I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
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Previously, if you opened a new line after an underlined heading (what
the CommonMark spec calls a "Setext heading") or inserted a newline into
a line that started with `**strong emphasis**` the Markdown autoindent
hook would assume the leading symbols were list bullets and paste them
at the beginning of the new line.
However, the CommonMark specification says that list bullets must be
followed by at least one horizontal whitespace character, so Setext
heading underlines and strong emphasis are not valid list bullets and
should not be matched by the autoindent pattern.
This commit changes the regex that selects the pastable prefix of the
previous line so that it must match either:
- One or more `>` characters with optional whitespace between them
(a blockquote prefix), optionally followed by a list bullet; or
- An optional blockquote prefix and a list bullet
Since we don't strictly need either the blockquote prefix nor the list
bullet, we could concievably just make both optional... but for lines
without either, the regex would find a zero-length match, and for the
purposes of copy/paste Kakoune treats that as a one-character match.
Therefore, the regex is written to fail if neither pattern is found.
When used just after grepping, grep-next-match ended up jumping to
the second match, as `0g` is the same as `g`.
The fix itself is pretty ugly, a better one might be to distinguish
the `0` count from no count given, so that `0g` could fail with
"no such line" or similar.
Looking up the man page for `index` was failing on systems using
GNU/coreutils. The `:man` command matched whatever page it was given with
the `expr` utility. This tool behaves as expected when it follows strictly
the POSIX standard but the GNU implementation introduces additional commands
(including `index`), about which the standard states:
```
The use of string arguments length, substr, index, or match produces unspecified results.
```
As a result, parsing the man page number is now implemented with pure
shell expansions, to avoid triggering an undefined behavior when the topic
searched is one of the keywords above.
Certain cases, like diffing an empty buffer with a big buffer, were
very slow, now this should get better as we will directly detect the
matching eol at the end of both buffers, end then immediatly detect
we need to add the rest of the big buffer.
We still are too slow on some general diff when there is a lot of
differences.
We can index native arrays negatively, so just setup V1 and V2 to
point in the middle of the work arrays and remove the need for
creating MirroredArray.
Replacing with empty strings is essentially a deletion, which means
it can end up push some selections out of the buffer (imagine 3 a
2 empty line buffer, and deleting the second one). We are fixing
the selections in SelectionList::erase, but we were not doing that
in SelectionList::insert.
Fixes#1504
Due to the way Selection::min/max worked, we were creating backward
selections, with cursor < anchor, which was triggering an assert when
trying to move cursor back one char when it was already on the first
char of the buffer.