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
Previously, spelling suggestions were presented with the :menu command,
requiring the user to cycle through wild and fanciful alternatives to get to the
one they wanted. Now, we present suggestions with the :prompt command, which
allows the user to type to filter down the list, and also to customise the
replacement after they've chose it (perhaps to fix capitalisation or add
apostrophe-S).
We also use the mispelled word as the initial content of the prompt. That
filters out the wildest alternatives by default, and allows the user to edit the
original word instead of forcing them to choose from among the suggestions. To
get the full list of suggestions, it's easy enough to just backspace until the
word you want appears in the list.
Add support for the following gopls commands:
- format
- imports
- definition
- references
Thanks krobelus@ and lenormf@ for their review and suggestions.
- some wording changes in included documentation
- find supports multiple starting paths, we don't need to launch it 3 times
- Change the regex that trims the file extension to only trim the last extension
Some additional things I noticed:
- find should use -L to see through symlinks like the autoload processing does.
- find should check the user's autoload directory first, so users can override
Kakoune's built-in documentation.
This makes the somewhat-dubious assumption that every plugin will have uniquely-
named documentation files, instead of automatically putting every plugin's docs
into a namespace. However, plugins already have to deal with flat namespaces for
commands, options, filetypes, etc. so one more shouldn't hurt.
Fixes#2466.
This adds two things I forgot in
9a7d8df4 (Avoid accidentally using environment variables in sh scopes)
Mea culpa, the problem was that I was skipping matches with "filetype"
because that's usually just a hook parameter as in "WinSetOption filetype=.."
rg --pcre2 '\b(?!filetype=)\w+=' rc/
So I missed these two cases where a shell variable is actually called "filetype".
The one in git.kak was not a problem because show_git_cmd_output is only
ever called with sane inputs. However, file.kak does use the filetype
environment variable for many mime types, for example:
filetype=somefiletype\''; echo -debug injection; nop '\' kak /dev/null
Will run the echo since /dev/null has mime type "inode/chardevice"
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.
This commit renames `lint-enable` into `lint-show-diagnostics`,
makes it hidden, and calls it automatically after diagnostics have
been recovered by `:lint-cleaned-selections`.
The `lint-disable` command becomes `lint-hide-diagnostics`.
The concept of "enabling" diagnostics was inherited from the Clang
support script, but in that case it's not clear why calling `:lint`
should do the work but not render it (similarly to `:spell`).
The `lint-show` command was also renamed into a more descriptive
`lint-show-current-line`.
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
Calling `:lint-buffer` when `lintcmd` is empty results in a temporary
directory being created, but never removed when the underlying linting
code errors out.
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
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.
Fixes#2302, #3336.
Addresses parts of #3155.
Changes include:
- New `lint-selections` command that only lints the current selections,
and allows a custom lint command.
- New `lint-buffer` command that always lints the whole buffer with
the linter specified in the lintcmd option.
- `lint` alias for `lint-buffer`, for backwards compatibility.
- Errors and warnings are now shown in the Error and Information faces,
not hard-coded red and yellow.
- Error and warning flags now use "!" and "?" symbols respectively,
instead of a unicode block, so they can still be distinguished
in a monochrome colour-scheme or by colour-blind users.
- An error flag on a given line always takes precedence over a warning.
- All messages for the same line are collected into a multi-line message.
- We no longer escape tildes in messages, since that change was added
in commit ae339dc (2016) when we started using `%~~` to quote messages.
We stopped using `%~~` in commit 1a2eecd (2018).
- Anything the linter writes to stderr is logged to the *debug* buffer,
not lost.
- If the linter writes to stderr, an error is shown to the user instead
of the usual error/warning count.
- The `lint_errors` hidden option is replaced by `lint_messages`,
because it contains warnings as well as errors.
- `lint-next-error` renamed to `lint-next-message`,
and `lint-previous-error` renamed to `lint-previous-message`
for the same reason.
- New `lint-next-error` and `lint-previous-error` aliases,
for backwards compatibility.
- `lint-next-message` and `lint-previous-message` show the message
they jump to.
- Where `lint_errors` was a range-specs option, `lint_messages` is a
line-specs option to keep things simpler. This means lint-next-message
and lint-previous-message no longer jump to a specific column.
The first line returned by `aspell` isn't always an identification
string, it can also be an error.
This commit prevents the first line from being ignored in any case,
and allows errors to be reported consistently.
Related to #3330
Adds support for highlighting git-status(1) output in short format
(--short) and with branch name (--branch), including file renames and
commits ahead/behind information.
Using `{\}` in an Awk script results in the following error being printed:
```
awk: cmd. line:18: warning: escape sequence `\}' treated as plain `}'
```
This commit adds a `spell_lang` option that will be used by the
`spell` command when no language is passed to it directly.
Setting a buffer/window local option allows using `:spell` seamlessly
across several buffers, written in different languages.
-verbatim will disable argument parsing in evaluate-commands, making
it possible to forward a single command to a different context without
triggering a reparsing of the arguments.
Fixes -try-client support in grep.kak
Closes#3153
When trimming indent, the last line, if only containing
whitespaces does not need to match the indent, so that
this indentation style works:
-docstring %{
indented string
}
Due to ambiguity in the POSIX standard, GNU and BSD versions of the `wc`
utility use slightly different whitespace conventions when formatting
their output [1]. When limiting the output to just counting the number
of bytes (as is done by Kakoune when calculating the length of words
for spell check highlighting), the BSD version of `wc -c` has some
additional leading whitespace:
gnu$ printf %s "test" | wc -c
4
bsd$ printf %s "test" | wc -c
4
This leading whitespace needs to be removed before defining the "region"
to highlight, or `set-option` will not be able to parse the given
`spell_regions` and will complain that there are "not enough elements
in tuple." In other words, the region `1.21+8|Error` on Linux ends up
looking like `1.21+ 8|Error` on macOS, which is invalid.
Removing the whitespace could be accomplished in a number of ways, but
using arithmetic expansion [2] is POSIX compliant and does not require
shelling out to another process.
[1]: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/205906/extra-space-with-counted-line-number
[2]: https://mywiki.wooledge.org/ArithmeticExpression
Fixup ctags-complete command to search for partial matches for the
current selection in all tags files listed in ctagsfiles option. Format
the results to fit the Kakoune completions type.
Add ctags-enable-autocomplete and ctags-disable-autocomplete commands to
add and remove an InsertIdle hook to select the previous word and call
ctags-complete.
Use the ctags_min_chars option to limit the noise of returning many
completions for very short selections.
Change regular expression in git blame, removing braces. New expression is supported on various awk engines used in some distributions as default ones. As trade-off, the new expression accepts more input character sequences.
adding init to git.kak
removing git init EOF line
git ls-files on on git.kak
no candidates for git-init, removed function
removed candidates for git-init