Problem:
When there are multiple inlay hints present at the same position, they
should be rendered in the order they are received in the response from
LSP as per the LSP spec. Currently, this is not respected.
Solution:
Gather all hints for a given position, and then set it in a single
extmark call instead of multiple set_extmark calls. This leads to fewer
extmark calls and correct inlay hints being rendered.
Although the built-in pum completion mechanism will filter anyway on the
next input it is odd if the initial popup shows entries which don't
match the current prefix.
Using fuzzy match on the label/prefix is compatible with
`completeopt+=fuzzy` and also doesn't seem to break postfix snippet
cases
Closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/29287
This is a breaking change which will make refactor of typval and shada
code a lot easier. In particular, code that would use or check for
v:msgpack_types.binary in the wild would be broken. This appears to be
rarely used in existing plugins.
Also some cases where v:msgpack_type.string would be used to represent a
binary string of "string" type, we use a BLOB instead, which is
vimscripts native type for binary blobs, and already was used for BIN
formats when necessary.
msgpackdump(msgpackparse(data)) no longer preserves the distinction
of BIN and STR strings. This is very common behavior for
language-specific msgpack bindings. Nvim uses msgpack as a tool to
serialize its data. Nvim is not a tool to bit-perfectly manipulate
arbitrary msgpack data out in the wild.
The changed tests should indicate how behavior changes in various edge
cases.
Problem:
For snippets lsp.completion prefers the label if it is shorter than the
insertText or textEdit to support postfix completion cases but clangd
adds decoration characters to labels. E.g.: `•INT16_C(c)`
Solution:
Use parse_snippet on insertText/textEdit before checking if it is
shorter than the label.
Fixes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/29301
This reduces the number of nil checks around buf_versions usage
Test changes were lifted from 5c33815
Co-authored-by: Mathias Fussenegger <f.mathias@zignar.net>
Problem:
Text edits with the same position (both line and character) were being
reverse sorted prior to being applied which differs from the lsp spec
Solution:
Change the sort order for just the same position edits
* Revert "fix(lsp): account for changedtick version gap on modified reset (#29170)"
This reverts commit 2e6d295f79.
* Revert "refactor(lsp): replace util.buf_versions with changedtick (#28943)"
This reverts commit 5c33815448.
`lsp.util.buf_versions` was already derived from changedtick (`on_lines`
from `buf_attach` synced the version)
As far as I can tell there is no need to keep track of the state in a
separate table.
The `complete()` mechanism matches completion candidates against
the typed text, so strict pre-filtering isn't necessary.
This is a first step towards supporting postfix snippets (like
`items@insert` in luals)
Problem: :TOhtml doesn't properly handle virtual text when it has
multiple highlight groups. It also improperly calculates position offset
for multi-byte virt_text characters.
Solution: Apply the `vim.api.nvim_strwidth` broadly to properly
calculate character offset, and handle the cases where the `hl` argument
can be a table of multiple hl groups.
Deprecation with vim.deprecate is currently too noisy. Show the
following warning instead:
[function] is deprecated. Run ":checkhealth vim.deprecated" for more information.
The important part is that the full message needs to be short enough to
fit in one line in order to not trigger the "Press ENTER or type command
to continue" prompt.
The full information and stack trace for the deprecated functions will
be shown in the new healthcheck `vim.deprecated`.
This will help manage the overly granular checkhealth completion to go
from
```
vim.health
vim.lsp
vim.provider.clipboard
vim.provider.node
vim.provider.perl
vim.provider.python
vim.provider.ruby
vim.treesitter
```
to
```
vim.health
vim.lsp
vim.provider
vim.treesitter
```
The namespacing for healthchecks for neovim modules is inconsistent and
confusing. The completion for `:checkhealth` with `--clean` gives
```
nvim
provider.clipboard
provider.node
provider.perl
provider.python
provider.ruby
vim.lsp
vim.treesitter
```
There are now three top-level module names for nvim: `nvim`, `provider`
and `vim` with no signs of stopping. The `nvim` name is especially
confusing as it does not contain all neovim checkhealths, which makes it
almost a decoy healthcheck.
The confusion only worsens if you add plugins to the mix:
```
lazy
mason
nvim
nvim-treesitter
provider.clipboard
provider.node
provider.perl
provider.python
provider.ruby
telescope
vim.lsp
vim.treesitter
```
Another problem with the current approach is that it's not easy to run
nvim-only healthchecks since they don't share the same namespace. The
current approach would be to run `:che nvim vim.* provider.*` and would
also require the user to know these are the neovim modules.
Instead, use this alternative structure:
```
vim.health
vim.lsp
vim.provider.clipboard
vim.provider.node
vim.provider.perl
vim.provider.python
vim.provider.ruby
vim.treesitter
```
and
```
lazy
mason
nvim-treesitter
telescope
vim.health
vim.lsp
vim.provider.clipboard
vim.provider.node
vim.provider.perl
vim.provider.python
vim.provider.ruby
vim.treesitter
```
Now, the entries are properly sorted and running nvim-only healthchecks
requires running only `:che vim.*`.
Problem:
The file watcher backends for Linux have too many limitations and
doesn't work reliably.
Solution:
disable didChangeWatchedFiles on Linux
Ref: #27807, #28058, #23291, #26520
Problem:
Inlay hints `enable()` does not fully implement the `:help dev-lua` guidelines:
Interface conventions ~
- When accepting a buffer id, etc., 0 means "current buffer", nil means "all
buffers". Likewise for window id, tabpage id, etc.
- Examples: |vim.lsp.codelens.clear()| |vim.diagnostic.enable()|
Solution:
Implement globally enabling inlay hints.
* refactor(lsp): do not rely on `enable` to create autocmds
* refactor(lsp): make `bufstates` a defaulttable
* refactor(lsp): make `bufstate` inherit values from `globalstate`
* feat(lsp): `vim.lsp.inlay_hints` now take effect on all buffers by default
* test(lsp): add basic tests for enable inlay hints for all buffers
* test(lsp): add test cases cover more than one buffer
Specifically, functions that are run in the context of the test runner
are put in module `test/testutil.lua` while the functions that are run
in the context of the test session are put in
`test/functional/testnvim.lua`.
Closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/27004.
Problem:
We need to establish a pattern for `enable()`.
Solution:
- First `enable()` parameter is always `enable:boolean`.
- Update `vim.diagnostic.enable()`
- Update `vim.lsp.inlay_hint.enable()`.
- It was not released yet, so no deprecation is needed. But to help
HEAD users, it will show an informative error.
- vim.deprecate():
- Improve message when the "removal version" is a *current or older* version.
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.
`exec_lua` makes code slighly harder to read, so it's beneficial to
remove it in cases where it's possible or convenient.
Not all `exec_lua` calls should be removed even if the test passes as it
changes the semantics of the test even if it happens to pass.
From https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/28155#discussion_r1548185779:
"Note for tests like this, which fundamentally are about conversion, you
end up changing what conversion you are testing. Even if the result
happens to be same (as they often are, as we like the rules to be
consistent if possible), you are now testing the RPC conversion rules
instead of the vim script to in-process lua conversion rules."
From https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/28155#discussion_r1548190152:
"A test like this specifies that the cursor is valid immediately and not
after a separate cycle of normal (or an other input-processing) mode."