This allows to jump from a mail buffer that contains an inline diff
to the source files (most accurate when the patch has been applied
locally).
This makes the diff module a mandatory dependency; we could relax that.
When reading and writing emails that contain patches (possibly
email-quoted), it can be convenient to the jump to the source file.
Allow this by making diff-jump (bound to <ret> in git-diff
buffers) ignore leading email quotes ("> "). A line that starts with
"> " should not occur in a unified diff, so this won't affect other
use cases.
Observe that diff-jump even works around interleaved replies; they
will not affect the computed line numbers because we ignore lines
that don't match ^(> )*[ +-].
git-diff-goto-source is specific to diffs produced by Git. This patch
generalizes the logic and moves it to a new diff-jump in diff.kak.
The main differences are:
- diff-jump handles plain file diffs (i.e. without the -r option). These
have no "diff" line. This means that it needs to parse +++/--- instead.
- diff-jump can go to the old file, not just the new one.
- diff-jump allows to override the base directory and the number of
directory components to strip.
git-diff-goto-source was implemented with several nested try/catch
blocks. Implementing the extra features would have added more
nesting, redundancy or hidden options. To avoid that, I ported the
parsing logic to Perl (which git.kak already depends on). Maybe
it's possible to do the same in awk.
Potential concerns:
- We could move diff-jump to a new rc/tools/diff.kak but then it's not
obvious where the "diff" module belongs to.
- Should diff "diff-jump -1" be spelled "diff-jump -p1"?
In future, the diff parser could be reused to implement a vimdiff-style
feature: given a diff and the "old" line number, we can compute the
corresponding "new" line number. Perhaps diff-jump should get a -client
argument.
We want to move git-diff-goto-source from rc/tools/git.kak
to rc/filetype/diff.kak (or should we could create
rc/tools/diff.kak?). Either way, create the diff module so we can
formalize this dependency.
Currently this module only provides highlighters, so require it
wherever we reference them.
Keep the diff-select-{file,hunk} commands outside the module because
people might already use them in git buffers.
This will unfortunately break some use case which will require
using wrapper scripts to add the necessary newline. It is however
harder to do the contrary, and it makes a lot of other use case
possible, such as checksuming.
Fixes#3669
After a while it seems clear changing this is much more ergonomic
and restoring it with pure config is impractical as we need to map
all lower case keys.
Cross-reference the "completers" option, and explain how filtering works.
Originally submitted as part of #4418
Helped-by: Tim Allen <screwtape@froup.com>
As reported in [1], completions provided by "set global completers
option=my_completion" activate insert mode autocompletion, even when
the autocomplete option does not have the insert mode flag.
This happens because InsertCompleter::on_option_changed() calls
InsertCompleter::setup_ifn(), which shows the completion pager.
Fix this by computing whether the completion pager is enabled;
otherwise we can return early from setup_ifn().
The completion pager is enabled if the autocompletion bit is set,
or if the user has requested explicit completion.
[1]: https://github.com/kak-lsp/kak-lsp/issues/585
When `set` or `se` is found at the start of the modeline, it should stop parsing options after `:`.
When `modeline-parse` is called in the following file, it should _not_ recognize `tabstop=4` and `invalid_option=3`.
```
# kak: set indentwidth=0 tabstop=16: tabstop=4 invalid_option=3
```
More info: http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/options.html#modeline
Now that it is, we get the following error when trying to execute
`test/compose/select-display-columns`
```sh
./enabled: 2: [: 4: unexpected operator
```
This commit fixes the enabled check
Even though the synopsis mentioned `kak -f` accepts filenames, it wasn't clear
to me that Kakoune would filter them in-place by default (I guess I assumed it
would write them to stdout like sed(1)).
In normal mode, the mode line contains "1 sel" or "n sels (k)" when n > 1,
whereas in insert mode, it contains "n sels (k)" even for n == 1. Change
the contents in insert mode to match normal mode.
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.
trim_indent call was incorrect, trim_indent is intended to work
on multi-line strings and trims trailing whitespace as well (could
benefit from a better name).
Fixes#4378