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.
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.
Unfortunately this breaks some pretty useful use cases, such as inserting a
command ending with a new-line (as it now leads to an addtional command being
auto-completed on validation)
This reverts commit aab0be529f.
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.
This commit prevents the lines following the one that holds the bullet
from being highlighted with the `bullet` face when they're indented:
- The bullet is highlighted properly, so is this sentence
but this line the ones that would follow are not
Fixes#3582
* fix multilines for declarations
* fix names with `-`, which Ninja allows
* fix few cases of `=` operators
* fix reserved keywords in `command = …` right-hand side
Co-authored-by: Frank LENORMAND <1379068+lenormf@users.noreply.github.com>
When pasting many words with <a-p> we can end-up with a huge
concatenated word and many selections, the previous code ended
up iterating from each selection cursor to that word start and
end to find the word under the cursor.
This could lead to performance issue as each selection would
trigger iteration on that huge word. This is unnecessary as
word completion has a word length limit, so we now take it into
account to avoid iterating to far from the cursor position.