Previously we would just bypass that hook making it impossible to
act on the inserted text when triggering an explicit completion after
inserting text from the previous completer.
This one has been a long time coming, I am still concerned this could
impact performance a lot. This hook does *not* trigger for capture
registers (0-9) or any other dynamic registers (that are not writable).
Fixes#859
ncurses_ui.cc:759:59: error: non-constant-expression cannot be narrowed from type 'unsigned int' to 'Key::MouseButton' in initializer list [-Wc++11-narrowing]
return mouse_button(mod, Key::MouseButton{code}, coord, c == 'm');
^~~~
Only include the value for int/str/bool options, for the rest just
write '<option name>=...'.
This should reduce the cost of some patterns such as repeatedly adding
a value inside a list option.
It seems very unlikely that the actual value would be matched by
a hook regex string for non primitive types.
Similarly to the <semicolon> key, make it easier to write
`:execute-keys` commands by replacing <percent> with `%`.
Highlighters can keep escaping the sign when regular expressions are
not quoted, but built-in scripts that use `%` as an editing primitive
have been modified to use the named key, for clarity.
Ranges specified with a +<length> were inconsistent, with +0 meaning
an empty range, while +1 meant a two character long range (first character
+ the following one). Change that to mean a single character.
Fixes#3479
Fixes#3489
When there are multiple empty lines between a paragraph and the cursor
(C in the example below), <a-[>p skips over one of them. Prevent the
check for the extra newline from going out of bounds.
```
a paragraph
C after <a-[>p, the first two lines will be selected
```
A command line argument like +line[:column] can be used to specify a
target line and column for the first file.
This did not work when connecting to a session, because the client
opens its file parameter with `-e "edit file1; edit file2"` which is
executed after the initial buffer position is set. Work around this by
passing the position to the first file and avoid moving the cursor
in unrelated files.
Reproduce:
kak -s foo
kak -c foo +4:11 README.asciidoc