Problem: filetype: some requirements files are not recognized
Solution: Detect '*-requirements.txt', 'constraints.txt',
'requirements.in', 'requirements/*.txt' and 'requires/*.txt'
as requirements filetype, include pip compiler, include
requirements filetype and syntax plugin
(Wu, Zhenyu, @raimon49)
closes: vim/vim#14379f9f5424d3e
Co-authored-by: Wu, Zhenyu <wuzhenyu@ustc.edu>
Co-authored-by: raimon <raimon49@hotmail.com>
runtime(java): Recognise non-ASCII identifiers (vim/vim#14543)
* runtime(java): Recognise non-ASCII identifiers
Also:
- Remove the already commented out and less general in its
definition javaFuncDef alternative.
- Stop recognising some bespoke {p,trace} debugging API.
Non-ASCII identifiers have been supported from the outset
of the Java language.
> An _identifier_ is an unlimited-length sequence of _Java
> letters_ and _Java digits_, the first of which must be a
> Java letter. An identifier cannot have the same spelling
> (Unicode character sequence) as a keyword . . . Boolean
> literal . . . or the null literal . . .
> . . . . . . . .
> Letters and digits may be drawn from the entire Unicode
> character set . . .
> . . . . . . . .
> A Java letter is a character for which the method
> Character.isJavaLetter . . . returns true. A Java
> letter-or-digit is a character for which the method
> Character.isJavaLetterOrDigit . . . returns true.
> . . . . . . . .
> The Java letters include . . . for historical reasons, the
> ASCII underscore (_) . . . and dollar sign ($) . . .
(Separate syntax tests will be written when particular parts
now touched will have been further improved.)
Reference:
https://javaalmanac.io/jdk/1.0/langspec.pdf [§3.8]
* Take on the maintenance of Java filetype and syntax files
4052474a1b
Co-authored-by: Aliaksei Budavei <32549825+zzzyxwvut@users.noreply.github.com>
This reverts commit 4382d2ed56.
The story for this feature was left in an incomplete state. It was never
the intention to unilaterally fold all information, only the ones that
did not contain relevant information. This feature does more harm than
good in its incomplete state.
runtime(vim): Improve Vim9 and legacy-script comment highlighting (vim/vim#13104)
This is a first-pass attempt to limit matching of Vim9 and legacy-script
comments to the appropriate syntactic contexts.
Vim9-script comments are highlighted at top level in a Vim9-script file,
in all :def functions, and in all :autocmd and :commmand command blocks.
Legacy-script comments are highlighted at top level in a legacy script
file, in all :func functions and in the Vim9-script preamble before the
:vim9script marker command.
Fixesvim/vim#13047, vim/vim#11307 and vim/vim#9587.
04e5363b82
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
runtime(deb822sources): Add minimal ftplugin (vim/vim#14240)
Set comment related options and avoid automatic line wrapping.
2708c0b585
Co-authored-by: James McCoy <jamessan@jamessan.com>
runtime(r,rhelp,rmd,rnoweb,rrst): Update ftplugin, browsefilter labels (vim/vim#14126)
Use the standard format for browsefilter labels:
"File Description (*.ext1, *.ext2, *.ext3)"
e93afc2e61
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Help outlines, invoked by `gO`, displays the help section titles in the
location list window. This feature is implemented by setting the buffer
lines after opening the window, but this implementation breaks the
assumption that the quickfix window texts are consistently constructed
by the quickfix list items. I think we can use the conceal feature here.
Using conceal here improves interoperability between quickfix plugins,
and also simplifies the outline implementation.
Originally reported at https://github.com/itchyny/vim-qfedit/issues/12
runtime(vim): Update syntax and ftplugin files (vim/vim#13924)
Improve matching of line-continuations and interspersed comments.
These are now also matched in multiline syntax command patterns,
dictionary literals, and parenthesised expressions and argument lists.
21ce159e05
Co-authored-by: dkearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Translate the Vim9 script Godot files to legacy.
`<scriptcmd>` is not ported yet, so replace it with `<Cmd>` and `<SID>`.
If it's ported, `<scriptcmd>call s:` can be used instead.
Includes changes from:
vim-patch:0daafaa7d99e (was partial, but is now pretty much fully ported)
vim-patch:9712ff1288f9
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
runtime(odin): include ftplugin, syntax and indent script (vim/vim#13867)
211211052d
Translate the files from Vim9 script to legacy Vim script. Notably:
- Prefer case-matching comparisons where needed.
- Save and restore `&cpo`.
- Make the functions script-local. (Pretty easy to use these in expr options now
since Vim 9.0 anyways)
Add a note after the header for each file stating that they're manually
translated.
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
Problem: Modula2 filetype support lacking
Solution: Improve the Modula-2 runtime support, add additional modula2
dialects, add compiler plugin, update syntax highlighting,
include syntax tests, update Makefiles (Doug Kearns)
closes: vim/vim#6796closes: vim/vim#811568a8947069
- Luaify the detection script:
- Split the `(*!m2foo*)` and `(*!m2foo+bar*)` detection into two Lua patterns,
as Lua capture groups cannot be used with `?` and friends (as they only work
on character classes).
- Use `vim.api.nvim_buf_call()` (ew) to call `modula2#SetDialect()` to ensure
`b:modula2` is set for the given bufnr.
- Skip the syntax screendump tests. (A shame as they test some of the detection
from `(*!m2foo+bar*)` tags, but I tested this locally and it seems to work)
- Port the synmenu.vim changes from Vim9 script. (Also tested this locally)
- (And also add the missing comma for `b:browsefilter` from earlier.)
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
runtime(ftplugin): Use "*" browsefilter pattern to match "All Files"
Problem: The "*.*" browsefilter pattern only matches all files on
Windows (Daryl Lee)
Solution: Use "*" to filter on all platforms but keep "*.*" as the label
text on Windows. (Fixesvim/vim#12685, Doug Kearns)
The *.* browsefilter pattern used to match "All Files" on Windows is a
legacy of the DOS 8.3 filename wildcard matching algorithm. For reasons
of backward compatibility this still works on Windows to match all
files, even those without an extension.
However, this pattern only matches filenames containing a dot on other
platforms. This often makes files without an extension difficult to
access from the file dialog, e.g., "Makefile"
On Windows it is still standard practice to use "*.*" for the filter
label so ftplugins should use "All Files (*.*)" on Windows and "All
Files (*)" on other platforms. This matches Vim's default browsefilter
values.
This commit also normalises the browsefilter conditional test to check
for the Win32 and GTK GUI features and an unset b:browsefilter.
closes: vim/vim#1275993197fde0f
Co-authored-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Runtime(fortran): updates to indent, syntax and ftplugin (vim/vim#13752)
* runtime update fortran.vim
Add folding for newer features of Fortran
* Runtime Update fortran.vim
Add indent support for newer features of Fortran
* Runtime Update fortran.vim
Add newer features of Fortran to matchit patterns
ea9964a36f
Co-authored-by: Ajit-Thakkar <142174202+Ajit-Thakkar@users.noreply.github.com>
runtime(erlang): add support for matchit plugin (vim/vim#13713)
This commit updates the Erlang runtime files to be in sync with the
`vim-erlang-runtime` repository. In particular, it adds the following
commit (with some cleanup and simplification afterwards):
6ea8b85bc918ab6c3392
Co-authored-by: Csaba Hoch <csaba.hoch@gmail.com>
Problem: Not all default highlight groups show their actual colors.
Solution: Refactor `vimhelp.lua` and apply it to all relevant lists (UI
groups, syntax groups, treesitter groups, LSP groups, diagnostic groups).
runtime(sbt): do not set b:did_ftplugin before sourcing scala ftplugin(vim/vim#13657)
The `b:did_ftplugin` guard was set and prevented us from actually sourcing `ftplugin/scala.vim`. Since the latter script also sets the guard properly, we can simply remove the guard here.
5a68cdf149
Co-authored-by: Karl Yngve Lervåg <karl.yngve@lervag.net>
Add syntax and filetype plugins for SWIG (Simplified Wrapper Interface
Generator) description files.
The default syntax for .i files highlights comments in a reverse
color scheme which doesn't look well. This syntax builds
on vim's c++ syntax by adding highlighting for common swig
directives and user defined directives. For an alternative
syntax, see vimscript vim/vim#1247 (which I found after writing this).
closes: vim/vim#135622e31065a65
Co-authored-by: Julien Marrec <julien.marrec@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Matěj Cepl <mcepl@cepl.eu>
Problem: wast filetype should be replaced by wat filetype
Solution: start using the official wat filetype name
runtime: rename `wast` filetype to `wat` (Wasm text format)
The problem is the name of the current filetype wast. When the plugin
was initially created, the file extension for Wasm text format was not
fixed and .wast was more popular.
However, recently .wat became the official file extension for
WebAssembly text (WAT) format and .wast is now a file extension for the
unofficial WAST format, which is a superset of .wat for the convenience
to describe the Wasm specification conformance tests.
https://webassembly.js.org/docs/contrib-wat-vs-wast.html
However for now, let's keep using the `wat` filetype even for the .wast
extension, so that we at least do not lose the filetype settings and
syntax highlighting. This can be adjusted later, if it turns out to have
a separate need for.
closes: vim/vim#13533bc8f79d36a
Co-authored-by: rhysd <lin90162@yahoo.co.jp>