I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.
I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.
I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.
I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.
Add that libexec directory to the PATH instead of the current kak
binary directory to avoid impacting other commands.
The libexec directory currently only contains a symlink back to
the Kakoune binary.
Various paths can run arbitrary commands (callbacks, hooks) which
could lead to the InputMode being popped off the mode stack, but
contrarily to the on_key method, we had no guarantees to be kept
alive.
Add a keep_alive RefPtr to this to ensure the mode survives till
the end.
Fixes#3915
Other scripts uses a dot `.` to separate the seed from the rest of
the template, making that standard across the codebase allows running
cleanup commands like `rm -rf /tmp/kak-*.*`.
This commit is an attempt at mitigating stray processes and temporary
directories, which pile up in the process tree and `$TMPDIR` over time.
To reproduce the issue, run the `lint` command in rapid successions,
or simply run `:lint; lint; lint;` in the prompt (two consecutive
calls are enough to trigger the bug).
The first call creates a `\*lint-ouput*` buffer, bound to a named
pipe that will be populated later on in an asychronous shell
process. It's that same process that runs the linter afterward, and as
soon as it has been spawned, the following call to `:lint` is executed.
Each call to `:lint` overrides the path to the named pipe that was
assigned to `\*lint-output*` by the previous one, resulting in several
asynchronous processes (that write diagnostics to the pipe) hanging
forever — the pipe is never read, and so the process idles.
The command that removes the temporary directory follows the one that
writes to the named pipe, it's never called in the above scenario,
which additionally results in `kak-lint.XXXXXXXX` directories being
left behind in `$TMPDIR`.
(Also) Fixes#3681.
Triple strings are now distinct from docstrings, triple strings
only preceeded by blanks on the line are considered docstrings.
Avoid highlighting of the closing marker using a lookahead, this
is not fully correct as it will break on a double quote triple
docstring containing a single quote triple string but that seems
improbable enough; if we encounter this in the wild we can split
the two docstring formats into separate regions.
I removed files which are no longer significant (ui-in, ui-out, selections,
state), added new files which are now important (enabled, script, kak_*),
and reordered the files to reflect the order in which they are applied -
in particular, cmd is applied *after* the input is read.
When doing line completion, we previously used to not complete the line
if it had different indent to the potential completion.
This commit changes the behaviour to ignore indentation when completing lines.
I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.