So far they have only been talked about in source code
(HistoryRegister), not in documentation.
Let's give them an official name so users can find them better;
"prompt history register" seems better than "history register" since
the former gives more context. OTOH, in future other registers (like @)
could grow into history registers, so I'm not sure.
State that the history registers are only changed by _interactive_
prompts; that's not quite true yet for user modes but I'll push a
separate fix for that.
`x` is often criticized as hard to predict due to its slightly complex
behaviour of selecting next line if the current one is fully selected.
Change `x` to use the previous `<a-x>` behaviour, and change `<a-x>` to
trim to fully selected lines as `<a-X>` did.
Adapt existing indentation script to the new behaviour
Cross-reference the "completers" option, and explain how filtering works.
Originally submitted as part of #4418
Helped-by: Tim Allen <screwtape@froup.com>
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)).
For the "completions" option type, the documentation states that |
and \ need to be escaped as \| and \\.
The same parser is for other option types that are lists-of-tuples:
range-specs and line-specs, so they need escaping too. Document that.
Only their last element can contain arbitrary data, so range-specs
and line-specs could work without escaping if we tweaked the parser.
The prologue led some users to believe the implementation was compliant with ECMAScript let alone some differences (who *are* documented at the end of the page).
kak-lsp uses these faces to mark errors inside the buffer, instead of the Error
face which is much more jarring, and which does not have an associated warning
face. Since the :spell command marks errors inside the buffer, it's also updated
to use this new face.
Adding these faces to Kakoune makes it more likely that colorschemes will
automatically do the right thing when used with kak-lsp, and makes it possible
to use a subtle appearance (like curly underlines) for in-buffer errors while
keeping Kakoune errors bold and jarring as they should be.