CA_COMMAND_BUSY in nv_event() was carried over from Vim nv_cursorhold()
(ref: e5165bae11). It prevents :startinsert from working during a RPC
call, so remove it.
Helped-by: glacambre <me@r4>
closes#7254
Problem: When 'hlsearch' is set and matching with the last search pattern
is very slow, Vim becomes unusable. Cannot quit search by
pressing CTRL-C.
Solution: When the search times out set a flag and don't try again. Check
for timeout and CTRL-C in NFA loop that adds states.
fbd0b0af68
wp->w_height_inner now contains the "inner" size, regardless if the
window has been drawn yet or not. It should be used instead of
wp->w_grid.Rows, for stuff that is not directly related to accessing
the allocated grid memory, such like cursor movement and terminal size
There is various places where 'conceallevel' and 'concealcursor'
necessitates additional redraws. This tries to separate the different
cases and handle each accordingly:
- Share code with 'cursorline' for the common case: vertical move of
cursor within the same window (concealcursor not active)
- Improve the logic for managing 'concealcursor' and switching modes:
test for the case where the new mode behaves differently from the
last one.
- Clarify the special case for horizontal movement within a line when
'concealcursor' is active, now there is an if-statement only for this
and not hidden in larger check mostly for the first point.
- Keep the special case for moving between windows as is.
update_single_line() was only used for 'concealcursor'. But 'cursorline'
has very similiar characteristics (redraw both lines on move cursor
between lines) and works without its own special entry point to the
redraw subsystem.
Later on 'concealcursor' and 'cursorline' could share more logic, but for
now make the former use standard redrawWinline(). Make sure it is called
before update_screen(), so that it is immediately visible.
Get rid of update_prepare() and update_finish(), and all issues from
them and their callsites not being in sync with changes to
update_screen()
Problem: Custom operators can't act upon a forced motion. (Christian
Wellenbrock)
Solution: Add the forced motion to the mode() result. (Christian Brabandt,
closesvim/vim#3490)
5976f8ff00closes#8667closes#9476
Christian Wellenbrock:
> For (most) built in text objects it's possible to force operation on
> them to be linewise, for example by using `dVab` (`:h o_V`,
> `motion_force`). When using custom text objects (defined as mappings
> by plugins for example), this doesn't currently work.
>
> Example:
>
> onoremap x viw
>
> Open a file with a few lines each containing some words. With the
> cursor on any word, try:
>
> 1. `dw` (builtin) deletes some characters
> 2. `dVw` (builtin) deletes linewise
> 3. `dx` (from mapping) deletes some characters
> 4. `dVx` (from mapping) deletes some characters, but should delete
> linewise
ref: https://github.com/wellle/targets.vim/issues/214
ref: https://gitter.im/neovim/neovim?at=5b379ff7f1664406610e7483
Decide whether to highlight the visual-selected character under the
cursor, depending on 'guicursor' style:
- Highlight if cursor is blinking or non-block (vertical, horiz).
- Do NOT highlight if cursor is non-blinking block.
Traditionally Vim's visual selection does "reverse mode", which perhaps
conflicts with the non-blinking block cursor. But 'guicursor' defaults
to a vertical bar for selection=exclusive, and this confuses users who
expect to see the text highlighted.
closes#8983
Problem: Crash if timer closes window while dragging status line.
Solution: Check if the window still exists. (Yasuhiro Matsumoto, closes
vim/vim#1979)
989a70c590