It allows plugins to create generic terminal using the user's preferred windowing system
For example, it can be used to run fzf, gdb or simply a shell.
* 'new' commands are refactored to simply use the 'terminal' one
* style and docstrings has been unified
* all windowing systems go through "sh -c" for consistency purposes, even if unnecessary
* ModeChange hooks that remove indent now belong to *-trim-indent groups, instead of just -indent
* *-filter-around-selections hooks and commands have been renamed to trim-indent for clarity
This commit also introduces a regression in that I decided that the best way to
avoid overly long and confusing names was to rename the current shell-*
switches to script-*, and have the shell command completion be
shell-completion.
renamed script-{completion,candidates} to shell-script-*
Updated docs with new switch names
Added -shell-completion switch to x11-repl and kitty-repl
Algol-like indenting doesn't work for Lisp as we tend to open (and
close) many forms on one line. This generally puts the cursor
where it should be, though it is probably confused by strings
with brackets and things.
Use regions to avoid highlighting the commit message as a diff.
The new method will fail if one line of the commit message matches
'^diff --git' but that is fairly unlikely.
Fixes#2371
Previously, one of the syntaxes for italic was (greatly summarized) something
like this:
[^_]_[^_]+_[^_]
That is to say, the regex matched the blanks on both sides of the italic span,
as well as the actual span content. That means that if you had consecutive
italic words:
_some_ _italic_ _words_
...only the odd-numbered words would be highlighted: the space after "_some_"
was counted as part of that span, so it wasn't available as part of "_italic_"
and therefore "_italic_" wouldn't be highlighted. Likewise, if the first word
in a buffer was italic, it wouldn't be highlighted because the first underscore
was not preceded by a non-underscore character!
Now we use lookahead/lookbehind assertions, which don't count as part of the
matched span, so consecutive spans don't interfere with one another.
Fixes#2111.