Problem: The indent.c file is a bit big.
Solution: Move C-indent code a a new cindent.c file. Move other
indent-related code to indent.c. (Yegappan Lakshmanan,
closesvim/vim#5031)
14c01f8348
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem:
Cannot enter multiline prompts in a buftype=prompt buffer.
Solution:
- Support shift+enter (`<s-enter>`) to start a new line in the prompt.
- Pasting multiline text via OS paste, clipboard, "xp, etc.
- A/I in editable region works as usual.
- i/a/A/I outside of editable region moves cursor to end of current
prompt.
- Support undo/redo in prompt buffer.
- Support o/O in prompt buffer.
- Expose prompt location as `':` mark.
Problem: Delay for reading a message may be unwanted for ext_messages,
and can be done by the implementation. Empty completion source
error message is not distinguishable as such.
Solution: Only delay without ext_messages enabled. Emit empty completion
source message as an error.
Problem: Lines to/from which virt_lines or inline virt_text may have
moved are left valid. Similarly the modified region may be
too small to account for moved decorations after inserting
or deleting lines. `redrawOneLine()` can be replaced with
a call to `changed_lines_redraw_buf()`.
Solution: Invalidate the line after a change if there is virt_lines, or
inline virt_text in the buffer with 'wrap' enabled. Extend the
modified region for inserted or deleted lines if there may be
decorations in the buffer. Remove `redrawOneLine()`.
Simplify the logic for `changed_lines_invalidate_win()`.
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.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>
Problem: too many strlen() calls in edit.c
Solution: refactor edit.c and remove strlen() calls
(John Marriott)
This commit attempts to make edit.c more efficient by:
- in truncate_spaces() pass in the length of the string.
- return a string_T from get_last_insert(), so that the length of the
string is available to the caller.
- refactor stuff_insert():
- replace calls to stuffReadbuff() (which calls STRLEN() on it's
string argument) with stuffReadbuffLen() (which gets the length of
it's string argument passed in).
- replace call to vim_strrchr() which searches from the start of the
string with a loop which searches from end of the string to find the
last ESC character.
- change get_last_insert_save() to call get_last_insert() to get the
last_insert string (the logic is in one place).
closes: vim/vim#1686334954972c2
Co-authored-by: John Marriott <basilisk@internode.on.net>
Problem: When expanding omni completion items with newlines (e.g.
`then\n\t\nend`), the end statement gets wrong indentation.
Solution: Add OPENLINE_FORCE_INDENT flag to make open_line() use
second_line_indent directly (glepnir)
closes: vim/vim#166145090a1fecb
Problem: ins_str() is inefficient by calling STRLLEN()
Solution: refactor ins_str() to take a length argument
and let all callers provide the correct length
when calling ins_str() (John Marriott)
closes: vim/vim#16711f4b36417e8
Co-authored-by: John Marriott <basilisk@internode.on.net>
Problem: 'smoothscroll' gets stuck with 'listchars' "eol".
Solution: Count size of 'listchars' "eol" in line size when scrolling.
(zeertzjq)
related: neovim/neovim#32405closes: vim/vim#166272c47ab8fcd
Problem: Option metadata like list of valid values for an option and
option flags are not listed in the `options.lua` file and are instead
manually defined in C, which means option metadata is split between
several places.
Solution: Put metadata such as list of valid values for an option and
option flags in `options.lua`, and autogenerate the corresponding C
variables and enums.
Supersedes #28659
Co-authored-by: glepnir <glephunter@gmail.com>
Problem: Highlight group id is not propagated to the end of the message call
stack, where ext_messages are emitted.
Solution: Refactor message functions to pass along highlight group id
instead of attr id.
Use the grapheme break algorithm from utf8proc to support grapheme
clusters from recent unicode versions.
Handle variant selector VS16 turning some codepoints into double-width
emoji. This means we need to use ptr2cells rather than char2cells when
possible.
Problem:
Variables are often assigned multiple places in common patterns.
Solution:
Replace these common patterns with different patterns that reduce the
number of assignments.
Use `MAX` and `MIN`:
```c
if (x < y) {
x = y;
}
// -->
x = MAX(x, y);
```
```c
if (x > y) {
x = y;
}
// -->
x = MIN(x, y);
```
Use ternary:
```c
int a;
if (cond) {
a = b;
} els {
a = c;
}
// -->
int a = cond ? b : c;
```
Problem: CurSearch highlight is often wrong.
Solution: Remember the last highlighted position and redraw when needed.
368137aa52
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
The latter was mostly relevant with the past char_u madness.
NOTE: STRCAT also functioned as a counterfeit "NOLINT" for clint
apparently. But NOLINT-ing every usecase is just the same as disabling
the check entirely.
This most likely doesn't matter as all windows are redrawn when
switching tabpages and w_valid is reset is entering window, but still
check all tabpages for consistency with changed_common().
Problem: Using xstrlcpy() when the exact length of the string to be
copied is known is not ideal because it requires adding 1 to
the length and an unnecessary strlen().
Solution: Add xmemcpyz() and use it in place of such xstrlcpy() calls.
Problem: Logic to make sure cursor is in visible part of the screen after
scrolling the text with 'smoothscroll' is scattered, asymmetric
and contains bugs.
Solution: Adjust and create helper function for 'smoothscroll' cursor logic.
(Luuk van Baal)
9148ba8a46
Problem: Support for 'smoothscroll' in (half-)page scrolling
broke backward compatibility and can be made to work better.
(after v9.1.215)
Solution: Restore the previous cursor and end-of-buffer behavior for
half-page scrolling and improve 'smoothscroll' support.
(Luuk van Baal)
cb204e688e
Problem: More code can use ml_get_buf_len() instead of STRLEN().
Solution: Change more STRLEN() calls to ml_get_buf_len(). Also do not
set ml_line_textlen in ml_replace_len() if "has_props" is set,
because "len_arg" also includes the size of text properties in
that case. (zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#1418394b7c3233e
A lot of functions in move.c only worked for curwin, alternatively
took a `wp` arg but still only work if that happens to be curwin.
Refactor those that are needed for update_topline(wp) to work
for any window.
fixes#27723fixes#27720
Problem: too many STRLEN calls when getting a memline
Solution: Optimize calls to STRLEN(), add a few functions in memline.c
that return the byte length instead of relying on STRLEN()
(John Marriott)
closes: vim/vim#1405202d7a6c6cf
Cherry-pick line break changes from patch 8.1.0226.
Cherry-pick ml_line_len from patch 8.1.0579.
Cherry-pick test_comments.vim change from patch 9.1.0153.
Co-authored-by: John Marriott <basilisk@internode.on.net>
vim-patch:9.1.0100: Redrawing can be improved with undo and 'spell'
Problem: When undoing with 'spell', redrawWinline() is called after
changed_lines(), while later win_update() sets redraw type to
UPD_NOT_VALID, even though w_redraw_top and w_redraw_bot are
still valid.
Solution: Only set redraw type to UPD_NOT_VALID when inserting/deleting
lines after parts of window has pending redraw, i.e., when
changed_lines() is called after redrawWinline().
(zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#14019f2d90a3511
Problem: Mechanism to prevent recursive screen updating is incomplete.
Solution: Add "redraw_not_allowed" and set it in build_stl_str_hl().
(issue vim/vim#10952)
471c0fa3ee
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
The `get_indent_str_vtab()` function currently calls `tabstop_padding()`
every time a tab is encountered (unless tabstops aren't used).
`tabstop_padding()` either does a division by 'tabstop' If 'vartabstop'
is not set, or iterates through the 'vartabstop' list to find current
tab width.
Since the virtual column only increases, we can keep track of where the
next tabstop would be, and update this information once it was reached.
`get_indent_str_vtab()` also depends on 'listchars' "tab" value from the
current window, even though it may be called for a line from the same
buffer in a different window. In most cases, it is called with tabstops
enabled (last argument was `false`), so I split the function into one
that uses tabstops and the other that doesn't.
I removed `get_indent_str()` since I couldn't find any calls to it.
Problem: Redrawing can be improved when deleting lines with 'cursorline'.
Solution: Use smarter invalidation and adjustment. Remove unnecessary
UPD_VALID as it is already set at the top of the loop. Make
the test for vim/vim#4862 fail without the fix.
(zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#139867ce34c9a94
This expands on the global "don't pay for what you don't use" rules for
these special extmark decorations:
- inline virtual text, which needs to be processed in plines.c when we
calculate the size of text on screen
- virtual lines, which are needed when calculating "filler" lines
- signs, with text and/or highlights, both of which needs to be
processed for the entire line already at the beginning of a line.
This adds a count to each node of the marktree, for how many special
marks of each kind can be found in the subtree for this node. This makes
it possible to quickly skip over these extra checks, when working in
regions of the buffer not containing these kind of marks, instead of
before where this could just be skipped if the entire _buffer_
didn't contain such marks.
Remove `export` pramgas from defs headers as it causes IWYU to believe
that the definitions from the defs headers comes from main header, which
is not what we really want.
Problem:
With vim.treesitter.foldexpr, `o`-ing two lines above a folded region
opens the fold. This does not happen with legacy foldexprs. For example,
make a markdown file with the following text (without indentation),
enable treesitter fold, and follow the instruction in the text.
put cursor on this line and type zoo<Esc>
initially folded, revealed by zo
# then this fold will be opened
initially folded, revealed by o<Esc>
Analysis:
* `o` updates folds first (done in `changed_lines`), evaluating
foldexpr, and then invokes `on_bytes` (done in `extmark_splice`).
* Treesitter fold allocates the foldinfo for added lines (`add_range`)
on `on_bytes`.
* Therefore, when treesitter foldexpr is invoked while running `o`, it
sees outdated foldinfo.
Solution:
`extmark_splice`, and then `changed_lines`. This seems to be the
standard order in other places, e.g., `nvim_buf_set_lines`.
FUNC_ATTR_* should only be used in .c files with generated headers.
Defining FUNC_ATTR_* as empty in headers causes misuses of them to be
silently ignored. Instead don't define them by default, and only define
them as empty after a .c file has included its generated header.