Makes all the suggestions on the completion menu have the same format:
{type}{suggestedWord}{extra description}
the type column is aligned to 6 characters wide (and aligned to the right),
to allow the suggestion to be easily visually detectable and, as a bonus,
the type too.
For example, a bit of menu would look like this:
fn stdout() -> Stdout
trait BufRead: Read
struct BufReader<R>
Type is one of the following:
- fn
- enum
- mod
- trait
- struct
It also trims the module extra bits to only 30 characters long (it can be a lot longer than that)
When AWK processes the racer response, it adds a trailing ':' that
kakoune completion expects to lead to a row having an 'a|b|c' shape,
but it's empty instead. Removing the extra ':' allows the racer
complation to actually work.
There does not seem to be any reasonable use cases of not collapsing
jumps when the input is not comming from the user. Always collapse
them.
It could make sense to move jump collapsing out of context_wrap as
in general any action not comming directly from the user should
collapse them, at the moment a comment or mapping will not collapse
jumps, which is unfortunate.
The use of `%{...%reg{...}}` was not being expanded correctly, as
the enclosing %{...} prevents the internal %expand{...} from being
considered.
The introduction of an additional command allows us to bypass
quoting hell as the expansion of %reg{5} could contain arbitrary
text.
With the introduction of -match-capture for the lua region highlighter,
the string closing regex had spurious captures that were not going to
match.
Fixes#1850
This commit avoids false positives when highlighting literals such as
`$window`, which is a regular variable but still highlighted as a
special value.
Special highlighting of variables that start with a dollar sign `$`
was also removed, as not all variables start with a dollar sign,
and we don't have a reliable way yet to detect variables.
unsetting static_words whenever any buffer filetype is set to non ocaml
is wrong, it breaks static_words for every filetype whose filetype hook
run before the ocaml ones.
Block comments in Lua were broken, apparently due to the opening
sequence being interpreted as a line comment. Changing the order in the
highlighter seems to fix this issue.
Fixes#1735
We need \K to not interfer with languages own interpretation of ` like multiline strings in javascript
We need \b in e.g. java\b otherwise it blocks javascript
I couldn't get the bare ``` to not block the other highlighters when introducing \K any other way than negative lookahead of all possible highlighers
Commit 870d2d22d7 introduced a regression
in the highlighting of qualified Haskell variables, such as `Foo.bar`.
After that commit `Fo` was highlighted as a constructor (note, not
`Foo`, just `Fo` without the trailing `o`). This restores the original
behavior.
- Ensure ranger opens with the currently focused client tty if multiple screen clients are connected to the same session.
- Ensure args are passed to ranger correctly.
- Ensure command-line args are passed to ranger correctly. (Only strict long format works e.g. `ranger --cmd="echo foo"`)
- Change the current directory because `screen -X` uses screen's cwd not kakoune's.
- Use heredoc to make escaping and quoting easier to debug and slightly less unpredictable.
- Use ranger's `--choosefiles` option instead of mapping keys and having to do multiple levels of escaping and quoting of args esp. command-line args which were unusable in `screen -X eval`.
- Remove screen region when user quits ranger.
- The proper way to do this would be to switch focus to the target client's region but GNU Screen offers no obvious way to do that.
- Remove screen region after client is closed.
- Assumed: Kak server runs in screen.
- Hack: kak sets `/proc/self/fd/0 -> /dev/null`. Get the client process tty because Screen needs to know the controlling terminal. Else Screen will use the last known tty and will open new windows on a different terminal if one is connected.
As well as ordinary `//` line-comments, Rust regards `///` comments
as documentation applying to the following item, and `//!` comments as
documentation applying to the enclosing item, so we should copy those
to new lines, too.
* move most of the kakoune implementation outside of the shell scope
to avoid unnecessary escaping
* let kakoune do the option expansions to avoid injection of special
characters
* split block commenting options into two and do the < to <lt>
conversion directly
* show error messages directly in the buffer rather than in *debug*
Fixes#1600 and #875
That means we can now have highlighters active at global, buffer, and
window scope. The add-highlighter and remove-highlighter syntax changed
to take the parent path (scope/group/...) as a mandatory argument,
superseeding the previous -group switch.
boost regex tolerates non-escaped special characters, and escaped
non-special characters. Standardize on stricter syntax, where
special characters must be escaped, and non-special characters must
not.
this uses 'export' to set $TMPDIR instead; fish provides an 'export'
function for bash-compatibility, so this should work for both shells.
note that prior to this change, opening new panes with fish did not
work, as fish does not support `FOO=1 bar` syntax.
- the file was edited with a different editor/program or
- kak didn't restore a backup or
- if old backups weren't purged or
- if autorestore wasn't loaded (e.g. `kak -n`) after backups were generated.
Sometimes the implementation of `man` will display errors, e.g.
```
<standard input>:4808: warning [p 54, 13.2i]: can't break line
```
Those errors are harmless but are still reported on the debug buffer,
so we hide them by redirecting the standard error stream to /dev/null.
When using the `man` filetype to make use of the text highlighters
of the `man.kak` script, the documentation pages inherit from the
window resizing hooks that won't work on `doc` buffers.
Fixes#1591
Highlighting perl regex patterns with regular expressions (with
highlighters) caused several misses that made most of the file
unreadable. This commit makes `perl.kak` not try to highlight
those patterns in the code, and also addresses issues with string
highlighting.
Import keywords are put in keyword face instead of meta face.
This leaves room for pragmas and macros to be in the meta face.
Operator keywords are put in keyword face too.
Finally, expression keywords are put in face attribute.
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.
The previous implementation used to replace the contents of the buffer with
whatever the `formatcmd` was returning, regardless of the exit code of the
command, which led to the buffer being wiped out on error.
This commit does the formatting in a temporary file, and only replaces the
current buffer with the contents of the -formatted- temporary file if the
`formatcmd` returned successfully.
Fixes#1357
this uses the string opening regex from the c-family highlighter to prevent
highlighting the rest of the file as a string on encountering the character
literal '"'