adds the ability to press <ret> within a hunk and navigate to the original
source code. This can be useful because one often needs to go back and forth
between the diff and the full source code.
- You can press <ret> anywhere _within_ a hunk i.e. lines that start with
` `, `+`, `-`. You will be taken to the exact line in the source that corresponds
to where you pressed <ret> in the hunk. It actually does not make sense
to press <ret> on a `-` line because that does not exist anymore but
in that case you are taken to a nearby line in the hope this is still useful.
- You can also press <ret> on a range line (lines that
look like @@ ... @@). If you press <ret> on anywhere on a range line e.g.
```
@@ -120,3 +123,4 @@ fn some_function {
```
The code will try to navigate to the section heading "fn some_function {"
Note that the section heading is _not_ necessarily located at the
range line (in the above example the range line is 123).
- You can press <ret> on a +++ line also and you will be taken the first
line of the file
Caveats:
- Navigation to the original source file will be accurate only if any edits to
the original source file have been saved to disk, because otherwise
they will not be detected by the `:git diff` or `:git show` commands
- This feature should work well for most typical uses e.g. `:git diff`, `:git diff HEAD^`
`:git diff <some-sha1>`. In fact this feature should work in all scenarios when
the *current files* on disk are being compared _with_ some arbitrary git revision/staging.
It will be less useful in other scenarios when two arbitrary revisions are being
compared to each other or when you are trying to compare staging to some revision.
For example when you invoke `:git diff --staged` you are trying to compare staging
with HEAD but are navigating to what is currently on disk (which may be different
from staging).
Co-authored-by: Johannes Altmanninger <aclopte@gmail.com>
As per man page eval(1p):
> The eval utility shall construct a command by concatenating arguments together,
> separating each with a `<space>` character. The constructed command shall be
> read and executed by the shell.
When not quoting `$kak_opt_makecmd` in the eval, the variable is split by
newlines and spaces and then joined by spaces to form the command. If there
were newlines in `$kak_opt_makecmd`, the command would be malformed.
To reproduce:
```kak
set-option global makecmd "
echo foo
echo bar"
make a b c
```
Expected output in the `*make*` buffer:
```
foo
bar a b c
```
Actual output:
```
foo echo bar a b c
```
This patch fixes this.
OCaml does not have line comments, and as far as I can tell neither
does Coq. Setting it to '' (like markdown and html do) throws an error
that can be handled or displayed instead of inserting the default '#'.
kak-lsp uses these faces to mark errors inside the buffer, instead of the Error
face which is much more jarring, and which does not have an associated warning
face. Since the :spell command marks errors inside the buffer, it's also updated
to use this new face.
Adding these faces to Kakoune makes it more likely that colorschemes will
automatically do the right thing when used with kak-lsp, and makes it possible
to use a subtle appearance (like curly underlines) for in-buffer errors while
keeping Kakoune errors bold and jarring as they should be.
If the session wasn't valid anymore by the time the linter finishes,
writing to "$dir"/fifo would hang forever leaving temporary files in
/tmp/kak-lint.XXX and the process alive. This commit fixes that by
not writing to the fifo if the session was not valid.
throwawayaccount12345-1 Copyright Waiver
I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.
The off-by-one was introduced by cd9b1e66 which changed `column-1` to `column`.
The refactoring solves some esoteric quoting errors: I think cases like
unbalanced braces in the bufname and client were not supported.
This commit removes the default prompt value from the `spell-replace`
command.
Currently, running the command after selecting a misspelled word
might not allow the editor to propose alternative spellings because
it completes upon whatever is inserted into the prompt. If the words
returned by `aspell` are too different from the currently misspelled
word, no candidates are shown.
For example, selecting “unanymously” and running `:spell-replace`
will not show any candidates under the current implementation (the
‘y’ probably trips the fuzzy-matcher).
The user develops a habit of clearing the prompt every time, because
that's the only way to make sure all suggestions from `aspell` are
visible, so the editor might as well not have any default value for
`:spell-replace`.
Other scripts uses a dot `.` to separate the seed from the rest of
the template, making that standard across the codebase allows running
cleanup commands like `rm -rf /tmp/kak-*.*`.
This commit is an attempt at mitigating stray processes and temporary
directories, which pile up in the process tree and `$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.
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
Remove unnecessary single quotes and whitespaces in %file{}
Do not delete error file before sending to debug buffer
Fix gopls definition error handling and empty sting check
Silence shellcheck warnings