Make sure decorators are on their own line, and don't stop highlighting at
the first dot when they are imported, e.g.
```
import enum
@enum.unique
class A(enum.Enum):
…
```
Ideally highlighting shouldn't stop at the first parenthesis either
(e.g. `@foo(['1'])`), but the current code somewhat highlights the contents
of the parens already, which is good enough in most cases.
This attempts to support a simple formatting and intentation style for
plain sh syntax (and other sh-compatible code which doesn't stray too
far from portable sh).
The complexity of sh syntax means that we have to be opinionated -
attempting to be more flexible would require extensive context
awareness, and would require something more akin to a proper
autoformatting tool or a language server.
The formatting style used here makes use of vertical whitespace as the
primary delimiter, so that code ends up looking like this:
if [ $foo = "bar" ]; then
thing1
else
thing2
fi
for i in foo bar baz; do
thing1
thing2
done
case "$foo" in
bar) thing1;;
baz)
thing1
thing2
;;
esac
Since the formatting style used is very opinionated the 'sh_auto_indent'
option can be used to disable auto-indentation, with the default set to
'no'.
Due to ambiguity in the POSIX standard, GNU and BSD versions of the `wc`
utility use slightly different whitespace conventions when formatting
their output [1]. When limiting the output to just counting the number
of bytes (as is done by Kakoune when calculating the length of words
for spell check highlighting), the BSD version of `wc -c` has some
additional leading whitespace:
gnu$ printf %s "test" | wc -c
4
bsd$ printf %s "test" | wc -c
4
This leading whitespace needs to be removed before defining the "region"
to highlight, or `set-option` will not be able to parse the given
`spell_regions` and will complain that there are "not enough elements
in tuple." In other words, the region `1.21+8|Error` on Linux ends up
looking like `1.21+ 8|Error` on macOS, which is invalid.
Removing the whitespace could be accomplished in a number of ways, but
using arithmetic expansion [2] is POSIX compliant and does not require
shelling out to another process.
[1]: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/205906/extra-space-with-counted-line-number
[2]: https://mywiki.wooledge.org/ArithmeticExpression
Fixup ctags-complete command to search for partial matches for the
current selection in all tags files listed in ctagsfiles option. Format
the results to fit the Kakoune completions type.
Add ctags-enable-autocomplete and ctags-disable-autocomplete commands to
add and remove an InsertIdle hook to select the previous word and call
ctags-complete.
Use the ctags_min_chars option to limit the noise of returning many
completions for very short selections.
Indentation can be different depending on the first word of list forms. The
indent hook uses `e` from inside the parent to select the first word for
testing whether it is a special word; however, in the case of a one-character
symbol, this selects to the end of the *next* word.
This rejects such selections.
Change regular expression in git blame, removing braces. New expression is supported on various awk engines used in some distributions as default ones. As trade-off, the new expression accepts more input character sequences.
adding init to git.kak
removing git init EOF line
git ls-files on on git.kak
no candidates for git-init, removed function
removed candidates for git-init
1. Add commands to navigate between man page links.
2. Add command to jump to a man page by following a man page link.
3. Add key map for <ret> to jump command.
4. Add key maps for a suggested user mode.
1. If there is no man page found (error 16), then echo stderr text.
2. For other kinds of errors, fail with stderr text so that command can propagate through a try/catch.