This highlighter (line 50 of markdown.kak) looks for the filetype
specified by the author at the top of the code fence, e.g.
``` python
print("hello")
```
and highlights the code within using Kakoune's relevant highlighter --
in this case Python.
Some flavours of markdown use curly braces and other characters in the
first line such as the following:
``` {=python}
print("hello")
```
Previously Kakoune recognised `{=python}` but not `{.python}`. The latter
is Pandoc's flavour of markdown. This patch adjusts the regex patterns
to recognise the dot notation as well.
When $1 or ${kak_selection} start with dash, like "-1", the command will fail, because tmux think it's an argument flag.
-- prevent this.
Also the doc (append new line) is no longer valid.
Other scripts uses a dot `.` to separate the seed from the rest of
the template, making that standard across the codebase allows running
cleanup commands like `rm -rf /tmp/kak-*.*`.
This commit is an attempt at mitigating stray processes and temporary
directories, which pile up in the process tree and `$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.
This commit prevents the lines following the one that holds the bullet
from being highlighted with the `bullet` face when they're indented:
- The bullet is highlighted properly, so is this sentence
but this line the ones that would follow are not
Fixes#3582
* fix multilines for declarations
* fix names with `-`, which Ninja allows
* fix few cases of `=` operators
* fix reserved keywords in `command = …` right-hand side
Co-authored-by: Frank LENORMAND <1379068+lenormf@users.noreply.github.com>
Now it uses the window id to identify the REPL window. It is stored in
the option x11_repl_id. That way it is possible to have different REPLs
for different buffers or windows.
Fixes issue #2377 by removing the ability to escape backticks in backticks in compliance with asciidoc's behaviour. Adjusted hooks.asciidoc, keys.asciidoc, and command-parsing.asciidoc to match accordingly.
`-atomic` becomes `-method replace` and `-method overwrite` is now
supported explicitely instead of only available through the
writemethod option.
Fixes#3827
This commit allows code blocks to be prefixed with tabulation
characters to be picked up and highlighted by the editor.
Indenting caused by the inclusion of an inline code block into a
list item is also taken into account. However, that might cause false
positives, for example with a hard wrapped list item indented with
an amount of spaces congruent to 4.
Git includes them in commit messages and notes, which is sometimes useful
when adding shell script snippets:
# this is included in the commit message!
Also, in rebase buffers, # only marks a comment if it is the first nonblank
character in a line.