`, the same behavior as when the user aborts with `<Esc>`.
I can think of three good reasons why the behavior should be this way:
1. Easier for the user to understand** It's not intuitive for there to be two
ways to abort an input dialog that have _different_ outcomes. As a user,
I would expect any action that cancels the input to leave me in the same
state. As a plugin author, I see no value in having two possible outcomes for
aborting the input. I have to handle both cases, but I can't think of
a situation where I would want to treat one differently than the other.
2. Provides an API that can be overridden by other implementations** The current
contract of "throw an error upon `<C-c>`" cannot be replicated by async
implementations of `vim.ui.input`. If the callsite wants to handle the case
of the user hitting `<C-c>` they need to use `pcall(vim.ui.input, ...)`,
however an async implementation will instantly return and so there will be no
way for it to produce the same error-throwing behavior when the user inputs
`<C-c>`. This makes it impossible to be fully API-compatible with the
built-in `vim.ui.input`.
3. Provides a useful guarantee to the callsite** As a plugin author, I want the
guarantee that `on_confirm` will _always_ be called (only catastrophic errors
should prevent this). If I am in the middle of some async thread of logic,
I need some way to resume that logic after handing off control to
`vim.ui.input`. The only way to handle the `<C-c>` case is with `pcall`,
which as already mentioned, breaks down if you're using an alternative
implementation.
fix(vim.ui.input): return empty string when inputs nothing
The previous behavior of `vim.ui.input()` when typing <CR> with
no text input (with an intention of having the empty string as input)
was to execute `on_confirm(nil)`, conflicting with its documentation.
Inputting an empty string should now correctly execute `on_confirm('')`.
This should be clearly distinguished from cancelling or aborting the
input UI, in which case `on_confirm(nil)` is executed as before.
* vim.ui.input is an overridable function that prompts for user input
* take an opts table and the `on_confirm` callback, see `:help vim.ui.input` for more details
* defaults to a wrapper around vim.fn.input(opts)
* switches the built-in client's rename handler to use vim.ui.input by default
Continuation of https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/15202
A plugin like telescope could override it with a fancy implementation
and then users would get the telescope-ui within each plugin that
utilizes the vim.ui.select function.
There are some plugins which override the `textDocument/codeAction`
handler solely to provide a different UI. With custom client commands and
soon codeAction resolve support, it becomes more difficult to implement
the handler right - so having a dedicated way to override the picking
function will be useful.