This commit adds an on_print callback to stdioopen's dictionary
argument which lets the caller specify a function called each time
neovim will try to output something to stdout (e.g. on "echo" or
"echoerr" in --headless mode).
Problem: "verbose set efm" reports the location of the :compiler command.
(Gary Johnson)
Solution: Add the "-keepscript" argument to :command and use it when
defining CompilerSet.
58ef8a31d7
Problem: 'listchars' "exceeds" character appears in foldcolumn. Window
separator is missing. (Leonid V. Fedorenchik)
Solution: Only draw the "exceeds" character in the text area. Break the
loop when not drawing the text. (closesvim/vim#8524)
41fb723ee9
Closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/13647
This allows customizing the priority of the highlights.
* Add default priority of 50
* Use priority of 200 for highlight on yank
* use priority of 40 for highlight references (LSP)
This removes the "fallback" to utf-16 in many of our helper functions. We
should always explicitly pass these around when possible except in two
locations:
* generating params with help utilities called by buf.lua functions
* the buf.lua functions themselves
Anything that is called by the handler should be passed the offset encoding.
omnisharp-roslyn can send negative values:
{
activeParameter = 0,
activeSignature = -1,
signatures = { {
documentation = "",
label = "TestEntity.TestEntity()",
parameters = {}
} }
}
In 3.16 of the specification `activeSignature` is defined as `uinteger`
and therefore negative values shouldn't be allowed, but within 3.15 it
was defined as `number` which makes me think we can be a bit lenient in
this case and handle them.
The expected behavior is quite clear:
The active signature. If omitted or the value lies outside the
range of `signatures` the value defaults to zero or is ignored if
the `SignatureHelp` has no signatures.
Fixes an error:
util.lua:1685: attempt to get length of local 'lines' (a nil value)
util.lua:1685: in function 'trim_empty_lines'
handlers.lua:334: in function 'textDocument/signatureHelp'
Part of the `pending_change` closure in the `changetracking.prepare` was
a bit confusing because it has access to `bufnr` and `uri` but it could
actually contain pending changes batched for multiple buffers.
(We accounted for that by grouping `pending_changes` by a `uri`, but
it's not obvious what's going on)
This commit changes the approach to do everything per buffer to avoid
any ambiguity.
It also brings the debounce/no-debounce a bit closer together: The
only difference is now whether a timer is used or if it is triggered
immediately
This is a much better solution than #16942 as it doesn't require copying
every new change from test_filetype.vim into filetype_spec.lua (which is
much more maintainable).
When the user is in ex mode, a call to mode(1) is documented to return
"cv". However, it does not currently do so, because the check which
checks for ex mode is nested inside a conditional which is never reached
in ex mode. Vim uses an explicit check for exmode_active, so let's do
the same thing here. Add some tests for this case both with a TTY and
in silent mode.
Because filetype.lua is gated behind an opt-in variable, it's not tested
during the "standard" test_filetype.vim test. So port the test into
filetype_spec where we enable the opt-in variable.
This means runtime Vim patches will need to update test_filetype in two
places. This can eventually be removed if/when filetype.lua is made
opt-out rather than opt-in.
Filetype detection runs on BufRead and BufNewFile autocommands, both of
which can fire without an underlying buffer, so it's incorrect to use
<abuf> to determine the file path. Instead, match on <afile> and assume
that the buffer we're operating on is the current buffer. This is the
same assumption that filetype.vim makes, so it should be safe.
This introduces two new functions `vim.keymap.set` & `vim.keymap.del`
differences compared to regular set_keymap:
- remap is used as opposite of noremap. By default it's true for <Plug> keymaps and false for others.
- rhs can be lua function.
- mode can be a list of modes.
- replace_keycodes option for lua function expr maps. (Default: true)
- handles buffer specific keymaps
Examples:
```lua
vim.keymap.set('n', 'asdf', function() print("real lua function") end)
vim.keymap.set({'n', 'v'}, '<leader>lr', vim.lsp.buf.references, {buffer=true})
vim.keymap.set('n', '<leader>w', "<cmd>w<cr>", {silent = true, buffer = 5 })
vim.keymap.set('i', '<Tab>', function()
return vim.fn.pumvisible() == 1 and "<C-n>" or "<Tab>"
end, {expr = true})
vim.keymap.set('n', '[%', '<Plug>(MatchitNormalMultiBackward)')
vim.keymap.del('n', 'asdf')
vim.keymap.del({'n', 'i', 'v'}, '<leader>w', {buffer = 5 })
```