| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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We already have an extensive suite of static analysis tools we use,
which causes a fair bit of redundancy as we get duplicate warnings. PVS
is also prone to give false warnings which creates a lot of work to
identify and disable.
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Co-authored-by: tmummert <doczook@gmx.de>
Co-authored-by: parikshit adhikari <parikshitadhikari@gmail.com>
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Fix #22670
Fix #8659
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Fixes #22526
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Some more reasonable defaults for topline:
- if topline was replaced with another line, that now becomes topline
- if line was inserted just before topline, display it. This is more
similar to the previous API behavior.
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The change in #24824 0081549 was not a regression, however it was an
incomplete change. Unfortunately some common plugins come to depend on
this exising self-inconsistent behavior. These plugins are going to need
to update for 0.10
nvim_buf_set_lines used to NOT adjust the topline correctly if a buffer
was displayed in just one window. However, if displayed in multiple
windows, it was correctly adjusted for any window not deemed the
current window for the buffer (which could be an arbitrary choice if the
buffer was not already current, as noted in the last rafactor)
This fixes so that all windows have their topline adjusted. The added
tests show this behavior, which should be the reasonable one.
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Most of the messy things when changing a non-current buffer is
not about the buffer, it is about windows. In particular, it is about
`curwin`.
When editing a non-current buffer which is displayed in some other
window in the current tabpage, one such window will be "borrowed" as the
curwin. But this means if two or more non-current windows displayed the buffers,
one of them will be treated differenty. this is not desirable.
In particular, with nvim_buf_set_text, cursor _column_ position was only
corrected for one single window. Two new tests are added: the test
with just one non-current window passes, but the one with two didn't.
Two corresponding such tests were also added for nvim_buf_set_lines.
This already worked correctly on master, but make sure this is
well-tested for future refactors.
Also, nvim_create_buf no longer invokes autocmds just because you happened
to use `scratch=true`. No option value was changed, therefore OptionSet
must not be fired.
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ml_get_buf() takes a third parameters to indicate whether the
caller wants to mutate the memline data in place. However
the vast majority of the call sites is using this function
just to specify a buffer but without any mutation. This makes
it harder to grep for the places which actually perform mutation.
Solution: Remove the bool param from ml_get_buf(). it now works
like ml_get() except for a non-current buffer. Add a new
ml_get_buf_mut() function for the mutating use-case, which can
be grepped along with the other ml_replace() etc functions which
can modify the memline.
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It uses the same code as "scroll_delta" of "win_viewport" UI event to
calculate text height, but is more flexible.
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Problem: nvim_buf_set_text(), nvim_open_term() and termopen() all change buffer
text, which is forbidden during textlock. Additionally, nvim_open_term() and
termopen() may be used to convert the cmdwin buffer into a terminal buffer,
which is weird.
Solution: Allow nvim_buf_set_text() and nvim_open_term() in the cmdwin, but
disallow nvim_open_term() from converting the cmdwin buffer into a terminal
buffer. termopen() is not allowed in the cmdwin (as it always operates on
curbuf), so just check text_locked().
Also happens to improve the error in #21055: nvim_buf_set_text() was callable
during textlock, but happened to check textlock indirectly via u_save();
however, this caused the error to be overwritten by an unhelpful "Failed to
save undo information" message when msg_list == NULL (e.g: an `<expr>` mapping
invoked outside of do_cmdline()).
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Problem: some API functions that check textlock (usually those that can change
curwin or curbuf) can break the cmdwin.
Solution: make FUNC_API_CHECK_TEXTLOCK call text_locked() instead, which already
checks for textlock, cmdwin and `<expr>` status.
Add FUNC_API_TEXTLOCK_ALLOW_CMDWIN to allow such functions to be usable in the
cmdwin if they can work properly there; the opt-in nature of this attribute
should hopefully help mitigate future bugs.
Also fix a regression in #22634 that made functions checking textlock usable in
`<expr>` mappings, and rename FUNC_API_CHECK_TEXTLOCK to FUNC_API_TEXTLOCK.
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Problem: vimdoc parser requires space between column heading and `~`.
Solution: Add space to docs (and mention it). Also edit `luaref.txt`
headings for consistency.
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Enforce consistent terminology (defined in
`gen_help_html.lua:spell_dict`) for common misspellings.
This does not spellcheck English in general (perhaps a future TODO,
though it may be noisy).
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Adds new API helper macros `CSTR_AS_OBJ()`, `STATIC_CSTR_AS_OBJ()`, and `STATIC_CSTR_TO_OBJ()`, which cleans up a lot of the current code. These macros will also be used extensively in the upcoming option refactor PRs because then API Objects will be used to get/set options. This PR also modifies pre-existing code to use old API helper macros like `CSTR_TO_OBJ()` to make them cleaner.
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redraw! redraws the entire screen instead of just the windows with
the buffer which were actually changed.
I considered trying to calculating the range for the delta
but it looks tricky. Could a follow-up.
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Problem:
Validation messages are not consistently formatted.
- Parameter names sometimes are NOT quoted.
- Descriptive names (non-parameters) sometimes ARE quoted.
Solution:
Always quote the `name` value passed to a VALIDATE macro _unless_ the
value has whitespace.
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- VALIDATE() takes a format string
- deduplicate check_string_array
- VALIDATE_RANGE
- validate UI args
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Problem:
- API validation involves too much boilerplate.
- API validation errors are not consistently worded.
Solution:
Introduce some macros. Currently these are clumsy, but they at least
help with consistency and avoid some nesting.
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Allow Include What You Use to remove unnecessary includes and only
include what is necessary. This helps with reducing compilation times
and makes it easier to visualise which dependencies are actually
required.
Work on https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/549, but doesn't close
it since this only works fully for .c files and not headers.
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Lua makes (or reuses) an internal copy of strings, so we can safely push
buf pointers onto the stack.
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- increase python line-length limit from 88 => 100.
- gen_help_html: fix bug in "tag" case (tbl_count => tbl_contains)
ref #15632
fix #18215
fix #18479
fix #20527
fix #20532
Co-authored-by: Ben Weedon <ben@weedon.email>
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Work on https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/459
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This introduces the following breaking changes:
- nvim_get_keymap now always returns a LuaRef object as "callback" for a
Lua mapping regardless of how it is called. The LuaRef object can be
called from Lua and Vim script, but is lost over RPC.
- maparg() now returns a Funcref instead of a ref number as "callback"
for a Lua mapping. The Funcref can be called from Lua and Vim script,
but is lost over RPC.
This may also make nvim_get_keymap faster, but make maparg() slower.
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Work on https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/459
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Problem: The screen.c file is much too big.
Solution: Split it in three parts. (Yegappan Lakshmanan, closes vim/vim#4943)
https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/7528d1f6b5422750eb778dfb550cfd0b0e540964
This is an approximation vim-patch 8.1.2057. Applying the patch directly
isn't feasible since our version of screen.c has diverged too much,
however we still introduce drawscreen.c and drawline.c:
- screen.c is now a much smaller file used for low level screen functions
- drawline.c contains everything needed for win_line()
- drawscreen.c contains everything needed for update_screen()
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
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Replace grid.h in screen.h and screen.h in buffer.h with grid_defs.h
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The line returned but ml_get_buf() may be freed by another call to
ml_get_buf(), so it is necessary to make a copy.
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use the MAXSIZE_TEMP_ARRAY + ADD_C pattern instead, as exemplified
by the changes in this commit.
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** Refactor
Previously most functions used to "get" a mark returned a position,
changed the line number and sometimes changed even the current buffer.
Now functions return a {x}fmark_T making calling context aware whether
the mark is in another buffer without arcane casting. A new function is
provided for switching to the mark buffer and returning a flag style
Enum to convey what happen in the movement. If the cursor changed, line,
columns, if it changed buffer, etc.
The function to get named mark was split into multiple functions.
- mark_get() -> fmark_T
- mark_get_global() -> xfmark_T
- mark_get_local() -> fmark_T
- mark_get_motion() -> fmark_T
- mark_get_visual() -> fmark_T
Functions that manage the changelist and jumplist were also modified to
return mark types.
- get_jumplist -> fmark_T
- get_changelist -> fmark_T
The refactor is also seen mainly on normal.c, where all the mark
movement has been siphoned through one function nv_gomark, while the
other functions handle getting the mark and setting their movement
flags. To handle whether context marks should be left, etc.
** Mark View
While doing the refactor the concept of a mark view was also
implemented:
The view of a mark currently implemented as the number of lines between
the mark position on creation and the window topline. This allows for
moving not only back to the position of a mark but having the window
look similar to when the mark was defined. This is done by carrying and
extra element in the fmark_T struct, which can be extended later to also
restore horizontal shift.
*** User space features
1. There's a new option, jumpoptions+=view enables the mark view restoring
automatically when using the jumplist, changelist, alternate-file and
mark motions. <C-O> <C-I> g; g, <C-^> '[mark] `[mark]
** Limitations
- The view information is not saved in shada.
- Calls to get_mark should copy the value in the pointer since we are
using pos_to_mark() to wrap and provide a homogeneous interfaces. This
was also a limitation in the previous state of things.
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This marks the following Vim patches as ported:
vim-patch:8.1.1785: map functionality mixed with character input
Problem: Map functionality mixed with character input.
Solution: Move the map functionality to a separate file. (Yegappan
Lakshmanan, closes vim/vim#4740) Graduate the +localmap feature.
https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/b66bab381c8ba71fd6e92327d1d34c6f8a65f2a7
vim-patch:8.2.3643: header for source file is outdated
Problem: Header for source file is outdated.
Solution: Make the header more accurate. (closes vim/vim#9186)
https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/a3f83feb63eae5464a620ae793c002eb45f7a838
Also cherry-pick a change for <unique> mappings from patch 8.2.0807.
Rename map_clear_mode() to do_mapclear().
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