- Match escape sequences in :command replacement blocks.
- Match :substitute after escape sequences (a temporary fix until Ex
commands are contained).
fixes: vim/vim#17326closes: vim/vim#17663a8b86605f3
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
- Match Conceal, ComplMatchIns, MsgArea, Terminal, and User[1-9]
highlight groups.
- Generate the vimGroup syntax group from runtime/syncolor.vim.
- Match :SynColor and :SynLink as special user commands.
fixesvim/vim#17467closes: vim/vim#17556c233c2e6a5
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Set minlines and maxlines to 100 and 200 respectively. Set these after
the script interface syntax files have been loaded to ensure the values
set in those are overridden.
fixesvim/vim#17580closes: vim/vim#17614a5b744ef93
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Remove unmatchable :normal {mark,register} matches. The arg to :normal
is now handled separately and contained marks and registers are no
longer matched.
closes: vim/vim#17571dcff497373
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
The required space in Vim9 continuation comments (#\ comment) was
accidentally removed in commit 6acca4b as trailing whitespace.
closes: vim/vim#1757399b9847bd8
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Limit heredoc matches to assignment statements. Matching these at the
top level is very slow.
closes: vim/vim#17473274efcc7e6
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Complement the documented support for the recognition of all
public types of the "java.lang" package (":help java.vim").
(The original syntax item generator may have, inadvertently,
contributed via suppressing "NullPointerException"s to not
having annotation and interface types qualify in general.)
Also, re-link usage instructions for the alternative syntax
item generator to a rolling "master"'s version.
closes: vim/vim#17419b577ad50d0
Co-authored-by: Aliaksei Budavei <0x000c70@gmail.com>
- Match full :mark and :k commands.
- Match 2 and 3 letter :s repeat commands.
- Match :s [count] argument.
closes: vim/vim#17408086b3b5b79
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
- Match "autoload" as a keyword in :import commands.
- Match an expression argument for the filename.
closes: vim/vim#153757b5550fac7
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
- Match comments and trailing bar after :set without args.
- Match the <...> form for key code options.
- Remove orphaned vim_ex_python[3x]* dump files (Aliaksei Budavei).
closes: vim/vim#17397570e71a277
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
- Fixed syntax highlighting for ksh93 namespace variables starting
with '${.'
- Added support for the alarm, eloop, fds, mkservice, pids, poll and
sha2sum builtins (which are indeed ksh93 builtins, albeit whether or
not they are available depends on the ksh release and the compiled
SHOPT options).
- Added support for the many Unix commands provided by ksh93's libcmd
as builtin commands (since these are general commands, scripts for
other shells like bash will also highlight these).
- The dumps for the sh_0{2,5,6,8,9}.sh were recreated due to this
change affecting commands those scripts call (e.g. 'wc').
- Enabled ${parameter/pattern/string} and friends for ksh syntax.
- Enabled case modification for ksh. See also:
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/commit/c1762e03
- Enabled ;;& support for ksh. See also:
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/commit/fc89d20a
- Added many special ksh variables using 93u+m's data/variables.c
as a reference.
If vim can't figure out which ksh release is in play using e.g.
the hashbang path, in such a case a generic default that enables
everything and the kitchen sink will be used. Otherwise, features will
be disabled if it's absolutely known a certain feature will not be
present. Examples:
- ERRNO is ksh88 specific, so that is locked to ksh88.
- Only 93u+m (assumed for generic) has SRANDOM, and only 93u+m
and 93v- have case modification support.
- 93u+ and 93v- have VPATH and CSWIDTH variables (the latter
is vestigal, but still present in the hardcoded variable table).
- 93v- and ksh2020 have (buggy and near unusable) implementations
of compgen and complete.
- Only mksh provides function substitutions, i.e. ${|command;}.
This took the better part of my day to implement. It seems to work well
enough though. (Also had to regenerate the dumps again while testing
it, as now there are dup scripts with mere hashbang differences, used
solely for testing syntax highlighting differences.)
closes: vim/vim#17348b0691b46bd
Co-authored-by: Johnothan King <johnothanking@protonmail.com>
- Normalise interface heredoc highlighting with that used for
:let-heredocs.
- Remove interface feature testing. The Lua and Python interface
command scripts are now highlighted by default. Loading all syntax
files incurs an undesirable load-time burden so highlighting of the
less popular MzScheme, Perl, Ruby and Tcl interfaces is disabled by
default. g:vimsyn_embed can still be used to customise the supported
interfaces.
- Always highlight interface ex-commands as valid commands, even when
the corresponding command-script highlighting is disabled.
- Highlight simple command-script statements as well as heredocs.
- Remove error highlighting of heredoc and statement command-script
regions when an interface is disabled. These are now highlighted as
plain text.
- Allow indented heredoc end tokens when "trim" is specified.
- Match interface heredocs in :def functions.
- Fix runaway vimEmbedError regions. These regions have been removed.
- Use python2 syntax for :python, and :pythonx when 'pyxversion' is
appropriately set.
closes: vim/vim#15522a577e4289c
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Tag folding poses a few difficulties. Many elements, e.g.
"blockquote", are always delimited by start and end tags;
end tags for some elements, e.g. "p", can be omitted in
certain contexts; void elements, e.g. "hr", have no end tag.
Although the rules for supporting omissible end tags are
ad-hoc and involved, they apply to elements in scope.
Assuming syntactical wellformedness, an end tag can be
associated with its nearest matching start tag discoverable
in scope and towards the beginning of a file, whereas all
unbalanced tags and inlined tags can be disregarded.
For example:
------------------------------------------------------------
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en"> <!-- >1 : 1 -->
<body> <!-- >2 : 2 -->
<p>Paragraph vim/vim#1. <!-- = : 2 -->
<p> <!-- >3 : 3 -->
Paragraph vim/vim#2. <!-- = : 3 -->
</p> <!-- <3 : 3 -->
<p>Paragraph vim/vim#3.</p> <!-- = : 2 -->
</body> <!-- <2 : 2 -->
</html> <!-- <1 : 1 -->
------------------------------------------------------------
(HTML comments here, "<!-- ... -->", record two values for
each folded line that are separated by ":", a value obtained
from "&foldexpr" and a value obtained from "foldlevel()".)
Innermost foldedable tags will be flattened. For example:
------------------------------------------------------------
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en"> <!-- >1 : 1 -->
<body> <!-- >2 : 2 -->
<div class="block"> <!-- >3 : 3 -->
<pre><code> <!-- >4 : 4 -->
[CODE SNIPPET] <!-- = : 4 -->
</code></pre> <!-- <4 : 4 -->
</div> <!-- <3 : 3 -->
</body> <!-- <2 : 2 -->
</html> <!-- <1 : 1 -->
------------------------------------------------------------
No folding will be requested for the "<code>"-"</code>" tag
pair and reflected by "&foldexpr" because such a fold would
have claimed the same lines that the immediate fold of the
"<pre>"-"</pre>" tag already claims.
Run-on folded tags may confuse Vim. When a file such as:
------------------------------------------------------------
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en"> <!-- >1 : 1 -->
<body> <!-- >2 : 2 -->
<div class="block"> <!-- >3 : 3 -->
<pre> <!-- >4 : 4 -->
<code> <!-- >5 : 5 -->
[CODE SNIPPET vim/vim#1] <!-- = : 5 -->
</code> <!-- <5 : 5 -->
</pre> <!-- <4 : 4 -->
</div> <!-- <3 : 3 -->
<!-- = : 3 -->
<div class="block"> <!-- >3 : 3 -->
<pre> <!-- >4 : 4 -->
<code> <!-- >5 : 5 -->
[CODE SNIPPET vim/vim#2] <!-- = : 5 -->
</code> <!-- <5 : 5 -->
</pre> <!-- <4 : 4 -->
</div> <!-- <3 : 3 -->
</body> <!-- <2 : 2 -->
</html> <!-- <1 : 1 -->
------------------------------------------------------------
is reformatted as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en"> <!-- >1 : 1 -->
<body> <!-- >2 : 2 -->
<div class="block"> <!-- >3 : 3 -->
<pre> <!-- >4 : 4 -->
<code> <!-- >5 : 5 -->
[CODE SNIPPET vim/vim#1] <!-- = : 5 -->
</code> <!-- <5 : 5 -->
</pre> <!-- <4 : 4 -->
</div><div class="block"><pre><code> <!-- <3 : 3 -->
[CODE SNIPPET vim/vim#2] <!-- = : 2 ? -->
</code> <!-- <5 : 2 ? -->
</pre> <!-- <4 : 2 ? -->
</div> <!-- <3 : 2 ? -->
</body> <!-- <2 : 2 -->
</html> <!-- <1 : 1 -->
------------------------------------------------------------
"&foldexpr" values will not be used as is for the lines
between (and including) "[CODE SNIPPET vim/vim#2]" and "</div>".
(Cf. v9.1.0002.)
Having syntax highlighting in effect, tag folding using the
"fold-expr" method can be enabled with:
------------------------------------------------------------
let g:html_expr_folding = 1
------------------------------------------------------------
By default, tag folding will be redone from scratch after
each occurrence of a TextChanged or an InsertLeave event.
Such frequency may not be desired, especially for large
files, and this recomputation can be disabled with:
------------------------------------------------------------
let g:html_expr_folding_without_recomputation = 1
doautocmd FileType
------------------------------------------------------------
To force another recomputation, do:
------------------------------------------------------------
unlet! b:foldsmap
normal zx
------------------------------------------------------------
References:
https://web.archive.org/web/20250328105626/https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/syntax.html#optional-tagshttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dangling_elsecloses: vim/vim#17141dc7ed8f946
Co-authored-by: Aliaksei Budavei <0x000c70@gmail.com>
- Default to POSIX supported classes.
- Add a KornShell specific class list.
- Remove "or" from the Bash class list, presumably a typo.
closes: vim/vim#17293839b79eeb3
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>