Problem: vim.keymap.del has 'modes' as it's first argument while vim.keymap.set
has 'mode' as it's first argument despite both 'mode' and 'modes' taking in the
same type input of String or String[].
Solution: Updated vim.keymap.set docs to refer to it's first argument
as 'modes'.
Problem:
After bc0635a9fc `vim.wait()` rejects floats
and NaN values.
Solution:
Restore the prior behavior, while still supporting `math.huge`. Update
tests to cover float case.
Technically the current behavior does match documentation. However, the
keys following <Cmd>/K_LUA aren't normally received by vim.on_key()
callbacks either, so it does makes sense to discard them along with the
preceding key.
One may also argue that vim.on_key() callbacks should instead receive
the following keys together with the <Cmd>/K_LUA, but doing that may
cause some performance problems, and even in that case the keys should
still be discarded together.
* feat(lua): `Range:is_empty()` to check vim.range emptiness
* fix(lsp): don't overlay insertion-style inline completions
**Problem:** Some servers commonly respond with an empty inline
completion range which acts as a position where text should be inserted.
However, the inline completion module assumes that all responses with a
range are deletions + insertions that thus require an `overlay` display
style. This causes an incorrect preview, because the virtual text should
have the `inline` display style (to reflect that this is purely an
insertion).
**Solution:** Only use `overlay` for non-empty replacement ranges.
Problem:
Previously, the fallback logic to ".conf" was located outside of
`vim.filetype.match()` and directly within the AutoCmd definition. As a
result, `vim.filetype.match()` would return nil instead of ".conf" for
fallback cases (#30100).
Solution:
Added a boolean return value to `vim.filetype.match()` that indicates
whether the match was the result of fallback. If true, the filetype will
be set using `setf FALLBACK <ft>` instead of `setf <ft>`.
Problem: There is no way to ensure a stable key order when encoding a JSON string,
which can be useful for comparisons and producing cleaner diffs.
Solution: Introduce a `sort_keys` option for `vim.json.encode()`,which
is disabled by default. When enabled, object keys are sorted in
alphabetical order.
Problem:
There is no straightforward way to pretty-print objects as JSON.
The existing `vim.inspect` outputs LON.
Solution:
Introduce an `indent` option for `vim.json.encode()` which enables
human-readable output with configurable indentation.
Adapts PR to upstream: openresty/lua-cjson#114
Problem:
The callback passed to `vim.wait` cannot return results directly, it
must set upvalues or globals.
local rv1, rv2, rv3
local ok = vim.wait(200, function()
rv1, rv2, rv3 = 'a', 42, { ok = { 'yes' } }
return true
end)
Solution:
Let the callback return values after the first "status" result.
local ok, rv1, rv2, rv3 = vim.wait(200, function()
return true, 'a', 42, { ok = { 'yes' } }
end)
Problem:
Generated docs sections are ordered randomly. This matters when showing
an outline or table of contents (e.g. `gO`).
Solution:
Specify which sections have an intentional ordering; sort the rest by
name.
Problem:
Nvim depends on netrw to download/request URL contents.
Solution:
- Add `vim.net.request()` as a thin curl wrapper:
- Basic GET with --silent, --show-error, --fail, --location, --retry
- Optional `opts.outpath` to save to a file
- Operates asynchronously. Pass an `on_response` handler to get the result.
- Add integ tests (requires NVIM_TEST_INTEG to be set) to test success
and 404 failure.
- Health check for missing `curl`.
- Handle `:edit https://…` using `vim.net.request()`.
API Usage:
1. Asynchronous request:
vim.net.request('https://httpbingo.org/get', { retry = 2 }, function(err, response)
if err then
print('Fetch failed:', err)
else
print('Got body of length:', #response.body)
end
end)
2. Download to file:
vim.net.request('https://httpbingo.org/get', { outpath = 'out_async.txt' }, function(err)
if err then print('Error:', err) end
end)
3. Remote :edit integration (in runtime/plugin/net.lua) fetches into buffer:
:edit https://httpbingo.org/get
Make `vim.iter():take()` and `vim.iter():skip()`
optionally accept predicates to enable takewhile
and skipwhile patterns used in functional
programming.
731e616a79 made it so passing `{env = nil, clear_env = true }` would
pass `{env = {}}` to `vim.uv.spawn`.
However this is not what `clear_env` is (arguably) supposed to do.
If `env=nil` then that implies the uses wants `vim.uv.spawn()` to use
the default environment. Adding `clear_env = true` simply prevents
`NVIM` (the base environment) from being added.
Fixes#34730
Problem: No way to compute intersection of two version ranges, which is
useful when computing version range that fits inside several reference
ranges.
Solution: Add `vim.version.intersect()`.
Problem: `vim.version.range('<=a.b.c')` is not precise when it comes to
its right hand side. This is due to version ranges using exclusive right
hand side. While `vim.version.range('>a.b.c')` is not precise when it
comes to its left hand side because left hand sides are inclusive.
Solution: For '>=a.b.c' increase `to` from 'a.b.c' to the smallest
reasonable version that is bigger than 'a.b.c'. For '<a.b.c' do the same
for `from`.
More proper solution is an explicit control over inclusivity of version
range sides, but it has more side effects and requires design decisions.