This reverts commit 4382d2ed56.
The story for this feature was left in an incomplete state. It was never
the intention to unilaterally fold all information, only the ones that
did not contain relevant information. This feature does more harm than
good in its incomplete state.
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: 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.
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.
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.
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.
and for return value of nlua_exec/nlua_call_ref, as this uses
the same family of functions.
NB: the handling of luaref:s is a bit of a mess.
add api_luarefs_free_XX functions as a stop-gap as refactoring
luarefs is a can of worms for another PR:s.
as a minor feature/bug-fix, nvim_buf_call and nvim_win_call now preserves
arbitrary return values.
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:
Since 2448816956, the --startuptime report shows
two blocks of data. The TUI process and its embedded nvim process write to the
file concurrently, which may interleave the two startup sequences into the same
timeline.
Solution:
Report each process as a separate section in the same file.
1. Each process buffers the full report.
2. After startup is finished, the buffer is flushed (appended) to the file.
Fix#23036
Sample report:
--- Startup times for process: Primary/TUI ---
times in msec
clock self+sourced self: sourced script
clock elapsed: other lines
000.006 000.006: --- NVIM STARTING ---
000.428 000.422: event init
000.728 000.301: early init
...
005.880 000.713: init highlight
005.882 000.002: --- NVIM STARTED ---
--- Startup times for process: Embedded ---
times in msec
clock self+sourced self: sourced script
clock elapsed: other lines
000.006 000.006: --- NVIM STARTING ---
000.409 000.403: event init
000.557 000.148: early init
000.633 000.077: locale set
...
014.383 000.430: first screen update
014.387 000.003: --- NVIM STARTED ---
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:
- `: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.
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.
'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>
perf: make screen size and position calculations more efficient
N/A patches for version.c:
vim-patch:9.1.0037: Calling get_breakindent_win() repeatedly when computing virtcol
vim-patch:9.1.0038: Unnecessary loop in getvcol()
When computing on-screen size or position, the size 'breakindent' and 'showbreak' is now cached,
and checks for whether a faster character size function can be used are performed only once at the start.
Multibyte characters are not decodes multiple times anymore, and character decoding functions are more efficient.
Additionally, the amount of trailing spaces for pasted blockwise text is now calculated correctly for multibyte characters.
Internal lisp formatting now doesn't erroneously use inline virtual text from a different line.
- 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: Sharing queries with upstream and Helix is difficult due to
different capture names.
Solution: Define and document a new set of standard captures that
matches tree-sitter "standard captures" (where defined) and is closer to
Helix' Atom-style nested groups.
This is a breaking change for colorschemes that defined highlights based
on the old captures. On the other hand, the default colorscheme now
defines links for all standard captures (not just those used in bundled
queries), improving the out-of-the-box experience.
The motivation for this update is Issue #15365, where background=light
is not properly set for Nvim running from an Nvim :terminal. This can be
encountered when e.g., opening a terminal to make git commits, which
opens EDITOR=nvim in the nested terminal.
Under the implementation of this commit, the OSC response always
indicates a black or white foreground/background. While this may not
reflect the actual foreground/background color, it permits 'background'
to be retained for a nested Nvim instance running in the terminal
emulator. The behaviour matches Vim.
Problem: Current values of `StatusLine` and `StatusLineNC` are currently
designed to be visually distinctive while being not intrusive.
However, the compromise was more shifted towards "not intrusive".
After the feedback, statusline highlight groups should be designed to:
- Make current window clearly noticeable. Meaning `StatusLine` and
`StatusLineNC` should obviously differ.
- Make non-current windows clearly separable. Meaning `StatusLineNC`
and `Normal`/`NormalNC` should obviously differ.
Solution:
- Update `StatusLineNC` to have more visible background.
- Update `StatusLine` to be inverted variant of `StatusLineNC`.
- Update `WinBar` and `WinBarNC` to not link to `StatusLine` and
`StatusLineNC` because it makes two goals harder to achieve.
- Update `TabLine` to link to `StatusLineNC` instead of `StatusLine`
to not be very visually intrusive.
This commit implements a new TermRequest autocommand event and has Neovim
emit this event when children of terminal buffers emit an OSC or DCS sequence
libvterm does not handle.
The TermRequest autocommand event has additional data in the
v:termrequest variable.
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
Problem:
Currently `deepcopy` hashes every single tables it copies so it can be
reused. For tables of mostly unique items that are non recursive, this
hashing is unnecessarily expensive
Solution:
Port the `noref` argument from Vimscripts `deepcopy()`.
The below benchmark demonstrates the results for two extreme cases of
tables of different sizes. One table that uses the same table lots of
times and one with all unique tables.
| test | `noref=false` (ms) | `noref=true` (ms) |
| -------------------- | ------------------ | ----------------- |
| unique tables (50) | 6.59 | 2.62 |
| shared tables (50) | 3.24 | 6.40 |
| unique tables (2000) | 23381.48 | 2884.53 |
| shared tables (2000) | 3505.54 | 14038.80 |
The results are basically the inverse of each other where `noref` is
much more performance on tables with unique fields, and `not noref` is
more performant on tables that reuse fields.
feat(diagnostic): add `vim.diagnostic.count()`
Problem: Getting diagnostic count based on the output of
`vim.diagnostic.get()` might become costly as number of diagnostic
entries grows. This is because it returns a copy of diagnostic cache
entries (so as to not allow users to change them in place).
Getting information about diagnostic count is frequently used in
statusline, so it is important to be as fast as reasonbly possible.
Solution: Add `vim.diagnostic.count()` which computes severity
counts without making copies.
Problem: Unable to predict which byte-offset to place virtual text to
make it repeat visually in the wrapped part of a line.
Solution: Add a flag to nvim_buf_set_extmark() that causes virtual
text to repeat in wrapped lines.