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 thisd
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.
Changed the indentation behavior such that an extra level of
indentation is added after a line containing a ( or { that is
not closed on the same line instead of aligning to the unclosed
( or {. This is consistent with how `go fmt` formats source code.
Added regression tests.
When indenting on newline in Go files, only remove trailing whitespace
on the previous line and copy indentation of the previous line if in
comment context.
Added regression tests.
Add a separate hook group for inserting ) and } on newline because the
current implementation does not work in 100% of cases and should be
able to be disabled independently of copying comment characters (which
is much easier in comparison to get right) if one does not care about
this feature.
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.
While Wayland offers nothing general to help us support `focus` on all
window managers, WM-specific implementations are generally possible.
Sway is a tiling window manager that mimics i3, and has a reasonably
powerful CLI that can help us achieve this.
In addition to supporting `focus` for Sway, this change paves the way
for additional WM-specific Wayland functionality by adding a detection
step to wayland.kak, in a similar fashion to detection.kak.
Insert mode completions are accepted by typing any key. For example,
if there is a completion "somefunction()", then typing
some<c-n>;
will insert
somefunction();
and then the InsertCompletionHide hook will fire. The hook parameter
is a range that contains the entire thing: the actual completion plus
the trailing semicolon that closed the completion menu.
The [original motivation] for the hook parameter was to support
removing text inserted by completion, so we can apply text edits
or expand snippets instead. One problem is that we don't want to
remove the semicolon. Another problem came up in a discussion
about [snippets]: let's say we have a snippet "add" that expands to
add(?, ?)
where ? are placeholders. After snippet expansion the cursor replaces
the first placeholder. If I type "ad<c-n>1" I expect to get "add(1, ?)".
If the InsertCompletionHide hook only runs after processing the "1"
keystroke, this is not possible without evil hacks.
Fix these problems by running InsertCompletionHide when a completion is
accepted _before_ inserting anything else into the buffer. This should
make it much easier to fully implement [LSP text edits]. I doubt
that anyone besides kak-lsp is using the hook parameter today so this
should be a low-risk fix.
[original motivation]: https://github.com/mawww/kakoune/issues/2898
[snippets]: https://github.com/kak-lsp/kak-lsp/pull/616#discussion_r883208858
[LSP text edits]: https://github.com/kak-lsp/kak-lsp/issues/40
An indent hook automatically adds whitespace, so it seems prudent to
add the hook to remove unwanted whitespace again. This is what we do
in most languages already.
Some languages have a trim-indent command but don't use it (for no
apparent reason). Make them trim trailing spaces when exiting insert
mode, like most other languages support scripts do.
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.