Note: this contains two _temporary_ changes which can be reverted
once the Arena vs no-Arena distinction in API wrappers has been removed.
Both nlua_push_Object and object_to_vim_take_luaref() has been changed
to take the object argument as a pointer. This is not going to be
necessary once these are only used with arena (or not at all) allocated
Objects.
The object_to_vim() variant which leaves luaref untouched might need to
stay for a little longer.
The '*.bats' file type is for Bash Automated Testing System (BATS)
scripts. BATS scripts are Bash with a special '@test' extension but they
otherwise work with Vim's bash filetype.
See https://github.com/bats-core/bats-corecloses: vim/vim#14039d00fb4b3a2
Co-authored-by: Brandon Maier <brandon.maier@collins.com>
The 'Config.in' file type is for Buildroot configuration files.
Buildroot Config.in files use the same Kconfig backend as the Linux
kernel's Kconfig files.
Buildroot also has other filename variants that follow "Config.in.*",
they are used to distinguish multiple Config.in files in the same
directory.
See https://buildroot.org/downloads/manual/manual.html#_literal_config_in_literal_filecloses: vim/vim#140385f20f050ef
Co-authored-by: Brandon Maier <brandon.maier@collins.com>
Problem: filetype: no support for dtso files
Solution: Add detection for *.dtso files as dts file type
(Markus Schneider-Pargmann)
*.dtso files are devicetree overlay files which have the same syntax as dts or dtsi files.
closes: vim/vim#14026b1700fb33f
Co-authored-by: Markus Schneider-Pargmann <msp@baylibre.com>
Problem: Visual highlight hard to read with 'termguicolors'
(Maxim Kim)
Solution: Set Visual GUI foreground to black (with background=light)
and lightgrey (with background=dark)
(Maxim Kim)
fixes: vim/vim#14024closes: vim/vim#1402534e4a05d02
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
Problem: Visual highlighting can still be improved
Solution: Update Visual highlighting for 8 color terminals,
use uniform grey highlighting for dark and light bg
(Maxim Kim)
Update terminal Visual
1. Use `ctermbg=Grey ctermfg=Black` for both dark and light
This uniforms Visual highlighting between default dark and light colors
And should work for vim usually detecting light background for terminals
with black/dark background colors.
Previously used `ctermfg=White` leaks `cterm=bold` if available colors
are less than 16.
2. Use `term=reverse cterm=reverse ctermbg=NONE ctermfg=NONE`
for terminals reporting less than 8 colors available
If the terminal has less than 8 colors, grey just doesn't work right
closes: vim/vim#1394059bafc8171
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
Previously the LSP-Client object contained some fields that are also
in the client config, but for a lot of other fields, the config was used
directly making the two objects vaguely entangled with either not having
a clear role.
Now the config object is treated purely as config (read-only) from the
client, and any fields the client needs from the config are now copied
in as additional fields.
This means:
- the config object is no longet normalised and is left as the user
provided it.
- the client only reads the config on creation of the client and all
other implementations now read the clients version of the fields.
In addition, internal support for multiple callbacks has been added to
the client so the client tracking logic (done in lua.lsp) can be done
more robustly instead of wrapping the user callbacks which may error.
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: Loading `vim.fs` via the `vim.loader` Lua package loader will
result in a stack overflow due to a cyclic dependency. This may happen
when the `vim.fs` module isn't byte-compiled, i.e. when `--luamod-dev`
is used (#27413).
Solution: `vim.loader` depends on `vim.fs`. Therefore `vim.fs` should
be loaded in advance.
Problem: upper-case of ß should be U+1E9E (CAPITAL LETTER SHARP S)
(fenuks)
Solution: Make gU, ~ and g~ convert the U+00DF LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S (ß)
to U+1E9E LATIN CAPITAL LETTER SHARP S (ẞ), update tests
(glepnir)
This is part of Unicode 5.1.0 from April 2008, so should be fairly safe
to use now and since 2017 is part of the German standard orthography,
according to Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_%E1%BA%9E#cite_note-auto-12
There is however one exception: UnicodeData.txt for U+00DF
LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S does NOT define U+1E9E LATIN CAPITAL LETTER
SHARP S as its upper case version. Therefore, toupper() won't be able
to convert from lower sharp s to upper case sharp s (the other way
around however works, since U+00DF is considered the lower case
character of U+1E9E and therefore tolower() works correctly for the
upper case version).
fixes: vim/vim#5573closes: vim/vim#14018bd1232a1fa
Co-authored-by: glepnir <glephunter@gmail.com>
Problem: 'breakindentopt' "min" works incorrectly with 'signcolumn'.
Solution: Use win_col_off() and win_col_off2().
(zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#14014f0a9d65e0a
vim-patch:9.1.0100: Redrawing can be improved with undo and 'spell'
Problem: When undoing with 'spell', redrawWinline() is called after
changed_lines(), while later win_update() sets redraw type to
UPD_NOT_VALID, even though w_redraw_top and w_redraw_bot are
still valid.
Solution: Only set redraw type to UPD_NOT_VALID when inserting/deleting
lines after parts of window has pending redraw, i.e., when
changed_lines() is called after redrawWinline().
(zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#14019f2d90a3511
Problem: Mechanism to prevent recursive screen updating is incomplete.
Solution: Add "redraw_not_allowed" and set it in build_stl_str_hl().
(issue vim/vim#10952)
471c0fa3ee
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Attempting to manipulate the window layout via ex commands is not safe
here. It is also redundant: `win_free_all()` can free multiple windows
by itself perfectly fine.
Problem: CompleteChanged not triggered when new leader added causing
no matching item in the completion menu
Solution: When completion is active but no items matched still trigger
CompleteChanged event
(glepnir)
closes: vim/vim#139820d3c0a66a3Fix#15077
runtime(vim): Update syntax file (vim/vim#14009)
- allow comments after :highight commands
- match the bang in a :highlight[!] command
- highlight the bang in :map[!], :menu[!] and :unlet[!] with vimOper
like all other commands
b614b284ee
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Problem: #25826 added a (duplicate) sign comparison function, which was
modified and strayed from the original in #27418.
Solution: Merge the two functions and add a display test that actually
tests for this order in addition to the legacy tests.
Problem: 'breakindent' behaves inconsistently with 'list' and splits.
Solution: Use 'listchars' from the correct window and handle caching
properly. Move cheaper comparisons to the top.
(zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#14008efabd7c8d4
The `get_indent_str_vtab()` function currently calls `tabstop_padding()`
every time a tab is encountered (unless tabstops aren't used).
`tabstop_padding()` either does a division by 'tabstop' If 'vartabstop'
is not set, or iterates through the 'vartabstop' list to find current
tab width.
Since the virtual column only increases, we can keep track of where the
next tabstop would be, and update this information once it was reached.
`get_indent_str_vtab()` also depends on 'listchars' "tab" value from the
current window, even though it may be called for a line from the same
buffer in a different window. In most cases, it is called with tabstops
enabled (last argument was `false`), so I split the function into one
that uses tabstops and the other that doesn't.
I removed `get_indent_str()` since I couldn't find any calls to it.
runtime(gpg): Mark dangerous use-embedded-filename with WarningMsg
The syntax highlighter is likely to encourage people to use the listed
commands.
But `use-embedded-filename` is a dangerous option that can cause GnuPG
to write arbitrary data to arbitrary files whenever GnuPG encounters
malicious data.
GnuPG upstream explicitly warns against using this option:
https://dev.gnupg.org/T4500https://dev.gnupg.org/T6972
However, since this is a valid option, we cannot just drop it from the
syntax script. Instead, let's mark it with the WarningMsg highlighting
to make it obvious, that this option is different (and should not be
used for security reasons).
closes: vim/vim#139616d91227267
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
The dispatchers used by the RPC client should be defined in the client,
so they have been moved there. Due to this, it also made sense to move
all code related to client configuration and the creation of the RPC
client there too.
Now vim.lsp.start_client is significantly simplified and now mostly
contains logic for tracking open clients.
- Renamed client.new -> client.start
When "q" is set in 'shortmess' it now fully hides the "recording @a" message
when you are recording a macro instead of just shortening to "recording". This
removes duplication when using reg_recording() in the statusline.
Related #19193