while the implementation is not tied to screen chars, it is a reasonable
expectation to support the same size. If nvim is able to display a
multibyte character, it will accept the same character as input,
including in normal mode commands like r{char}
Problem: Wrong cursor position when clicking after end of line with
'rightleft', 'virtualedit' and conceal.
Solution: Set values in ScreenCols[] also with SLF_RIGHTLEFT. Also fix
off-by-one cursor position with 'colorcolumn' (zeertzjq).
closes: vim/vim#14218deb2204bff
decor->text.str pointer must go. This removes it for conceal char,
in preparation for a larger PR which will also handle the sign case.
By actually allowing composing chars for a conceal chars, this
becomes a feature and not just a refactor, as a bonus.
Problem: buffer text with composing chars are converted from UTF-8
to an array of up to seven UTF-32 values and then converted back
to UTF-8 strings.
Solution: Convert buffer text directly to UTF-8 based schar_T values.
The limit of the text size is now in schar_T bytes, which is currently
31+1 but easily could be raised as it no longer multiplies the size
of the entire screen grid when not used, the full size is only required
for temporary scratch buffers.
Also does some general cleanup to win_line text handling, which was
unnecessarily complicated due to multibyte rendering being an "opt-in"
feature long ago. Nowadays, a char is just a char, regardless if it consists
of one ASCII byte or multiple bytes.
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.
This is not used as part of the logic to actually implement TUI line wrapping
In vim (especially gvim) it is used to emulate terminal-style text
selection. But in nvim we don't do that, and have no plans to reintroduce it.
Previously, a screen cell would occupy 28+4=32 bytes per cell
as we always made space for up to MAX_MCO+1 codepoints in a cell.
As an example, even a pretty modest 50*80 screen would consume
50*80*2*32 = 256000, i e a quarter megabyte
With the factor of two due to the TUI side buffer, and even more when
using msg_grid and/or ext_multigrid.
This instead stores a 4-byte union of either:
- a valid UTF-8 sequence up to 4 bytes
- an escape char which is invalid UTF-8 (0xFF) plus a 24-bit index to a
glyph cache
This avoids allocating space for huge composed glyphs _upfront_, while
still keeping rendering such glyphs reasonably fast (1 hash table lookup
+ one plain index lookup). If the same large glyphs are using repeatedly
on the screen, this is still a net reduction of memory/cache
consumption. The only case which really gets worse is if you blast
the screen full with crazy emojis and zalgo text and even this case
only leads to 4 extra bytes per char.
When only <= 4-byte glyphs are used, plus the 4-byte attribute code,
i e 8 bytes in total there is a factor of four reduction of memory use.
Memory which will be quite hot in cache as the screen buffer is scanned
over in win_line() buffer text drawing
A slight complication is that the representation depends on host byte
order. I've tested this manually by compling and running this
in qemu-s390x and it works fine. We might add a qemu based solution
to CI at some point.
Problem: Wrong cursor position when clicking after concealed text
with 'virtualedit'.
Solution: Store virtual columns in ScreenCols[] instead of text
columns, and always use coladvance() when clicking.
This also fixes incorrect curswant when clicking on a TAB, so now
Test_normal_click_on_ctrl_char() asserts the same results as the ones
before patch 9.0.0048.
closes: vim/vim#12808e500ae8e29
Remove the mouse_adjust_click() function.
There is a difference in behavior with the old mouse_adjust_click()
approach: when clicking on the character immediately after concealed
text that is completely hidden, cursor is put on the clicked character
rather than at the start of the concealed text. The new behavior is
better, but it causes unnecessary scrolling in a functional test (which
is an existing issue unrelated to these patches), so adjust the test.
Now fully merged:
vim-patch:9.0.0177: cursor position wrong with 'virtualedit' and mouse click
* refactor: move tabline code to statusline.c
Problem: Tabline code is closely related to statusline, but still left over in drawscreen.c and screen.c.
Solution: Move it to statusline.c.
* refactor: add statusline_defs.h
Add space around arithmetic operators '+' and '-'.
Remove space between back-to-back parentheses, i.e. ')(' vs. ') ('.
Remove space between '((' or '))' of control statements.
Add space between ')' and '{' of control statements.
Remove space between function name and '(' on function declaration.
Collapse empty blocks between '{' and '}'.
Remove newline at the end of the file.
Remove newline between 'enum' and '{'.
Remove newline between '}' and ')' in a function invocation.
Remove newline between '}' and 'while' of 'do' statement.
* refactor: format all C files under nvim
* refactor: disable formatting for Vim-owned files:
* src/nvim/indent_c.c
* src/nvim/regexp.c
* src/nvim/regexp_nfa.c
* src/nvim/testdir/samples/memfile_test.c
sattr_T was defined as uint16_t. But this is not enough to handle the
24-bit colors of the terminal. To solve this problem, change it to int.
In 32bit, int may overflow. So, if it overflows, change it to ignore it
without adding more attr_entries.
fixes#12366
add proper msg_set_pos event, delet win_scroll_over_*
make compositor click through unfocusable grids
add MsgArea attribute for the message/cmdline area, and add docs and tests
Initially we will use this for the popupmenu, floating windows will
follow soon
NB: writedelay + compositor is weird, we need more flexible
redraw introspection.
wp->w_height_inner now contains the "inner" size, regardless if the
window has been drawn yet or not. It should be used instead of
wp->w_grid.Rows, for stuff that is not directly related to accessing
the allocated grid memory, such like cursor movement and terminal size