Go 1.18 introduces the `any` and `comparable` predeclared identifiers. Modify
the list of identifiers here, so syntax highlighting will catch these new
identifiers. See https://go.dev/ref/spec#Predeclared_identifiers.
Passing large diff buffers via the environment can quickly result in
the error "execve failed: Argument list too long". Use a pipe like
in format.kak
When running | (or <a-|>), Kakoune does not use %arg{@} to populate
"$@" (missing feature?). Work around this by moving %arg{@} to a
temporary register. Apparently $kak_quoted_reg_a will never be an
empty list, so work around that too.
When diff parsing fails, we take care to run "fail" in the calling
client, unlike :format (probably a bug in format.kak).
(This patch is best viewed while ignoring whitespace changes (diff -w))
Mapping in the filetype hook matches others like grep.kak and man.kak.
Since we map in buffer scope, git diff buffers will override diff-jump
with git-diff-goto-source.
This means that the diff-jump binding applies here:
diff -u "$1" "$2" | kak -e 'set buffer filetype diff'
Reported in: https://github.com/mawww/kakoune/issues/153#issuecomment-1030643854
*.ini files traditionally use ; but for example the "foot" terminal's
foot.ini uses #. Add a hack to treat ini files as "conf" filetype
if they contain a #-comment (very slim chance of false positives).
This requires to explicitly set comment_line to the default #,
because we set the "ini" filetype earlier.
A recent commit wrapped diff.kak into a module. The module includes the
hook that adds diff highlighting to filetype=diff buffers. This means
that the hook is only loaded after opening the first diff buffer in a
Kakoune session, so it only actually fires for the second diff buffer.
Fix this by moving the hook out of the module.
Fixes#4525
This allows to jump from a mail buffer that contains an inline diff
to the source files (most accurate when the patch has been applied
locally).
This makes the diff module a mandatory dependency; we could relax that.
When reading and writing emails that contain patches (possibly
email-quoted), it can be convenient to the jump to the source file.
Allow this by making diff-jump (bound to <ret> in git-diff
buffers) ignore leading email quotes ("> "). A line that starts with
"> " should not occur in a unified diff, so this won't affect other
use cases.
Observe that diff-jump even works around interleaved replies; they
will not affect the computed line numbers because we ignore lines
that don't match ^(> )*[ +-].
git-diff-goto-source is specific to diffs produced by Git. This patch
generalizes the logic and moves it to a new diff-jump in diff.kak.
The main differences are:
- diff-jump handles plain file diffs (i.e. without the -r option). These
have no "diff" line. This means that it needs to parse +++/--- instead.
- diff-jump can go to the old file, not just the new one.
- diff-jump allows to override the base directory and the number of
directory components to strip.
git-diff-goto-source was implemented with several nested try/catch
blocks. Implementing the extra features would have added more
nesting, redundancy or hidden options. To avoid that, I ported the
parsing logic to Perl (which git.kak already depends on). Maybe
it's possible to do the same in awk.
Potential concerns:
- We could move diff-jump to a new rc/tools/diff.kak but then it's not
obvious where the "diff" module belongs to.
- Should diff "diff-jump -1" be spelled "diff-jump -p1"?
In future, the diff parser could be reused to implement a vimdiff-style
feature: given a diff and the "old" line number, we can compute the
corresponding "new" line number. Perhaps diff-jump should get a -client
argument.
We want to move git-diff-goto-source from rc/tools/git.kak
to rc/filetype/diff.kak (or should we could create
rc/tools/diff.kak?). Either way, create the diff module so we can
formalize this dependency.
Currently this module only provides highlighters, so require it
wherever we reference them.
Keep the diff-select-{file,hunk} commands outside the module because
people might already use them in git buffers.