- Render node ranges as virtual text
- Set filettype=query. The virtual text is to avoid parsing errors.
- Make sure highlights text is always in view.
Problem: Some injections (like markdown) allow specifying arbitrary
language names for code blocks, which may be lead to errors when
looking for a corresponding parser in runtime path.
Solution: Validate that the language name only contains alphanumeric
characters and `_` (e.g., for `c_sharp`) and error otherwise.
Add a "show_tree" function to view a textual representation of the
nodes in a language tree in a window. Moving the cursor in the
window highlights the corresponding text in the source buffer, and
moving the cursor in the source buffer highlights the corresponding
nodes in the window.
Use the first, not last, query for a language on runtimepath. Typically,
this implies that a user query will override a site plugin query, which
will override a bundled runtime query.
Problem: Treesitter queries for a given language in runtime were merged together,
leading to errors if they targeted different parser versions (e.g., bundled viml queries
and those shipped by nvim-treesitter).
Solution: Runtime queries now work as follows:
* The last query in the rtp without `; extends` in the header will be used as the base query
* All queries (without a specific order) with `; extends` are concatenated with the base query
BREAKING CHANGE: queries need to be updated if they are meant to extend other queries
- Added 'spell' option to extmarks:
Extmarks with this set will have the region spellchecked.
- Added 'noplainbuffer' option to 'spelloptions':
This is used to tell Neovim not to spellcheck the buffer. The old
behaviour was to spell check the whole buffer unless :syntax was set.
- Added spelling support to the treesitter highlighter:
@spell captures in highlights.scm are used to define regions which
should be spell checked.
- Added support for navigating spell errors for extmarks:
Works for both ephemeral and static extmarks
- Added '_on_spell_nav' callback for decoration providers:
Since ephemeral callbacks are only drawn for the visible screen,
providers must implement this callback to instruct Neovim which
regions in the buffer need can be spell checked.
The callback takes a start position and an end position.
Note: this callback is subject to change hence the _ prefix.
- Added spell captures for built-in support languages
Co-authored-by: Lewis Russell <lewis6991@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Björn Linse <bjorn.linse@gmail.com>
This removes the support for defining links via
vim.treesitter.highlighter.hl_map (never documented, but plugins did
anyway), or the uppercase-only `@FooGroup.Bar` to `FooGroup` rule.
The fallback is now strictly `@foo.bar.lang` to `@foo.bar` to `@foo`,
and casing is irrelevant (as it already was outside of treesitter)
For compatibility, define default links to builting syntax groups
as defined by pre-existing color schemes
The private 'get_node_range' function from the languagetree module has
been renamed and remains private as it serve a purpose that is only
relevant inside the languagetree module.
The 'get_node_range' upstreamed from nvim-treesitter in the treesitter
module has been made public as it is in itself a utlity function.
As part of the upstream of utility functions from nvim-treesitter, this
option when set to false allows to return a table (downstream behavior).
Effectively making the switch from the downstream to the upstream
function much easier.
Previously the `offset!` directive populated the metadata in such a way
that the new range could be attributed to a specific capture. #14046
made it so the directive simply stored just the new range in the
metadata and information about what capture the range is based from is
lost.
This change reverts that whilst also correcting the docs.
When trying to load a language parser, escape the value of
the language.
With language injection, the language might be picked up from the
buffer. If this value is erroneous it can cause `nvim_get_runtime_file`
to hard error.
E.g., the markdown expression `~~~{` will extract '{' as a language and
then try to get the parser using `parser/{*` as the pattern.