Cirrus CI switched macOS machines to M1 where "brew install gcc@10"
fails due to architecture mismatch. I'm not sure if it's possible
to install gcc 10 natively for ARM. Let's work around this by
installing the x86_64 compatibility layer. Apparently we need
to install a x86_64 Homebrew to install x86_64 packages.
This fixes the CI failure where clang could not find <compare>.
Removing the include would not be enough, there are some other
failures.
Debian Stable ships Clang 11 so this seems accessible enough.
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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.
If, for example, the buffer path now is a directory, MappedFile will
throw on construction. Using a try block to explicitely allow errors
fixes the issue.
Instead of potentially decoding for each thread, always decode as
its only slightly slower than finding next codepoint (which will
be necessary anyway) and pass the codepoint to each thread.
The command line "hook -group xyz " should get scope completions but
it actually gets hook completions because "xyz" is wrongly interpreted
as positional argument.
Fix this by using the parameters parser to compute positional
arguments.
Fixes#4840
Some plugins (*cough* kak-lsp) and help texts tend to have immensely long content
in a single line. This generates info boxes that span the entire terminal width.
This is made especially worse on widescreen monitors or at small text size.
This grants user control over how wide these boxes are.
I deliberately avoid pushing this change to `kak-lsp` because it's not the only
plugin that this could help--see the `hook` help text for an example of this
problem in vanilla Kakoune. I would also suggest that since this is a rendering
concern, it be handled by the terminal rendering logic.
We only grow when the ring buffer is full, which allows for a nice
simplification of the code.
Tell grow_ifn if we pushed in current or next so that we can
distinguish between filled by next or filled by current when
m_current == m_next_begin
Instead of two stacks growing from the two ends of a buffer, use
a ring buffer growing from the same mid spot.
This avoids the costly memory copy every step when we set next
threads as the current ones.
Erasing fully trimmed display atoms one by one means we have to
shift all the remaining ones every time. This is wasteful and we
can just erase all the fully trimmed atom in one go.
Fixes#4797
Previously it would result in a stray single-character selection at the
beginning of the input text.
For example:
[abcabc] -> split on 'a' -> [a][bc]a[bc]
or
[foobarfoobar] -> split on 'foo' -> [f]oo[bar]foo[bar]
Note that this behavior was not occuring if the input text was at the
beginning of the buffer