Problem: Vim9: when debugging cannot inspect local variables.
Solution: Make local variables available when debugging.
b69c6fb7b4
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: recursive callback may cause issues on some archs
Solution: Decrease the limit drastically to 20
Recursive callback limit causes problems on some architectures
Since commit 47510f3d6598a1218958c03ed11337a43b73f48d we have a test
that causes a recursive popup callback function to be executed. However
it seems the current limit of 'maxfuncdepth' option value is still too
recursive for some 32bit architectures (e.g. 32bit ARM).
So instead of allowing a default limit of 100 (default value for
'maxfuncdepth'), let's reduce this limit to 20. I don't think there is a
use case where one would need such a high recursive callback limit and a
limit of 20 seems reasonable (although it is currently hard-coded).
closes: vim/vim#13495closes: vim/vim#135022076463e38
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
We already have an extensive suite of static analysis tools we use,
which causes a fair bit of redundancy as we get duplicate warnings. PVS
is also prone to give false warnings which creates a lot of work to
identify and disable.
Problem: CI: test_termdebug fails
Solution: only test for a changed winlayout, if the window
width actually changed
Also, include an unrelated comment (which doesn't warrant its own patch
number)
305127f9f2
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: Not easy to filter the output of maplist().
Solution: Add mode_bits to the dictionary. (Ernie Rael, closesvim/vim#10356)
d8f5f76621
Co-authored-by: Ernie Rael <errael@raelity.com>
Problem: It is not easy to restore saved mappings.
Solution: Make mapset() accept a dict argument. (Ernie Rael, closesvim/vim#10295)
51d04d16f2
Co-authored-by: Ernie Rael <errael@raelity.com>
Problem: Can only get a list of mappings.
Solution: Add the optional {abbr} argument. (Ernie Rael, closesvim/vim#10277)
Rename to maplist(). Rename test file.
09661203ec
Co-authored-by: Ernie Rael <errael@raelity.com>
Problem: Not simple programmatic way to find a specific mapping.
Solution: Add getmappings(). (Ernie Rael, closesvim/vim#10273)
659c240cf7
Co-authored-by: Ernie Rael <errael@raelity.com>
Problem: maparg() does not indicate the type of script where it was defined.
Solution: Add "scriptversion".
a9528b39a6
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: statusline may look different than expected
Solution: do not check for highlighting of stl and stlnc characters
statusline fillchar may be different than expected
If the highlighting group for the statusline for the current window
|hl-StatusLine| or the non-current window |hl-StatusLineNC| are cleared
(or do not differ from each other), than Vim will use the hard-coded
fallback values '^' (for the non-current windows) or '=' (for the
current window). I believe this was done, to make sure the statusline
will always be visible and be distinguishable from the rest of the
window.
However, this may be unexpected, if a user explicitly defined those
fillchar characters just to notice that those values are then not used
by Vim.
So, let's assume users know what they are doing and just always return
the configured stl and stlnc values. And if they want the statusline to
be non-distinguishable from the rest of the window space, so be it. It
is their responsibility and Vim shall not know better what to use.
fixes: vim/vim#13366closes: vim/vim#134886a650bf696
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: No way to have extmarks automatically removed when the range it
is attached to is deleted.
Solution: Add new 'invalidate' property that will hide a mark when the
entirety of its range is deleted. When "undo_restore" is set
to false, delete the mark from the buffer instead.
When the contents of a quickfix buffer are replaced, there is a chance
that deletion of the previous lines fails. This ensures that we don't
get stuck in an infinite loop of retrying.
Fix#25402
This ensures that the read stream never overflows termkey's internal
buffer. This only happens when a large amount of bytes are pushed into
termkey at the same time, which is exactly what happens when we receive
a large OSC 52 response.
When the terminal emulator sends an OSC sequence to Nvim (as a response
to another OSC sequence that was first sent by Nvim), populate the OSC
sequence in the v:termresponse variable and fire the TermResponse event.
The escape sequence is also included in the "data" field of the
autocommand callback when the autocommand is defined in Lua.
This makes use of the already documented but unimplemented TermResponse
event. This event exists in Vim but is only fired when Vim receives a
primary device attributes response.
Fixes: https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/25856
It is enabled with ENABLE_ASAN_UBSAN like other compilers. Technically
it only enables ASAN as UBSAN is not available, meaning to make the
variable names fully correct we'd need to separate it into two checks:
ENABLE_ASAN and ENABLE_UBSAN, but the convenience of combining them into
the same flag outweighs the theoretical correctness.
Also note in CONTRIBUTING.md that debug builds in ASAN is not supported.
Technically it is the debug runtime that is not supported, which cmake
automatically enables when using the debug build type. However, neovim
can't be built with debug builds without linking to the debug runtime
since the third party libraries has likely been linked to the debug
runtime if it was built with debug build type. This technicality is
likely uninteresting to the potential developer and it's easier to just
say to use a release build type.
problem: checks for wp->w_p_rl are all over the place, making simple
things like "advance column one cell" incredibly complicated.
solution: always fill linebuf_char[] using an incrementing counter,
and then mirror the buffer as a post-processing step
This was "easier" that I first feared, because the stupid but simple
workaround for things like keeping linenumbers still left-right,
e.g. "mirror them and them mirror them once more" is more or less
what vim did already. So let's just keep doing that.
long is 32 bits on windows, while it is 64 bits on other architectures.
This makes the type suboptimal for a codebase meant to be
cross-platform. Replace it with more appropriate integer types.
It is a design goal of extmarks that they allow precise tracking
of changes across undo/redo, including restore the exact positions
after a do/undo or undo/redo cycle. However this behavior is not useful
for all usecases. Many plugins won't keep marks around for long after
text changes, but uses them more like a cache until some external source
(like LSP semantic highlights) has fully updated to changed text and
then will explicitly readjust/replace extmarks as needed.
Add a "undo_restore" flag which is true by default (matches existing
behavior) but can be set to false to opt-out of this behavior.
Delete dead u_extmark_set() code.
regext_bt.c and regexp_nfa.c are inlined into regexp.c instead of
included as a header. This makes developer tools like clang-tidy and
clangd be able to understand the code better.
- silence false warnings on MSVC
- merge `clang-tidy` cmake target into `lintc` and remove the
corresponding make target
- use cmake's built-in endianness detection
Problem: complete_info() skips entries with 'noselect'
Solution: Check, if first entry is at original text state
Unfortunately, Commit daef8c74375141974d61b85199b383017644978c
introduced a regression, that when ':set completeopt+=noselect' is set
and no completion item has been selected yet, it did not fill the
complete_info['items'] list.
This happened, because the current match item did not have the
CP_ORIGINAL_TEXT flag set and then the cp->prev pointer did point to the
original flag item, which caused the following while loop to not being
run but being skipped instead.
So when the 'noselect' is set, only start with to the previous selection
item, if the initial completion item has the CP_ORIGINAL_TEXT flag set,
else use the 2nd previous item instead.
fixes: vim/vim#13451closes: vim/vim#1345257f9ce1a09
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
refactor: use a more idiomatic loop to iterate over the cells
There are two cases in which the following assertion would fail:
```c
assert(g->icell < g->ncells);
```
1. If `g->ncells = 0`. Update this to be legal.
2. If an EOF is reached while parsing `wrap`. In this case, the unpacker
attempts to resume from `cells`, which is a bug. Create a new state
for parsing `wrap`.
Reference: https://neovim.io/doc/user/ui.html#ui-event-grid_line
Previously, 'rightleftcmd' was implemented by having all code which
would affect msg_col or output screen cells be conditional on `cmdmsg_rl`.
This change removes all that and instead implements rightleft as a
mirroring post-processing step.
In cases where the generated files depend on changes to Nvim itself,
generating the files with an older version of Nvim will fail because
those changes are not present in the older version.
For example, if a new option is added then the generator script should
be run with the version of Nvim that contains the new option, or else
the generation will fail.
Co-authored-by: dundargoc <gocdundar@gmail.com>