When using vim9-syntax plugin, :VimKeywordPrg does not lookup functions
correctly, as it relies solely on syntax names to find the help topic.
The syntax keyword used for builtin function is vi9FuncNameBuiltin in
vim9-syntax plugin, not vimFuncName expected by :VimKeywordPrg, so the
fallback rules apply, and there is no fallback rule for function calls.
Fix by just checking if the first char after topic is '(', and if so
assume help topic is a function.
closes: vim/vim#19320ac5af8ecd3
Co-authored-by: Mark Woods <mwoods.online.ie@gmail.com>
- Match &option, and &[lg]:option variables.
- Match Ex commands after :bar.
- Fix matching of pre and post context text.
- Style - use '..' for string concatenation.
fixesvim/vim#17567closes: vim/vim#17653c65643cbec
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
From the LSP Spec:
> There are two uses cases where it can be beneficial to only compute
> semantic tokens for a visible range:
>
> - for faster rendering of the tokens in the user interface when a user
> opens a file. In this use case, servers should also implement the
> textDocument/semanticTokens/full request as well to allow for flicker
> free scrolling and semantic coloring of a minimap.
> - if computing semantic tokens for a full document is too expensive,
> servers can only provide a range call. In this case, the client might
> not render a minimap correctly or might even decide to not show any
> semantic tokens at all.
This commit unifies the usage of range and full/delta requests as
recommended by the LSP spec and aligns neovim with the way other LSP
clients use these request types for semantic tokens.
When a server supports range requests, neovim will simultaneously send a
range request and a full/delta request when first opening a file, and
will continue to issue range requests until a full response is
processed. At that point, range requests cease and full (or delta)
requests are used going forward. The range request should allow servers
to return a result faster for quicker highlighting of the file while it
works on the potentially more expensive full result. If a server decides
the full result is too expensive, it can just error out that request,
and neovim will continue to use range requests.
This commit also fixes and cleans up some other things:
- gen_lsp: registrationMethod or registrationOptions imply dynamic
registration support
- move autocmd creation/deletion to on_attach/on_detach
- debounce requests due to server refresh notifications
- fix off by one issue in tokens_to_ranges() iteration
Problem:
`Client.on_exit` runs `Client._on_detach` and the client removal logic
within two separate `vim.schedule` sequentially. However, since
`Client._on_detach` executes `LspNotify` inside `vim.schedule`, this
causes `LspNotify` to be executed after the client removal, which is
scheduled first. At that point, a valid `Client` can no longer be
retrieved within the autocmd callback.
Solution:
Put the client deletion inside the `vim.schedule` call.
Problem:
Temporary files from /tmp/ and /private/ paths clutter :oldfiles list.
Additionally, the documented Windows default (rA:,rB:) was never applied
due to a missing platform condition.
Solution:
Drop platform-specific shada differences and default to excluding
/tmp/ and /private/ paths.
Problem: The wildmenu is hidden behind the dialog window with "list" in 'wildmode'.
Global ('laststatus' set to 3) statusline is hidden behind the
pager window.
Solution: Check wildmenumode() to adjust the dialog position when necessary.
Ensure pager is positioned above the global statusline with 'laststus' set to 3.
Problem: Scheduled callbacks reference potentially outdated window
handles e.g. after switching tabpage.
Solution: Use ext.wins which stores the updated window handles.
Problem:
Using vim.defer_fn() just before Nvim exit leaks luv handles.
Solution:
Make vim.schedule() return an error message if scheduling failed.
Make vim.defer_fn() close timer if vim.schedule() failed.
Problem:
`on_list` is supposed to replace the default list-handler. With the current order of these `if` statements `on_list` won't be called if `loclist` is true.
Solution:
Change the order of the relevant blocks.
- fix readability issue with IncSearch/CurSearch
- add highlights to some of ftplugins distributed with vim
closes: vim/vim#19295c99aaf4c87
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
Previously, adjust_start_col returned nil when completion items had
different start position from lsp textEdit range
This caused the completion to fall back to \k*$ which ignores the
non-keyword characters
Changes:
- adjust_start_col: now returns the minimum start postion among all
items instead of nil
- _lsp_to_complete_items - normalizes the items by adding the gap between
current and minimum start
Fixes: https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/37441
- Add PreInsert (darkblue, habamax, lunaperche, wildcharm, retrobox).
- Update QuickFixLine (habamax, lunaperche, wildcharm, retrobox) - make
it foreground transparent in GUI.
- Make Todo in wildcharm just bold.
closes: vim/vim#18304b1b80506ce
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
- all colorschemes were ported to colortemplate v3
- gui versions of habamax, lunaperche, wildcharm, retrobox colorschemes
have different Diff, Visual, Search and IncSearch colors compared to non-gui.
- habamax Search was changed to green instead of blue to better distinct
it with Visual (also bluish in gui)
closes: vim/vim#18061f3055eac84
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
indent/rust.vim behaves incorrectly when a string literal contains the
substring "if".
For example, in this code:
let x = "
motif
";
struct X {
}
indent/rust.vim thinks that the closing "}" should line up with "motif".
This patch fixes the issue by checking whether the "if" is in a string
literal or comment before considering it to be a match for a subsequent
brace (and also by requiring it to start on a word boundary).
Add an indent test to ensure this does not regress.
closes: vim/vim#19265663d809194
Co-authored-by: taylor.fish <contact@taylor.fish>
Problem: The behavior of vim.eval() with Vim special variables is not
clearly documented. It is (partly) the reason why Nvim
Python's vim.eval gives different output when evaluating
v:true and v:false
Solution: Document it (Phạm Bình An)
closes: vim/vim#191571e54023673
Although powerful -- especially with chained modifiers --, the
readability (and therefore maintainability) of `fnamemodify()` and its
modifiers is often worse than a function name, giving less context and
having to rely on `:h filename-modifiers`. However, it is used plenty in
the Lua stdlib:
- 16x for the basename: `fnamemodify(path, ':t')`
- 7x for the parents: `fnamemodify(path, ':h')`
- 7x for the stem (filename w/o extension): `fnamemodify(path, ':r')`
- 6x for the absolute path: `fnamemodify(path, ':p')`
- 2x for the suffix: `fnamemodify(path, ':e')`
- 2x relative to the home directory: `fnamemodify(path, ':~')`
- 1x relative to the cwd: `fnamemodify(path, ':.')`
The `fs` module in the stdlib provides a cleaner interface for most of
these path operations: `vim.fs.basename` instead of `':t'`,
`vim.fs.dirname` instead of `':h'`, `vim.fs.abspath` instead of `':p'`.
This commit refactors the runtime to use these instead of fnamemodify.
Not all fnamemodify calls are removed; some have intrinsic differences
in behavior with the `vim.fs` replacement or do not yet have a
replacement in the Lua module, i.e. `:~`, `:.`, `:e` and `:r`.
Problem:
- Nvim supports multi-line input in prompt buffer, so line(`$`) is not
always the prompt line.
Solution:
- Use `line("':")` to get the prompt line.
Problem:
Two cases lsp.enable() won't work in the first FileType event
1. lsp.enable luals inside FileType or ftplugin/lua.lua, then:
```
nvim a.lua
```
2. lsp.enable luals inside FileType or ftplugin/lua.lua, then:
```
nvim -> :edit a.lua -> :mksession! | restart +qa! so Session.vim
```
Solution:
Currently `v:vim_did_enter` is used to detected two cases:
1. "maunally enabled" (lsp.enable() or `:lsp enable`)
2. "inside FileType event"
To detect 2. correctly we use did_filetype().
Problem:
- According to [pipx
documentation](https://pipx.pypa.io/stable/docs/#pipx-install), `pipx
install` doesn't have --upgrade argument. Running `pipx install
--upgrade pynvim` results in an error "unrecognized arguments:
--upgrade"
- In file if_pyth.txt:317, it says "Implementation is ... written in C".
This is not true for Nvim, since find_module logic of Nvim's Python
interface is implemented in Python.
(fdaae821a9/pynvim/plugin/script_host.py (L217))
- $NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS has been deprecated.
- `:Next` is a core command, not termdebug plugin command. Termdebug
uses `:Over` to send command `next` to gdb
Solution:
- Just use `pipx install pynvim`
Problem:
If `vim.lsp.enable()` fails with an error, either because `'*'` is one
of the provided names or because there is an error in a config,
`vim.lsp.enable()` will still have side-effects:
- All names before the one that encountered an error will still be added
to `lsp._enabled_configs`, but the autocommand will not get added or
run.
- Any name which makes `vim.lsp.config[name]` error will be added to
`lsp._enabled_configs`, causing all future calls to `vim.lsp.enable()`
to fail. This will also break `:che vim.lsp`.
Solution:
- Check all names for errors before modifying `lsp._enabled_configs`.
- Check `vim.lsp.config[name]` does not raise an error before enabling
the name.
Problem: In float mode, vim.schedule() may run before filetype is set,
so winbar is not shown.
Solution: Use FileType autocmd to ensure winbar is set after filetype.
Also use type=Bug in URL.
* cache all tokens from various range requests for a given document
version
- all new token highlights are merged with previous highlights to
maintain order and the "marked" property
- this allows the tokens to stop flickering once they've loaded once
per document version
* abandon the processing coroutine if the request_id has changed instead
of relying only on the document version
- this will improve efficiency if a new range request is made while a
previous one was processing its result
* apply new highlights from processing coroutine directly to the current
result when the version hasn't changed
- this allows new highlights to be immediately drawable once they've
processed instead of waiting for the whole response to be processed
at once
* rpc layer was changed to provide the request ID back in success
callbacks, which is then provided as a request_id field on the handler
context to lsp handlers
Problem:
`:checkhealth` does not report when no `vim.ui.open()` handler is
available.
Solution:
Factor command resolution into `_get_open_cmd()` and reuse it from
`:checkhealth` to detect missing handlers.