This commit removes declarations and mentions to the built-in `bold`
and `italic` faces.
While they could be a user-friendly way of customising how tokens
are emphasised in Markdown documents (similarly to the
`$LESS_TERMCAP_*` environment variables for `man` pagers), most other
markup languages do not have the concept of "strong" and "emphasis"
but refer directly to the font style/weight.
The faces were also not even set by default to highlight as their
names implied, so having markup language support scripts directly
use the +b and +i face attributes is more consistent.
Calling `:lint-buffer` when `lintcmd` is empty results in a temporary
directory being created, but never removed when the underlying linting
code errors out.
In Ruby, identifiers can end with a `!` or `?` too, which means that `class!` or `end?`are not actually keywords, but regular identifiers. This fixes that by not using `\b` but `[^0-9A-Za-z_!?]` instead in some places.
Incrementally setting the lint variables triggers multiple refreshes,
including the text jumping as the guttter column is removed and re-
added. This causes the info message to disappear when linting is done
on NormalIdle.
Looks like hyphens and periods are sometimes printed as part of
git-log(1)’s graphing feature; for example, in this repository:
git log --graph 55e7f857
The -i flag on Mac OS means:
჻ man file | grep -i -- -i
-i If the file is a regular file, do not classify its contents.
The --mime-type option is (mostly) portable:
- Linux uses --mime-type
- macOS uses --mime-type
- FreeBSD uses --mime-type
- NetBSD uses --mime-type
- OpenBSD uses --mime-type and does not use the same implementation as everybody else
- Solaris does not support MIME types at all
There might legitimately be "|" characters in the message, so
we want to stop at the first one, the one that delimits the message location
from the message text.
Don't ask Kakoune to quote values we know can never contain shell-sensitive
characters, and flatten the kakquote() function to a single line for ease
of copy/pasting.