Problem:
Crash from:
set cmdheight=0 redrawdebug=invalid
resize -1
Solution:
Do not invalidate first `p_ch` `msg_grid` rows in `update_screen` when
scrolling the screen down after displaying a message, because they may
be used later for drawing cmdline.
Fixes#22154
The "f" flag was removed in f7da472257.
The value of the "f" flag is no longer listed in the 'shortmess'
description and it cannot be disabled, so having it in the default value
is pointless and confusing.
Not everything needs to be crazy overconfigurable.
Also fixes a warning in latest clang which didn't approve of
the funky math switch statement in append_arg_number
Problem: :unhide does not check for failing to close a window.
Solution: When closing a window fails continue with the next one. Do not
try closing the autocmd window. (closesvim/vim#9984)
6f2465d336
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
This is a step in an ongoing refactor where the "grid_puts" and
"grid_put_linebuf" code paths will share more of the implementation (in
particular for delta calculation, doublewidth and 'arabicshape'
handling). But it also makes sense by its own as a cleanup, and is thus
committed separately.
Before this change many of the low level grid functions grid_puts,
grid_fill etc could both be used in a standalone fashion but also as
part of a batched line update which would be finally transmitted as a
single grid_line call (via ui_line() ). This was initially useful to
quickly refactor pre-existing vim code to use batched logic safely.
However, this pattern is not really helpful for maintainable and newly
written code, where the "grid" and "row" arguments are just needlessly
repeated. This simplifies these calls to just use grid and row as
specified in the initial grid_line_start(grid, row) call.
This also makes the intent clear whether any grid_puts() call is actually
part of a batch or not, which is better in the long run when more things
get refactored to use effective (properly batched) updates.
If nvim exited with nonzero status this is for one of the two reasons
- `:cquit` was invoked. This is used by users and plugins to communicate
a result, like a nonzero status will fail a `git commit` operation
- There was an internal error or deadly signal. in this case an error
message was likely written to stderr or to the screen.
In the latter case, the error message was often hidden by the TUI
exiting altscreen mode, which erases all visible terminal text.
This change prevents this in the latter case, while still cleaning up
the terminal properly when `:cquit` was deliberatily invoked.
Other cleanup like exiting mouse mode and raw mode is still done.
Problem: Wrong curswant when clicking on empty line or with vsplits.
Solution: Don't check for ScreenCols[] before the start of the window
and handle empty line properly.
closes: vim/vim#1313203cd697d63
This is not used as part of the logic to actually implement TUI line wrapping
In vim (especially gvim) it is used to emulate terminal-style text
selection. But in nvim we don't do that, and have no plans to reintroduce it.
Problem: r_CTRL-C works differently in visual mode
Solution: Make r_CTRL-C behave consistent in visual mode
in terminal and Windows GUI
in visual mode, r CTRL-C behaves strange in Unix like environments. It
seems to end visual mode, but still is waiting for few more chars,
however it never seems to replace it by any characters and eventually
just returns back into normal mode.
In contrast in Windows GUI mode, r_CTRL-C replaces in the selected area
all characters by a literal CTRL-C.
Not sure why it behaves like this. It seems in the Windows GUI, got_int
is not set and therefore behaves as if any other normal character has
been pressed.
So remove the special casing of what happens when got_int is set and
make it always behave like in Windows GUI mode. Add a test to verify it
always behaves like replacing in the selected area each selected
character by a literal CTRL-C.
closes: vim/vim#13091closes: vim/vim#13112476733f3d0
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Previously, a screen cell would occupy 28+4=32 bytes per cell
as we always made space for up to MAX_MCO+1 codepoints in a cell.
As an example, even a pretty modest 50*80 screen would consume
50*80*2*32 = 256000, i e a quarter megabyte
With the factor of two due to the TUI side buffer, and even more when
using msg_grid and/or ext_multigrid.
This instead stores a 4-byte union of either:
- a valid UTF-8 sequence up to 4 bytes
- an escape char which is invalid UTF-8 (0xFF) plus a 24-bit index to a
glyph cache
This avoids allocating space for huge composed glyphs _upfront_, while
still keeping rendering such glyphs reasonably fast (1 hash table lookup
+ one plain index lookup). If the same large glyphs are using repeatedly
on the screen, this is still a net reduction of memory/cache
consumption. The only case which really gets worse is if you blast
the screen full with crazy emojis and zalgo text and even this case
only leads to 4 extra bytes per char.
When only <= 4-byte glyphs are used, plus the 4-byte attribute code,
i e 8 bytes in total there is a factor of four reduction of memory use.
Memory which will be quite hot in cache as the screen buffer is scanned
over in win_line() buffer text drawing
A slight complication is that the representation depends on host byte
order. I've tested this manually by compling and running this
in qemu-s390x and it works fine. We might add a qemu based solution
to CI at some point.
Problem: undefined behaviour upper/lower function ptrs
Solution: Fix UBSAN error in regexp and simplify upper/lowercase
modifier code
The implementation of \u / \U / \l / \L modifiers in the substitute
command relies on remembering the state by setting function pointers on
func_all/func_one in the code. The code signature of `fptr_T` is
supposed to return void* (due to C function signatures not being able to
return itself due to type recursion), and the definition of the
functions (e.g. to_Upper) didn't follow this rule, and so the code tries
to cast functions of different signatures, resulting in undefined
behavior error under UBSAN in Clang 17. See vim/vim#12745.
We could just fix `do_Upper`/etc to just return void*, which would fix
the problem. However, these functions actually do not need to return
anything at all. It used to be the case that there was only one pointer
"func" to store the pointer, which is why the function needs to either
return itself or NULL to indicate whether it's a one time or ongoing
modification. However, c2c355df6f094cdb9e599fd395a78c14486ec697
(7.3.873) already made that obsolete by introducing `func_one` and
`func_all` to store one-time and ongoing operations separately, so these
functions don't actually need to return anything anymore because it's
implicit whether it's a one-time or ongoing operation. Simplify the code
to reflect that.
closes: vim/vim#13117d25021cf03
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Problem: Cannot use an import in 'foldexpr'.
Solution: Set the script context to where 'foldexpr' was set. (closesvim/vim#9584)
Fix that the script context was not set for all buffers.
e70dd11ef4
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Problem: Vim9: ":put =expr" does not handle a list properly.
Solution: Use the same logic as eval_to_string_eap(). (closesvim/vim#7684)
883cf97f10
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>