Highlighting arbitrary words in Swift comments should be done from the
user configuration, plus hardcoding the `red` color doesn't play well
with all colorschemes.
this will only highlight elm 0.19 (latest) properly
very close to how https://ellie-app.com/ highlights
- anything that starts with an upper case letter is a type
- anything that starts with a lower case letter is a function
- function declaration is just a function at the start of a line
note: the default color scheme looks too colorful
For clojure.kak and haskell.kak, set extra_word_chars on the buffer
and not the window, so that the buffer's word db is updated correctly
for word completion.
Document this.
Also, minor refactor of clojure.kak.
Closes#3108
When trimming indent, the last line, if only containing
whitespaces does not need to match the indent, so that
this indentation style works:
-docstring %{
indented string
}
Check if buffile is a full path by checking for the beginning
'/' character in editorconfig-load command. This avoids a parsing
error from feeding a *scratch*/*debug*/*grep*/etc. buffer name to the
editorcofig command. Don't clear editorconfig hooks until after checking
for a valid bufffile path. This way, opening the *debug* buffer will
not clear the hooks from a previously parsed .editorconfig file. If
trim_trailing_whitespace is true, print the hook directly from awk. This
removes the need to save a editorcofig_trim_trailing_whitespace option.
Note: Setting the max_line_length requires a window to be created.
Therefore, a global hook to load .editorconfig settings should be:
hook global WinCreate .* %{editorconfig-load}
* Adapt the char literal highlighter from c-family.kak
* Fix line comment adjacent to char literal not being highlighted
* Fix single quote terminating a double quote string
* Fix keywords in comments being highlighted
* Highlight Nim's escape sequences for strings
* Highlight common comment tags
* Add on/off to the highlighted boolean values
* Remove redundant regex highlighter for comments
* Fix autoindent indenting lines more than it should
Before:
```nim
type
MyType = tuple
myint: int # This line needs to be indented manually
```
After:
```nim
type
MyType = tuple
myint: int # Lines after 'tuple' are now indented automatically
```