Problem: filetype: Power Query files are not recognized
Solution: detect '*.pq' as pq filetype, include pq syntax and filetype
plugin (Anarion Dunedain)
Microsoft Power Query provides a powerful data import experience that
encompasses many features. Power Query works with desktop Analysis
Services, Excel, and Power BI workbooks, in addition to many online
services, such as Fabric, Power BI service, Power Apps, Microsoft 365
Customer Insights, and more. A core capability of Power Query is to
filter and combine, that is, to mash-up data from one or more of a rich
collection of supported data sources. Any such data mashup is expressed
using the Power Query M formula language. The M language is a
functional, case sensitive language similar to F#.
Reference:
- Power Query M formula language overview:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/powerquery-m/closes: vim/vim#17045e74ec3f523
Co-authored-by: Anarion Dunedain <anarion80@gmail.com>
Problem: filetype: dax files are not recognized
Solution: detect "*.dax" as dax filetype, include dax filetype and
syntax plugin (Anarion Dunedain)
Data Analysis Expressions (DAX) is a formula expression language used in
Analysis Services, Power BI, and Power Pivot in Excel. DAX formulas
include functions, operators, and values to perform advanced
calculations and queries on data in related tables and columns in
tabular data models.
DAX language overview:
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dax/dax-overviewcloses: vim/vim#170357f518e044f
Co-authored-by: Anarion Dunedain <anarion80@gmail.com>
Problem: Diff mode's inline highlighting is lackluster. It only
performs a line-by-line comparison, and calculates a single
shortest range within a line that could encompass all the
changes. In lines with multiple changes, or those that span
multiple lines, this approach tends to end up highlighting
much more than necessary.
Solution: Implement new inline highlighting modes by doing per-character
or per-word diff within the diff block, and highlight only the
relevant parts, add "inline:simple" to the defaults (which is
the old behaviour)
This change introduces a new diffopt option "inline:<type>". Setting to
"none" will disable all inline highlighting, "simple" (the default) will
use the old behavior, "char" / "word" will perform a character/word-wise
diff of the texts within each diff block and only highlight the
differences.
The new char/word inline diff only use the internal xdiff, and will
respect diff options such as algorithm choice, icase, and misc iwhite
options. indent-heuristics is always on to perform better sliding.
For character highlight, a post-process of the diff results is first
applied before we show the highlight. This is because a naive diff will
create a result with a lot of small diff chunks and gaps, due to the
repetitive nature of individual characters. The post-process is a
heuristic-based refinement that attempts to merge adjacent diff blocks
if they are separated by a short gap (1-3 characters), and can be
further tuned in the future for better results. This process results in
more characters than necessary being highlighted but overall less visual
noise.
For word highlight, always use first buffer's iskeyword definition.
Otherwise if each buffer has different iskeyword settings we would not
be able to group words properly.
The char/word diffing is always per-diff block, not per line, meaning
that changes that span multiple lines will show up correctly.
Added/removed newlines are not shown by default, but if the user has
'list' set (with "eol" listchar defined), the eol character will be be
highlighted correctly for the specific newline characters.
Also, add a new "DiffTextAdd" highlight group linked to "DiffText" by
default. It allows color schemes to use different colors for texts that
have been added within a line versus modified.
This doesn't interact with linematch perfectly currently. The linematch
feature splits up diff blocks into multiple smaller blocks for better
visual matching, which makes inline highlight less useful especially for
multi-line change (e.g. a line is broken into two lines). This could be
addressed in the future.
As a side change, this also removes the bounds checking introduced to
diff_read() as they were added to mask existing logic bugs that were
properly fixed in vim/vim#16768.
closes: vim/vim#168819943d4790e
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Also, do not set g:is_kornshell when g:is_posix is set. BSD shells are
POSIX but many are derived from the ash shell.
closes: vim/vim#1693951a06ecee0
Co-authored-by: Mohamed Akram <mohd.akram@outlook.com>
Problem: runtime(tera): tera support can be improved
Solution: update tera filetype plugin, include a tera syntax script
update the filetype test, update makemenu and synmenu vim scripts
(MuntasirSZN)
closes: vim/vim#16830vim/vim@14da0fb
- Allow trailing backslashes in option values.
- Match :map-special modifier.
- Match :map-arguments case-sensitively.
- Remove <*Leader> from map modifier list and allow in RHS of a mapping.
closes: vim/vim#168226bdfeb099a
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Problem:
- The doc says the default `g:lua_subversion` is 2, but in fact it is 3
(see `runtime/syntax/lua.vim`)
- `includeexpr` doesn't work with module in `init.lua`
Solution:
- Update documentation
- Assign value to option `&include`
- Add function `LuaInclude` and assign it to `l:&includeexpr`
closes: vim/vim#1665500a00f5d3f
Co-authored-by: brianhuster <phambinhanctb2004@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Contain the vimNotation syntax group, matching this at top level is
unnecessary and very slow.
The removed vimString and vimNumber definitions are broken and/or never
match. They have long been replaced by newer definitions.
closes: vim/vim#1664568ba6c2c6c
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
- Match Vim9 boolean and null literals in parenthesised expressions and
function argument lists.
- Match read-only registers in expressions.
closes: vim/vim#16622a9c06429ac
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
- Match variables after operators, including line continuations.
- Match option variables without leading whitespace.
- Explicitly match expression subscripts.
- Match Vim9 variables in LHS of assignments and method calls.
- Match option variables (&option) with a dedicated syntax group like
environment variables.
- Match list literals, fixes: vim/vim#5830
- Match :{un}lockvar arguments.
- Match registers and environment variables in :let unpack lists.
- Match lambda expressions
- Match Vim9 scope blocks
- Match variables in :for subject
- Highlight user variables with Normal
- Improve this/super keyword matching, fixes: vim/vim#15970closes: vim/vim#164761aa287e048
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
this change includes the following changes:
- a macro option must be #1–#9
- add \providecommand
- add starred versions of \newcommand, \newenvironment, and their
variants
- add number of arguments to \(re)newenvironment
a35040f795
Co-authored-by: Eisuke Kawashima <e-kwsm@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: dircolors syntaxt termguicolors support was not taking dynamic
termguicolors changes into account.
Solution: initializing missing script-internal data on dynamic
termguicolors change.
Problem: filetype: just files are not recognized
Solution: adjust filetype detection pattern, detect just shebang line,
include just ftplugin, indent and syntax plugin
(Peter Benjamin)
closes: vim/vim#1646672755b3c8e
Co-authored-by: Peter Benjamin <petermbenjamin@gmail.com>
- Match is? and isnot? operators.
- Limit other comparison operators to one match modifier rather than
two.
closes: vim/vim#164828dec6c2e6c
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Dr. Chip retired some time ago and is no longer maintaining the netrw
plugin. However as a runtime plugin distributed by Vim, it important to
maintain the netrw plugin in the future and fix bugs as they are
reported.
So, split out the netrw plugin as an additional package, however include
some stubs to make sure the plugin is still loaded by default and the
documentation is accessible as well.
closes: vim/vim#163689cfdabb074
Co-authored-by: Luca Saccarola <github.e41mv@aleeas.com>
- highlight more C keywords, including some from C23
Conditionally highlight C23 features:
- #embed, #elifdef and #elifndef preprocessor directives
- predefined macros
- UTF-8 character constants
- binary integer constants, _BitInt literals, and digit separators
- nullptr_t type and associated constant
- decimal real floating-point, bit precise and char types
- typeof operators
Matchit:
- update for new preprocessor directives
fixes: vim/vim#13667fixes: vim/vim#13679closes: vim/vim#12984c2a967a1b9
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Albin Ahlbäck <albin.ahlback@gmail.com>
Match the '' escape sequence in literal strings. These were previously
ending the current string and starting another concatenated literal
string.
closes: vim/vim#16415695522dea3
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Problem: filetype: TI assembly files are not recognized
Solution: inspect '*.sa' and assembly files and detect TI assembly
files, include filetype plugin and syntax script for TI
assembly files (Wu, Zhenyu)
closes: vim/vim#158274f73c07abf
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Problem: filetype: shaderslang files are not detected
Solution: detect '*.slang' files as shaderslang filetype,
include a filetype and syntax script (mtvare6)
Reference:
https://shader-slang.com/closes: vim/vim#16387616219f684
Co-authored-by: mtvare6 <mtvare6@proton.me>