Problem: Custom operators can't act upon a forced motion. (Christian
Wellenbrock)
Solution: Add the forced motion to the mode() result. (Christian Brabandt,
closesvim/vim#3490)
5976f8ff00closes#8667closes#9476
Christian Wellenbrock:
> For (most) built in text objects it's possible to force operation on
> them to be linewise, for example by using `dVab` (`:h o_V`,
> `motion_force`). When using custom text objects (defined as mappings
> by plugins for example), this doesn't currently work.
>
> Example:
>
> onoremap x viw
>
> Open a file with a few lines each containing some words. With the
> cursor on any word, try:
>
> 1. `dw` (builtin) deletes some characters
> 2. `dVw` (builtin) deletes linewise
> 3. `dx` (from mapping) deletes some characters
> 4. `dVx` (from mapping) deletes some characters, but should delete
> linewise
ref: https://github.com/wellle/targets.vim/issues/214
ref: https://gitter.im/neovim/neovim?at=5b379ff7f1664406610e7483
Decide whether to highlight the visual-selected character under the
cursor, depending on 'guicursor' style:
- Highlight if cursor is blinking or non-block (vertical, horiz).
- Do NOT highlight if cursor is non-blinking block.
Traditionally Vim's visual selection does "reverse mode", which perhaps
conflicts with the non-blinking block cursor. But 'guicursor' defaults
to a vertical bar for selection=exclusive, and this confuses users who
expect to see the text highlighted.
closes#8983
Problem: It is not so easy to write a script that works with both Python 2 and Python 3, even when the Python code works with both.
Solution: Add 'pyxversion', :pyx, etc. (Marc Weber, Ken Takata)
f42dd3c390
The purpose of the {Nvim} hint was not well-defined, and its usage
inconsistent. It's also unnecessary.
Nvim-Vim differences are centralized at:
:help vim-differences
Removed things are centralized at:
:help deprecated
Developer guidelines for documentation are listed at:
:help dev-doc
Problem: Cannot act on edits in the command line.
Solution: Add the CmdlineChanged autocommand event. (xtal8, closesvim/vim#2603,
closesvim/vim#2524)
153b704e20
In Vim (and some vestigial parts of Nvim) E319 was a placeholder for
ex_ni commands, i.e. commands that are only available in certain builds
of Vim. That is obviously counter to Nvim's goals: all Nvim commands
are available on all platforms and build types (the remaining ex_ni
commands are actually just missing providers).
We need an error id for "missing provider", so it makes sense to use
E319 for that purpose.
ref #9344
ref #3577
Problem: Using an external diff program is slow and inflexible.
Solution: Include the xdiff library. (Christian Brabandt)
Use it by default.
e828b7621c
vim-patch:8.1.0360
vim-patch:8.1.0364
vim-patch:8.1.0366
vim-patch:8.1.0370
vim-patch:8.1.0377
vim-patch:8.1.0378
vim-patch:8.1.0381
vim-patch:8.1.0396
vim-patch:8.1.0432
Before this commit, if user does this:
let g:node_host_prog = '~/.nvm/versions/node/v11.3.0/bin/neovim-node-host'
the "~/" is not expanded to user's home directory.
`:help g:ruby_host_prog` suggests a path with "~/" so technically we
already claimed to support this.
closes https://github.com/neovim/node-client/issues/102
Up to now g:clipboard["copy"] only supported string values invoked as
system commands.
This commit enables the use of VimL functions instead. The function
signatures are the same as in provider/clipboard.vim. A clipboard
provider is expected to store and return a list of lines (i.e. the text)
and a register type (as seen in setreg()).
cache_enabled is ignored if "copy" is provided by a VimL function.
The order was swapped in #4150 to prefer `xsel` but there wasn't a clear
explanation. Meanwhile, `xsel` has been neglected upstream.
Let's trying preferring `xclip` again, we've had a few reports of
problems with `xsel`.
closes#7237
ref #5853
ref #7449
Problem: It is not easy to edit a script that was sourced.
Solution: Add a count to ":scriptnames", so that ":script 40" edits the
script with script ID 40.
07dc18ffa4
By historical accident, Nvim defaults to background=light. So on a dark
background, `:colorscheme default` looks completely wrong.
The "smart" logic that Vim uses is confusing for anyone who uses Vim on
multiple platforms, so rather than mimic that, pick the (hopefully) most
common default.
- Since Neovim is dark-powered, we assume most users have dark backgrounds.
- Most of the GUIs tend to have a dark background by default.
ref #6289
- TUI: _never_ rely on BCE for implicit clearing, only explicit commands.
- TUI: use unibi_erase_chars when possible.
- TUI: use end-exclusive ranges for invalid and cleared areas
- screen: scrolling leaves scrolled in aree undefined. This is a
conservative change, a client assuming the old semantics will still
behave correctly.
- screen: factor out vsep handling from line drawing. This is needed
anyway for the multigrid refactor.
- screen: simplifications of win_do_lines
Problem: Cannot see what digraph is used to insert a character.
Solution: Show the digraph with the "ga" command. (Christian Brabandt)
5f73ef8d20close#8190
Update runtime files.
fc65cabb15
---
vim-patch:8.0.1279: initializing menus can be slow
Problem: Initializing menus can be slow, especially when there are many
keymaps, color schemes, etc.
Solution: Do the globbing for runtime files lazlily. (Ken Takata)