Problem: filetype: some history files are not recognized
Solution: Add some history patterns to filetype.vim
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#14513da70feabea
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: xilinx files are not recognized
Solution: Add a few xilinx specific file patterns,
inspect lpr files for being xml/pascal
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#14454614691ceef
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: some TeX files are not recognized
Solution: Add more patterns for TeX files and inspect
a few more files for being TeX files
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#1445661ee833a50
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
To avoid repeatedly requesting a buffer multiple times before a request is completed, the current implementation puts the requested buffer into the active_refreshes table before requesting.
But since we only remove the buffer from active_refreshes in the lsp-handler of textDocument/codeLens, this will cause if the user sends a request that cannot trigger lsp-handler (for example, if there is an LSP server attached to the current buffer, and especially when the user creates an autocmd which performs vim.lsp.codelens.refresh after the BufEnter event is triggered like in the document example), this buffer will be put into active_refreshes, and there is no way to remove it, which will result in all subsequent vim.lsp.codelens.refresh not requesting textDocument/codeLens.
According to the LSP specification, the CodeLens.command is optional but the CodeLens.command.command is not optional, which means the correct representation of a display-only code lens is indeed one with a command with a title to display and an empty string as command.
Problem: filetype: R history files are not recognized
Solution: Detect '.Rhistory' files as r filetype
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#14440fc21b6437c
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
runtime(doc): Normalise builtin-function optional parameter formatting
These should generally be formatted as func([{arg}]) and referenced as
{arg} in the description.
closes: vim/vim#144389cd9e759ab
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Design
- Enable commenting support only through `gc` mappings for simplicity.
No ability to configure, no Lua module, no user commands. Yet.
- Overall implementation is a simplified version of 'mini.comment'
module of 'echasnovski/mini.nvim' adapted to be a better suit for
core. It basically means reducing code paths which use only specific
fixed set of plugin config.
All used options are default except `pad_comment_parts = false`. This
means that 'commentstring' option is used as is without forcing single
space inner padding.
As 'tpope/vim-commentary' was considered for inclusion earlier, here is
a quick summary of how this commit differs from it:
- **User-facing features**. Both implement similar user-facing mappings.
This commit does not include `gcu` which is essentially a `gcgc`.
There are no commands, events, or configuration in this commit.
- **Size**. Both have reasonably comparable number of lines of code,
while this commit has more comments in tricky areas.
- **Maintainability**. This commit has (purely subjectively) better
readability, tests, and Lua types.
- **Configurability**. This commit has no user configuration, while
'vim-commentary' has some (partially as a counter-measure to possibly
modifying 'commentstring' option).
- **Extra features**:
- This commit supports tree-sitter by computing `'commentstring'`
option under cursor, which can matter in presence of tree-sitter
injected languages.
- This commit comments blank lines while 'tpope/vim-commentary' does
not. At the same time, blank lines are not taken into account when
deciding the toggle action.
- This commit has much better speed on larger chunks of lines (like
above 1000). This is thanks to using `nvim_buf_set_lines()` to set
all new lines at once, and not with `vim.fn.setline()`.
Problem:
Some servers don't report progress during initialize unless the client
sets the `workDoneToken`
See https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#initiatingWorkDoneProgress
In particular:
> There is no specific client capability signaling whether a client will
> send a progress token per request. The reason for this is that this is
> in many clients not a static aspect and might even change for every
> request instance for the same request type. So the capability is signal
> on every request instance by the presence of a workDoneToken property.
And:
> Servers can also initiate progress reporting using the
> window/workDoneProgress/create request. This is useful if the server
> needs to report progress outside of a request (for example the server
> needs to re-index a database). The token can then be used to report
> progress using the same notifications used as for client initiated
> progress.
So far progress report functionality was relying entirely on the latter.
Solution:
Set a `workDoneToken`
Closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/27938
Ref #21393
- Move default user commands to _defaults.lua as that now contains all
kinds of defaults rather than just default mappings and menus.
- Remove the :aunmenu as there are no menus when _defaults.lua is run.
Problem: Dialog for file changed outside of Vim not tested.
Solution: Add a test. Move FileChangedShell test. Add 'L' flag to
feedkeys().
5e66b42aae
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: filetype: typespec files are not recognized
Solution: Detect '*.tsp' files as typespec
(Hilmar Wiegand)
Specs is at https://typespec.io/closes: vim/vim#143926c9f4f98f1
Co-authored-by: Hilmar Wiegand <me@hwgnd.de>
Problem: Injecting languages for file redirects (e.g., in bash) is not
possible.
Solution: Add `@injection.filename` capture that is piped through
`vim.filetype.match({ filename = node_text })`; the resulting filetype
(if not `nil`) is then resolved as a language (either directly or
through the list maintained via `vim.treesitter.language.register()`).
Note: `@injection.filename` is a non-standard capture introduced by
Helix; having two editors implement it makes it likely to be upstreamed.
Problem: Filetype detection fails if file name ends in many '~'.
Solution: Strip multiple '~' at the same time. (closesvim/vim#12553)
c12e4eecbb
In Nvim this already works as Lua filetype detection isn't subject to
such a small recursion limit as autocommands, but it still makes sense
to avoid unnecessary recursion.
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: filetype: rock_manifest and config.ld files are not recognized
Solution: Detect 'rock_manifest' and 'config.ld' as lua
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#14370a917bd58bd
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: fontconfig files are not recognized
Solution: detect 'fonts.conf' as xml
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#14367a2c27b01dc
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: zsh theme, history and zunit files are not
recognized.
Solution: Detect '.zsh_history', '*.zsh-theme' and '*.zunit' as zsh
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#14366a55a22a1a3
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: bash history files are not recognized
Solution: detect .bash-history and .bash_history files as bash
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#1436584ce55001a
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: netrw history file is not recognized
Solution: Detect .netrwhist as vim files (Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#14364abbb4a4f70
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: mysql history files are not recognized
Solution: Detect .mysql_history as mysql
(Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#143626b285c8cfd
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: supertux files are not recognized
Solution: Supertux uses lisp to store hotkeys in config and game stage information,
so add a pattern for supertux files.
(Wu, Zhenyu)
Reference: https://github.com/SuperTux/supertux/wiki/S-Expressioncloses: vim/vim#143564ff83b904e
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: support for Intel HEX files is lacking
Solution: Add more file extensions that are typical for Intel HEX files
(Wu, Zhenyu)
Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_HEXcloses: vim/vim#14355e523dd9803
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
The `callHierarchy` function should warn the user when
`textDocument/prepareCallHierarchy` didn't resolve an entity and
return, rather than calling the `callHierarchy/{incoming,outgoing}Calls`
method with an empty object - which is encoded as an empty list (which
doesn't respect language server specification for the
`callHierarchy/incomingCalls` call).
Backslashes are valid characters in unix style paths.
Fix the conversion of backslashes to forward slashes in several `vim.fs`
functions when not on Windows. On Windows, backslashes will still be converted
to forward slashes.
Problem: Two unrelated things are tested by a single test.
Solution: Split it into two, restoring the old Test_brace_single_line().
Add missing cleanup to some tests.
(zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#14323ad493ef3ea
Problem: Page-wise scrolling with Ctrl-D/Ctrl-U implements
it's own logic to change the topline and cursor.
More logic than necessary for scrolling with Ctrl-F/Ctrl-B
was removed in patch 9.1.0211.
Solution: Re-use the logic from Ctrl-E/Ctrl-Y/Ctrl-F/Ctrl-B while
staying backward compatible as much as possible.
Restore some of the logic that determined how many lines will
be scrolled (Luuk van Baal)
5a2e3ec9ac
Problem: Page-wise scrolling with Ctrl-F/Ctrl-B implements
it's own logic to change the topline and cursor.
In doing so, skipcol is not handled properly for
'smoothscroll', and virtual lines.
Solution: Re-use the logic from Ctrl-E/Ctrl-Y while staying
backward compatible as much as possible.
b9f5b95b7b
Problem: filetype: support for gnuplot files is lacking
Solution: Also detect *.gnuplot files
(RobbiZ98)
closes: vim/vim#142433a6bd0c5c7
Co-authored-by: RobbiZ98 <113035863+RobbiZ98@users.noreply.github.com>
Use pattern matching instead, as fnamemodify() with :e produces an empty
string when the file name only has an extension, leading to differences
in behavior from Vim.
Related #16955#27972
Problem: Not enough tests for the slice() function.
Solution: Test with multibyte chars, and in both Legacy and Vim9 script.
Update docs to be clearer about how it treats composing chars.
(zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#14275ad38769030
Problem: Vento files are not recognized.
Solution: Recognize *.vto files as filetype "vento" (wrapperup)
Vento is a templating engine https://vento.js.org/closes: vim/vim#142299f26e5a9bc
Co-authored-by: wrapperup <wrapperup4@gmail.com>
Problem:
`TSNode:_rawquery()` is complicated, has known issues and the Lua and
C code is awkwardly coupled (see logic with `active`).
Solution:
- Add `TSQueryCursor` and `TSQueryMatch` bindings.
- Replace `TSNode:_rawquery()` with `TSQueryCursor:next_capture()` and `TSQueryCursor:next_match()`
- Do more stuff in Lua
- API for `Query:iter_captures()` and `Query:iter_matches()` remains the same.
- `treesitter.c` no longer contains any logic related to predicates.
- Add `match_limit` option to `iter_matches()`. Default is still 256.
Problem: no overflow check for string formatting
Solution: Check message formatting function for overflow.
(Chris van Willegen)
closes: vim/vim#13799c35fc03dbd
Co-authored-by: Christ van Willegen <cvwillegen@gmail.com>
Problem: winframe functions incorrectly recompute window positions if
the altframe wasn't adjacent to the closed frame, which is
possible if adjacent windows had 'winfix{width,height}' set.
Solution: recompute for windows within the parent of the altframe and
closed frame. Skip this (as before) if the altframe was
top/left, but only if adjacent to the closed frame, as
positions won't change in that case. Also correct the return
value documentation for win_screenpos. (Sean Dewar)
The issue revealed itself after removing the win_comp_pos call below
winframe_restore in win_splitmove. Similarly, wrong positions could result from
windows closed in other tabpages, as win_free_mem uses winframe_remove (at least
until it is entered later, where enter_tabpage calls win_comp_pos).
NOTE: As win_comp_pos handles only curtab, it's possible via other means for
positions in non-current tabpages to be wrong (e.g: after changing 'laststatus',
'showtabline', etc.). Given enter_tabpage recomputes it, maybe it's intentional
as an optimization? Should probably be documented in win_screenpos then, but I
won't address that here.
closes: vim/vim#14191
Nvim: don't reuse "wp" for "topleft" in winframe_remove, so the change
integrates better with the call to winframe_find_altwin before it.
5866bc3a0f
Problem: more places exist where curwin == prevwin, and it may even be
expected in some cases.
Solution: revert v9.1.0001, but document that it's possible instead.
(Sean Dewar)
I've had a change of heart for the following reasons:
- A quick 'n dirty [GitHub code search](https://github.com/search?q=%2F%28winnr%5C%28%5C%29%5Cs*%3D%3D%5Cs*winnr%5C%28%5B%27%22%5D%23%5B%27%22%5D%5C%29%7Cwinnr%5C%28%5B%27%22%5D%23%5B%27%22%5D%5C%29%5Cs*%3D%3D%5Cs*winnr%5C%28%5C%29%29%2F&type=code)
reveals some cases where it's expected in the wild.
Particularly, it made me aware `winnr() == winnr('#')` is possible when curwin
is changed temporarily during the evaluation of a &statusline expression item
(`%{...}`), and is used to show something different on the statusline
belonging to the previous window; that behaviour wasn't changed in v9.1.0001,
but it means curwin == prevwin makes sense in some cases.
- The definition and call sites of back_to_prevwin imply some expectation that
prevwin == wp (== curwin) is possible, as it's used to skip entering the
prevwin in that case.
- Prior to v9.1.0001, `:wincmd p` would not beep in the case that was patched in
v9.1.0001, but now does. That resulted in vim/vim#14047 being opened, as it affected
the CtrlP plugin.
I find it odd that `:wincmd p` had cases where it wouldn't beep despite doing
nothing, but it may be preferable to keep things that way (or instead also
beep if curwin == prevwin, if that's preferred).
- After more digging, I found cases in win_free_mem, enter_tabpage,
aucmd_restbuf and qf_open_new_cwindow where curwin == prevwin is possible
(many of them from autocommands). Others probably exist too, especially in
places where curwin is changed temporarily.
fixes: vim/vim#14047closes: vim/vim#14186d64801e913
Using -1 as the initial value can cause the pattern offset to become
negative, which in turn results in a negative subpriority, which fails
validation in nvim_buf_set_extmark.
Tree-sitter queries can add URLs to a capture using the `#set!`
directive, e.g.
(inline_link
(link_text) @text.reference
(link_destination) @text.uri
(#set! @text.reference "url" @text.uri))
The pattern above is included by default in the `markdown_inline`
highlight query so that users with supporting terminals will see
hyperlinks. For now, this creates a hyperlink for *all* Markdown URLs of
the pattern [link text](link url), even if `link url` does not contain
a valid protocol (e.g. if `link url` is a path to a file). We may wish to
change this in the future to only linkify when the URL has a valid
protocol scheme, but for now we delegate handling this to the terminal
emulator.
In order to support directives which reference other nodes, the
highlighter must be updated to use `iter_matches` rather than
`iter_captures`. The former provides the `match` table which maps
capture IDs to nodes. However, this has its own challenges:
- `iter_matches` does not guarantee the order in which patterns are
iterated matches the order in the query file. So we must enforce
ordering manually using "subpriorities" (#27131). The pattern index of
each match dictates the extmark's subpriority.
- When injections are used, the highlighter contains multiple trees. The
pattern indices of each tree must be offset relative to the maximum
pattern index from all previous trees to ensure that extmarks appear
in the correct order.
- The `iter_captures` implementation currently has a bug where the
"match" table is only returned for the first capture within a pattern
(see #27274). This bug means that `#set!` directives in a query
apply only to the first capture within a pattern. Unfortunately, many
queries in the wild have come to depend on this behavior.
`iter_matches` does not share this flaw, so switching to
`iter_matches` exposed bugs in existing highlight queries. These
queries have been updated in this repo, but may still need to be
updated by users. The `#set!` directive applies to the _entire_ query
pattern when used without a capture argument. To make `#set!`
apply only to a single capture, the capture must be given as an
argument.
- Add :h fswatch-limitations that notifies user about default inotify
limitations on linux and how to adjust them
- Check for Event queue overflow message from fswatch and refer user to
new documentation
Signed-off-by: Tomas Slusny <slusnucky@gmail.com>
Problem: win_splitmove fires WinNewPre and possibly WinNew when moving
windows, even though no new windows are created.
Solution: don't fire WinNew and WinNewPre when inserting an existing
window, even if it isn't the current window. Improve the
accuracy of related documentation. (Sean Dewar)
96cc4aef3d
Partial as WinNewPre has not been ported yet (it currently has problems anyway).
Problem: nvim_open_win blocking all win_set_buf autocommands when !enter &&
!noautocmd is too aggressive.
Solution: temporarily block WinEnter/Leave and BufEnter/Leave events when
setting the buffer. Delegate the firing of BufWinEnter back to win_set_buf,
which also has the advantage of keeping the timing consistent (e.g: before the
epilogue in enter_buffer, which also handles restoring the cursor position if
autocommands didn't change it, among other things). Reword the documentation for
noautocmd a bit.
I pondered modifying do_buffer and callees to allow for BufEnter/Leave being
conditionally disabled, but it seems too invasive (and potentially error-prone,
especially if new code paths to BufEnter/Leave are added in the future).
Unfortunately, doing this has the drawback of blocking ALL such events for the
duration, which also means blocking unrelated such events; like if window
switching occurs in a ++nested autocmd fired by win_set_buf. If this turns out
to be a problem in practice, a different solution specialized for nvim_open_win
could be considered. :-)
Problem: currently, for splits, nvim_win_set_config accepts win without any of
split or vertical set, which has little effect and seems error-prone.
Solution: require at least one of split or vertical to also be set for splits.
Also, update nvim_win_set_config docs, as it's no longer limited to just
floating and external windows.
Problem: Duplicate assignment in f_getregion().
Solution: Remove the duplicate assignment. Also improve getregion()
docs wording and fix an unrelated typo (zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#141540df8f93bda
Problem: can only call getregion() for current buffer
Solution: Allow to retrieve selections from different buffers
(Shougo Matsushita)
closes: vim/vim#1413184bf6e658d
Co-authored-by: Shougo Matsushita <Shougo.Matsu@gmail.com>
Problem:
`vim.lsp.util.rename()` deletes the buffers that are affected by
renaming. This has undesireable side effects. For example, when renaming
a directory, all buffers under that directory are deleted and windows
displaying those buffers are closed. Also, buffer options may change
after renaming.
Solution:
Rename the buffers with :saveas.
An alternative approach is to record all the relevant states and restore
it after renaming, but that seems to be more complex. In fact, the older
version was attempting to restore the states but only partially and
incorrectly.
Context:
Nvim catches errors from the user's `on_exit` and rpc handler callbacks
and prints the error message.
Problem:
Printing the error message uses Nvim api functions. But callbacks
mentioned above run in `:h lua-loop-callbacks` where most of `vim.api`
is not allowed, so Nvim itself raises error.
Solution:
`vim.schedule()` the error reporting when necessary.
- Added `@inlinedoc` so single use Lua types can be inlined into the
functions docs. E.g.
```lua
--- @class myopts
--- @inlinedoc
---
--- Documentation for some field
--- @field somefield integer
--- @param opts myOpts
function foo(opts)
end
```
Will be rendered as
```
foo(opts)
Parameters:
- {opts} (table) Object with the fields:
- somefield (integer) Documentation
for some field
```
- Marked many classes with with `@nodoc` or `(private)`.
We can eventually introduce these when we want to.
Problem:
vim._watch.watchdirs has terrible performance.
Solution:
- On linux use fswatch as a watcher backend if available.
- Add File watcher section to health:vim.lsp. Warn if watchfunc is
libuv-poll.
runtime(doc): some improvements to getregion() docs (vim/vim#14122)
- Mention the default selection behavior
- Remove useless sentence
- Correct description about space padding
87410ab3f5
Problem: getregion() can be improved (after v9.1.120)
Solution: change getregion() implementation to use pos as lists and
one optional {opt} dictionary (Shougo Matsushita)
Note: The following is a breaking change!
Currently, the getregion() function (included as of patch v9.1.120) takes
3 arguments: the first 2 arguments are strings, describing a position,
arg3 is the type string.
However, that is slightly inflexible, there is no way to specify
additional arguments. So let's instead change the function signature to:
getregion(pos1, pos2 [, {Dict}]) where both pos1 and pos2 are lists.
This is slightly cleaner, and gives us the flexibility to specify
additional arguments as key/value pairs to the optional Dict arg.
Now it supports the "type" key to specify the selection type
(characterwise, blockwise or linewise) and now in addition one can also
define the selection type, independently of what the 'selection' option
actually is.
Technically, this is a breaking change, but since the getregion()
Vimscript function is still quite new, this should be fine.
closes: vim/vim#1409019b718828d
Co-authored-by: Shougo Matsushita <Shougo.Matsu@gmail.com>
Previously rename would unconditionally read the to-be-renamed file from the
disk and write it to the disk. This is redundant in some cases
If the file is not already loaded, it's not attached to lsp client, so nvim
doesn't need to care about this file.
If the file is loaded but has no change, it doesn't need to be written.
Problem: Some LSP servers return `textDocument/documentLink` responses
containing file URIs with line/column numbers in the fragment.
`vim.uri_to_fname` returns invalid file names for these URIs.
Solution: Remove the URI fragment from file URIs.
Problem:
The documentation flow (`gen_vimdoc.py`) has several issues:
- it's not very versatile
- depends on doxygen
- doesn't work well with Lua code as it requires an awkward filter script to convert it into pseudo-C.
- The intermediate XML files and filters makes it too much like a rube goldberg machine.
Solution:
Re-implement the flow using Lua, LPEG and treesitter.
- `gen_vimdoc.py` is now replaced with `gen_vimdoc.lua` and replicates a portion of the logic.
- `lua2dox.lua` is gone!
- No more XML files.
- Doxygen is now longer used and instead we now use:
- LPEG for comment parsing (see `scripts/luacats_grammar.lua` and `scripts/cdoc_grammar.lua`).
- LPEG for C parsing (see `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua`)
- Lua patterns for Lua parsing (see `scripts/luacats_parser.lua`).
- Treesitter for Markdown parsing (see `scripts/text_utils.lua`).
- The generated `runtime/doc/*.mpack` files have been removed.
- `scripts/gen_eval_files.lua` now instead uses `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua` directly.
- Text wrapping is implemented in `scripts/text_utils.lua` and appears to produce more consistent results (the main contributer to the diff of this change).
Validate the channel number before responding to an OSC 10/11 request.
When used with nvim_open_term, the channel number is unset (since there
is no process on the other side of the PTY).
Assert that the buffer number passed to apply_text_edits is fully
resolved (not 0 or null). Pass the known buffer number to
apply_text_edits from lsp.formatexpr().
runtime(doc) Update help text for matchbufline() and matchstrlist()
closes: vim/vim#14080a35235e824
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: Internal error when passing mark in another buffer to
getregion().
Solution: Don't allow marks in another buffer (zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#14076
Internal error when passing mark in another buffer to getregion()
421b597470
Problem: hard to get visual region using Vim script
Solution: Add getregion() Vim script function
(Shougo Matsushita, Jakub Łuczyński)
closes: vim/vim#13998closes: vim/vim#115793f905ab3c4
Cherry-pick changes from patch 9.1.0122, with :echom instead of :echow.
Co-authored-by: Shougo Matsushita <Shougo.Matsu@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jakub Łuczyński <doubleloop@o2.pl>
There is now a new tmux 3.4 release that queries background color from
the parent terminal if background is not set in tmux, so removing the
passthrough still works when background is not set in tmux, and fixes
the incorrect detection when background is set in tmux.
Currently, highlight.on_yank() does buffer-local highlighting, this PR
makes it window scoped.
Also fix the problem that when yanking in a buffer, moving to another
buffer, and yanking before the original buffer highlight disappears, the
original buffer highlight won't disappear on timeout.
To align the output of `nvim_get_hl` with its documentation -- which
points to `nvim_set_hl`, remove mentions of the keys `foreground`,
`background` and `special`.
The long keys are are still supported (via fallback checks inside
`dict2hlattrs`), but the `fg`, `bg` and `sp` keys are preferenced.
runtime(filetype): Modula-2 files with priority not detected (vim/vim#14055)
Problem: Modula-2 files with a specified priority are not detected.
Solution: Match the priority syntax in module header lines when
performing heuristic content detection.
Disable the :defcompile debug line. This was accidentally left enabled
in commit 68a8947.
ef387c062b
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Query patterns can contain quantifiers (e.g. (foo)+ @bar), so a single
capture can map to multiple nodes. The iter_matches API can not handle
this situation because the match table incorrectly maps capture indices
to a single node instead of to an array of nodes.
The match table should be updated to map capture indices to an array of
nodes. However, this is a massively breaking change, so must be done
with a proper deprecation period.
`iter_matches`, `add_predicate` and `add_directive` must opt-in to the
correct behavior for backward compatibility. This is done with a new
"all" option. This option will become the default and removed after the
0.10 release.
Co-authored-by: Christian Clason <c.clason@uni-graz.at>
Co-authored-by: MDeiml <matthias@deiml.net>
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/27428 changed the semantics of
callbacks passed to nvim_create_autocmd such that any truthy value will
delete the autocommand (rather than just the literal boolean value
`true`). Update the documentation accordingly and add an entry to
`news.txt`.
The behavior is now consistent between nvim_create_autocmd and
nvim_buf_attach.
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>
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.
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.
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
Problem:
If a rename results in a path that has missing parent directory(s), it
will fail.
Solution:
Do a recursive mkdir before attempting the rename.
Problem:
`vim.lsp.diagnostic.on_diagnostic` accepts an undocumented severity_limit
option which is widely used.
Solution:
Deprecate it in favour of `{min = severity}` used in `vim.diagnostic`.
Since this is undocumented, the schedule for removal is accelerated to
0.11.
Document that the `start` and `stop` parameters in
`Query:iter_captures()` and `Query:iter_matches()` are optional.
The tree-sitter lib has been bumped up to 0.20.9, so we also no longer
need "Requires treesitter >= 0.20.9".
- `TSQuery`: userdata object for parsed query.
- `vim.treesitter.Query`: renamed from `Query`.
- Add a new field `lang`.
- `TSQueryInfo`:
- Move to `vim/treesitter/_meta.lua`, because C code owns it.
- Correct typing for `patterns`, should be a map from `integer`
(pattern_id) to `(integer|string)[][]` (list of predicates or
directives).
- `vim.treesitter.QueryInfo` is added.
- This currently has the same structure as `TSQueryInfo` (exported
from C code).
- Document the fields (see `TSQuery:inspect`).
- Add typing for `vim._ts_parse_query()`.
Getting current channel info was kind of annoying via RPC. Two
functions had to be called:
1. `nvim_get_api_info` which returns `[channel_id, meta_data]`.
- This results in `channel_id = api.nvim_get_api_info()[0]`.
- Here the meta_data is sent but never used.
2. Finally call `nvim_get_chan_info(channel_id)`.
This commit reduces the need for `nvim_get_api_info` as passing 0
returns current channel info.
Problem:
The LSP client code is implemented as a complicated closure-class
(class defined in a single function).
Solution:
Move LSP client code to a more conventional Lua class and move to a
separate file.
Problem:
- `:InspectTree` was showing node ranges in 1-based indexing, i.e., in
vim cursor position (lnum, col). However, treesitter API adopts
0-based indexing to represent ranges (Range4). This can often be
confusing for developers and plugin authors when debugging code
written with treesiter APIs.
Solution:
- Change to 0-based indexing from 1-based indexing to show node ranges
in `:InspectTree`.
- Note: To make things not complicated, we do not provide an option or
keymap to configure which indexing mode to use.
Problem: vim.lsp.tagfunc() causes an infinite loop.
This is a bug happened while introducing deferred loading.
Solution: Rename the private module to `vim.lsp._tagfunc`.
The benefit of this is that users only pay for what they use. If e.g.
only `vim.lsp.buf_get_clients()` is called then they don't need to load
all modules under `vim.lsp` which could lead to significant startuptime
saving.
Also `vim.lsp.module` is a bit nicer to user compared to
`require("vim.lsp.module")`.
This isn't used for some nested modules such as `filetype` as it breaks
tests with error messages such as "attempt to index field 'detect'".
It's not entirely certain the reason for this, but it is likely it is
due to filetype being precompiled which would imply deferred loading
isn't needed for performance reasons.
Problem:
Processing non-fast events during SystemObj:wait() may cause two pieces
of code to interfere with each other, and is different from jobwait().
Solution:
Don't process non-fast events during SystemObj:wait().
The "priority" field of extmarks can be used to set priorities of
extmarks which dictates which highlight group a range will actually have
when there are multiple extmarks applied. However, when multiple
extmarks have the same priority, the only way to enforce an actual
priority is through the order in which the extmarks are set.
It is not always possible or desirable to set extmarks in a specific
order, however, so we add a new "subpriority" field that explicitly
enforces the ordering of extmarks that have the same priority.
For now this will be used only to enforce priority of treesitter
highlights. A single node in a treesitter tree may match multiple
captures, in which case that node will have multiple extmarks set. The
order in which captures are returned from the treesitter API is not
_necessarily_ in the same order they are defined in a query file, so we
use the new subpriority field to force that ordering.
For now subpriorites are not documented and are not meant to be used by
external code, and it only applies to ephemeral extmarks. We indicate
the "private" nature of subpriorities by prefixing the field name with
an "_".
Problem: E95 is possible if a buffer called "[Command Line]" already
exists when opening the cmdwin. This can also happen if the
cmdwin's buffer could not be deleted when closing.
Solution: Un-name the cmdwin buffer, and give it a special name instead,
similar to what's done for quickfix buffers and for unnamed
prompt and scratch buffers. As a result, BufFilePre/Post are
no longer fired when opening the cmdwin. Add a "command" key
to the dictionary returned by getbufinfo() to differentiate
the cmdwin buffer instead. (Sean Dewar)
Cherry-pick test_normal changes from v9.0.0954.
1fb4103206
Problem: Cannot map Super Keys in GTK UI
(Casey Tucker)
Solution: Enable Super Key mappings in GTK using <D-Key>
(Casey Tucker)
As a developer who works in both Mac and Linux using the same keyboard,
it can be frustrating having to remember different key combinations or
having to rely on system utilities to remap keys.
This change allows `<D-z>` `<D-x>` `<D-c>` `<D-v>` etc. to be recognized
by the `map` commands, along with the `<D-S-...>` shifted variants.
```vimrc
if has('gui_gtk')
nnoremap <D-z> u
nnoremap <D-S-Z> <C-r>
vnoremap <D-x> "+d
vnoremap <D-c> "+y
cnoremap <D-v> <C-R>+
inoremap <D-v> <C-o>"+gP
nnoremap <D-v> "+P
vnoremap <D-v> "-d"+P
nnoremap <D-s> :w<CR>
inoremap <D-s> <C-o>:w<CR>
nnoremap <D-w> :q<CR>
nnoremap <D-q> :qa<CR>
nnoremap <D-t> :tabe<CR>
nnoremap <D-S-T> :vs#<CR><C-w>T
nnoremap <D-a> ggVG
vnoremap <D-a> <ESC>ggVG
inoremap <D-a> <ESC>ggVG
nnoremap <D-f> /
nnoremap <D-g> n
nnoremap <D-S-G> N
vnoremap <D-x> "+x
endif
```
closes: vim/vim#1269892e90a1e10
Co-authored-by: Casey Tucker <dctucker@hotmail.com>
Extmarks can contain URLs which can then be drawn in any supporting UI.
In the TUI, for example, URLs are "drawn" by emitting the OSC 8 control
sequence to the TTY. On terminals which support the OSC 8 sequence this
will create clickable hyperlinks.
URLs are treated as inline highlights in the decoration subsystem, so
are included in the `DecorSignHighlight` structure. However, unlike
other inline highlights they use allocated memory which must be freed,
so they set the `ext` flag in `DecorInline` so that their lifetimes are
managed along with other allocated memory like virtual text.
The decoration subsystem then adds the URLs as a new highlight
attribute. The highlight subsystem maintains a set of unique URLs to
avoid duplicating allocations for the same string. To attach a URL to an
existing highlight attribute we call `hl_add_url` which finds the URL in
the set (allocating and adding it if it does not exist) and sets the
`url` highlight attribute to the index of the URL in the set (using an
index helps keep the size of the `HlAttrs` struct small).
This has the potential to lead to an increase in highlight attributes
if a URL is used over a range that contains many different highlight
attributes, because now each existing attribute must be combined with
the URL. In practice, however, URLs typically span a range containing a
single highlight (e.g. link text in Markdown), so this is likely just a
pathological edge case.
When a new highlight attribute is defined with a URL it is copied to all
attached UIs with the `hl_attr_define` UI event. The TUI manages its own
set of URLs (just like the highlight subsystem) to minimize allocations.
The TUI keeps track of which URL is "active" for the cell it is
printing. If no URL is active and a cell containing a URL is printed,
the opening OSC 8 sequence is emitted and that URL becomes the actively
tracked URL. If the cursor is moved while in the middle of a URL span,
we emit the terminating OSC sequence to prevent the hyperlink from
spanning multiple lines.
This does not support nested hyperlinks, but that is a rare (and,
frankly, bizarre) use case. If a valid use case for nested hyperlinks
ever presents itself we can address that issue then.
Problem: vim.diagnostic.{underline,float,virtual_text...}.severity
will have a type warning on list-like or table (min-max) inputs,
e.g. `vim.diagnostic.config { float = { severity = { min = INFO } } }`.
Solution: Correct the typing as documented in |diagnostic-severity|.
'foldtext' can be set to an empty string to disable and render the
line with:
- extmark highlight
- syntax highlighting
- search highlighting
- no line wrapping
- spelling
- conceal
- inline virtual text
- respects `fillchars:fold`
Currently normal virtual text is not displayed
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
- Problem: One cannot easily write something like, for example:
`version_current >= {0, 10, 0}`; writing like
`not vim.version.lt(version_current, {0, 10, 0})` is verbose.
- Solution: add {`le`,`ge`} in addition to {`lt`,`gt`}.
- Also improve typing on the operator methods: allow `string` as well.
- Update the example in `vim.version.range()` docs: `ge` in place of
`gt` better matches the semantics of `range:has`.
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()`.
Problem: Parsed language annotations can be random garbage so
`nvim_get_runtime_file` throws an error.
Solution: Validate that `alias` is a valid language name before trying
to find a parser for it.