Runtime updates that were bundled into the otherwise NA commit:
Problem: "make proto" adds extra function prototype.
Solution: Add vim/vim#ifdef.
5162822914
`:syntax keyword` is affected by 'iskeyword'. When we aligned
'iskeyword' to that of filetype=help, colon (:) is now included.
Simplest way to deal with this is to include colon (:) in the `:syntax
keyword` directive.
Also:
- change "SUGGESTIONS" mouthful to "ADVICE"
- change "SUCCESS" to "OK"
Always check for the presence of pyenv_root if pyenv is installed: if it
is not set, we don't know if it was intentional. If it wasn't
intentional, the warning is confusing (see #7176).
closes#7176
If an autoloaded function hasn't been resolved before it is used in
function(), the self dict will not be created which causes E725 when
calling the function. Since self isn't being used in
provider#stderr_collector, we can remove the dict attribute to
workaround the self dict bug[0].
Closes#7115
[0]: https://groups.google.com/d/msg/vim_dev/I7AXOyv-P4o/DzbyOxDHBgAJ
iTerm2 got its own entry in Thomas Dickey's terminfo.src on 2017-08-16.
Make sure that the new entry is handled in the same way as the old entry.
closes#7209closes#7214
- Show hint only once per session.
- provider#clipboard#Call(): prevent recursion
- provider#clear_stderr(): use has_key(), because :silent! is still
captured by :redir.
closes#7184
redir_write():
- This is a "batch" operation which was not yet covered by
start_batch_changes()
adjust_clipboard_name():
- msg() and friends during :redir will, of course, cause redir_write()
to try to capture that message, which causes recursion.
- EMSG() here is trouble: if it interrupts :redir it is a mess.
Rather than deal with the mess, show a non-error message.
closes#7182closes#7184closes#7183
ref #6048
ref #7032
- Prefer "TUI" where possible to refer to the host terminal.
- Remove obsolete tags and ancient TTY exposition.
- Establish "terminal" to consistently mean "terminal emulator" in all
Nvim documentation. This removes the need for verbose qualifiers in
tags and prose.
References #6280
References #6803