Problem: complete: preinsert does not work well with preinsert
Solution: Make "preinsert" completeopt value work with autocompletion
(Girish Palya)
This change extends Insert mode autocompletion so that 'preinsert' also
works when 'autocomplete' is enabled.
Try: `:set ac cot=preinsert`
See `:help 'cot'` for more details.
closes: vim/vim#18213fa6fd41a94
Co-authored-by: Girish Palya <girishji@gmail.com>
Problem:
The default progress message doesn't account for
message-status. Also, the title and percent sections don't get written
to history. And progress percent is hard to find with variable length messages.
Solution:
Apply highlighting on Title based on status. And sync the formated msg
in history too. Also updates the default progress message format to
{title}: {percent}% msg
These are not needed after #35129 but making uncrustify still play nice
with them was a bit tricky.
Unfortunately `uncrustify --update-config-with-doc` breaks strings
with backslashes. This issue has been reported upstream,
and in the meanwhile auto-update on every single run has been disabled.
Problem:
stderr messages from executing ":!cmd" show up with
highlight hl-ErrorMsg. But some shell utilites use stderr for debug
logging, progress updates, etc.
Solution:
Highlight shell command outputs hl-StderrMsg and hl-StdoutMsg.
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: currently `CursorLine`, `Folded`, `StatusLineNC` highlight
groups have the same background color in default color scheme (Grey3).
This is a result of optimizing their highlighting to be different from
`Normal` but not draw too much attention.
However, this design has a usability issue as those groups are
sometimes appear together which can make it hard (but not impossible)
to differentiate between them.
This was previously partially resolved with `StatusLineNC` using Grey1
as background (and thus be different from `CursorLine` but closer to
`Normal`), but optimizing more towards it being a visible separator
between windows was decided to be more important.
Solution: make `Folded` use Grey1 and `StatusLineNC` use Grey4. This
makes all three highlight groups have different backgrounds with the
following consequences:
- Folds now have the same background as floating windows. It makes
them there differentiable only by the value of 'foldtext' (which
is usually enough). Optimizing for the case "cursor line is next
to the fold" seems to be more useful than for the case "make folds
in floating window differ by background".
- Statusline of inactive windows now draw more attention to them.
The benefits are that they are different from cursor column and
are better window separators.
- Inactive tabline (both `TabLine` and `TabLineFill`) now also draws
a bit more attention to it (as they are linked to `StatusLineNC`)
but with the benefit of also being different from `CursorLine`.
Problem: Linking `TablineSel` to `Normal` makes it more noticeable with
`notermguicolors` but less so with `termguicolors` (compared to using
bold text in both cases).
Solution: use bold text with `termguicolors` and regular with
`notermguicolors`.
Also avoid going down message callstack with empty message, and remove expected grid for some tests where it did not change, and we are just testing for expected messages.
Problem: cannot highlight completed text
Solution: (optionally) highlight auto-completed text using the
ComplMatchIns highlight group (glepnir)
closes: vim/vim#161736a38aff218
Co-authored-by: glepnir <glephunter@gmail.com>
When a terminal application running inside the terminal emulator sets
the cursor shape or blink status of the cursor, update the cursor in the
parent terminal to match.
This removes the "virtual cursor" that has been in use by the terminal
emulator since the beginning. The original rationale for using the
virtual cursor was to avoid having to support additional UI methods to
change the cursor color for other (non-TUI) UIs, instead relying on the
TermCursor and TermCursorNC highlight groups.
The TermCursor highlight group is now used in the default 'guicursor'
value, which has a new entry for Terminal mode. However, the
TermCursorNC highlight group is no longer supported: since terminal
windows now use the real cursor, when the window is not focused there is
no cursor displayed in the window at all, so there is nothing to
highlight. Users can still use the StatusLineTermNC highlight group to
differentiate non-focused terminal windows.
BREAKING CHANGE: The TermCursorNC highlight group is no longer supported.
**Problem:** Despite the LSP providing the option for language servers
to specify a range with a hover response (for highlighting), Neovim does
not give the option to highlight this range.
**Solution:** Add an option to `buf.hover()` which causes this range to
be highlighted.
Co-authored-by: Mathias Fußenegger <mfussenegger@users.noreply.github.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.
Problem: both `PmenuMatch` and `PmenuMatchSel` can provide helpful
information about characters which actually match query in completion
candidates. This is not as useful with default regular match, but much
more useful with 'completopt+=fuzzy'.
Solution: make both highlight groups bold. This will also affect
(i.e. benefit) other color schemes which do not define groups
separately.
This is possible since the recently merged changes to `PmenuMatch` and
`PmenuMatchSel` combine attributes with underlying "base" groups.
See PR 29980.
Problem:
Headings in :help do not stand out visually.
Solution:
Define a non-standard `@markup.heading.1.delimiter` group and
special-case it in `highlight_group.c`.
FUTURE:
This is a cheap workaround until we have #25718 which will enable:
- fully driven by `vimdoc/highlights.scm` instead of using highlight
tricks (`guibg=bg guifg=bg guisp=fg`)
- better support of "cterm" ('notermguicolors')
In the api_info() output:
:new|put =map(filter(api_info().functions, '!has_key(v:val,''deprecated_since'')'), 'v:val')
...
{'return_type': 'ArrayOf(Integer, 2)', 'name': 'nvim_win_get_position', 'method': v:true, 'parameters': [['Window', 'window']], 'since': 1}
The `ArrayOf(Integer, 2)` return type didn't break clients when we added
it, which is evidence that clients don't use the `return_type` field,
thus renaming Dictionary => Dict in api_info() is not (in practice)
a breaking change.
Problem: completion items can now have dedicated highlighting (through
`hl_group` and `kind_hlgroup` fields). Both of the fields combine
their highlight attributes with the underlying `PmenuXxx` group.
As default color scheme `Pmenu` and `PmenuSel` are intentionally
almost inverted versions of one another, the added highlighting will
be unreadable in one of them if done only through foreground (which is
the most convenient way for users and being able to do so is arguably
the biggest benefit of actually combining added highlighting).
Solution: adjust `PmenuSel` to utilize `attr=reverse`. This works
because `fg`/`bg` are first combined and only then reversed. This
results in a colored background for items with `hl_group` and
`kind_hlgroup` using text highlighting.
This also results in the same background for regular selected item,
while intentionally changing foreground from `Nvim{Light,Dark}Grey3`
to (essentially) `Nvim{Light,Dark}Grey2`. This both provides better
contrast ratio and does not need realigning of the whole block.
Problem: Functions are global while they could be local.
Solution: Add "static". Add a few tests. (Yegappan Lakshmanan,
closesvim/vim#10612)
ee47eaceaa
Omit script_name_after_autoload(), untrans_function_name(): Vim9 script
only.
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: Cannot see matched text in popup menu
Solution: Introduce 2 new highlighting groups: PmenuMatch and
PmenuMatchSel (glepnir)
closes: vim/vim#1469440c1c3317d
Co-authored-by: glepnir <glephunter@gmail.com>
These highlight groups are used for the statusline in :terminal windows.
By default they link to StatusLine and StatusLineNC (respectively), so
there is no visual difference unless a colorscheme defines these groups
separately.
Problem: statusline for non-active window can be hard to distinguish
from normal text with 'notermguicolors'. It was set to use only bold
text to find a balance between being not too similar to active
statusline and normal text, and be supported in enough terminal
emulators (if it does not support 'termguicolors' there is higher
chance that it also does not support underline).
Solution: reconsider balance by placing more emphasis on making
non-active statusline more distinguishable.
This also results into tabline being shown with underline which
aligns with "make more distinguishable" shift.
Problem: Not all standard treesitter groups are documented.
Solution: Document them all (without relying on fallback); add default
link for new `*.builtin` groups to `Special` and `@keyword.type` to
`Structure`. Remove `@markup.environment.*` which only made sense for
LaTeX.
Added the following LSP semantic token types to be linked to highlight
groups by default:
* @lsp.type.event
* @lsp.type.keyword
* @lsp.type.modifier
* @lsp.type.number
* @lsp.type.operator
* @lsp.type.regexp
* @lsp.type.string
Current uses of vim_strup() calls memcpy()/strcpy() before calling vim_strup().
This results in 2 * strlen(string) operations.
We can trivially convert to lowercase while copying the string instead.
Problem: Currently default color scheme defines most of treesitter
highlight groups. This might be an issue for users defining their own
color scheme as it breaks the "fallback property" for some of groups.
Solution: Define less default treesitter groups; just enough for default
color scheme to be useful. That is:
- All first level groups (`@character`, `@string`, etc.).
- All `@xxx.builtin` groups as a most common subgroup.
- Some special cases (links/URLs, `@diff.xxx`, etc.).
Problem: Some core syntax highlight groups are cleared with intention to
always be shown without additional highlighting. This doesn't always
work as intended, especially with fallback mechanism of @-groups.
Example: `Statement`/`Keyword` group shown in help code blocks
(`@markup.raw`) is shown as bold (from `Statement`) cyan (from
`@markup.raw`) instead of bold grey.
Solution: Explicitly use normal grey foreground in syntax groups where
it was previously implicitly assumed.