This includes a partial port of Vim patch 8.2.2569 and some changes to
nvim_eval_statusline() to allow a multibyte fillchar. Literally every
line of C code touched by that patch has been refactored in Nvim, and
that patch contains some irrelevant foldcolumn tests I'm not sure how to
port (as Nvim's foldcolumn behavior has diverged from Vim's).
Problem: Printf() with %S does not handle multi-byte correctly.
Solution: Count cells instead of bytes. (closesvim/vim#9169, closesvim/vim#7486)
d85fccdfed
Closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/13647
This allows customizing the priority of the highlights.
* Add default priority of 50
* Use priority of 200 for highlight on yank
* use priority of 40 for highlight references (LSP)
marktree.c was originally constructed as a "generic" datatype,
to make the prototyping of its internal logic as simple as possible
and also as the usecases for various kinds of extmarks/decorations was not yet decided.
As a consequence of this, various extra indirections and allocations was
needed to use marktree to implement extmarks (ns/id pairs) and
decorations of different kinds (some which is just a single highlight
id, other an allocated list of virtual text/lines)
This change removes a lot of indirection, by making Marktree specialized
for the usecase. In particular, the namespace id and mark id is stored
directly, instead of the 64-bit global id particular to the Marktree
struct. This removes the two maps needed to convert between global and
per-ns ids.
Also, "small" decorations are stored inline, i.e. those who
doesn't refer to external heap memory anyway. That is highlights (with
priority+flags) are stored inline, while virtual text, which anyway
occurs a lot of heap allocations, do not. (previously a hack was used
to elide heap allocations for highlights with standard prio+flags)
TODO(bfredl): the functionaltest-lua CI version of gcc is having
severe issues with uint16_t bitfields, so splitting up compound
assignments and redundant casts are needed. Clean this up once we switch
to a working compiler version.
Problem: 'virtualedit' can only be set globally.
Solution: Make 'virtualedit' global-local. (Gary Johnson, closesvim/vim#8638)
53ba05b090
I changed some macros to unsigned integer literals to avoid compiler warnings.
This gives quickfix/location lists created by handlers which use
'response_to_list' (textDocument/documentSymbols and workspace/symbol by
default) the ability to set a more useful list title. This commit gives
lists created for documentSymbols a title of the form:
Symbols in <filename>
and lists for workspace/symbol a title of the form:
Symbols matching '<query>'
These are more informative than a standard "Language Server" list title
and can help disambiguate results when users have multiple quickfix
lists that they cycle through with `:colder` and `:cnewer`.
Problem: No suffucient testing for registers.
Solution: Add more test cases. (Yegappan Lakshmanan, closesvim/vim#5296)
Fix that "p" on last virtual column of tab inserts spaces.
6f1f0ca3ed
This patch doesn't actually change any behavior in Nvim, because Nvim
always has vartabs feature.
I modified a line in the test because of #6137.
This removes the "fallback" to utf-16 in many of our helper functions. We
should always explicitly pass these around when possible except in two
locations:
* generating params with help utilities called by buf.lua functions
* the buf.lua functions themselves
Anything that is called by the handler should be passed the offset encoding.
omnisharp-roslyn can send negative values:
{
activeParameter = 0,
activeSignature = -1,
signatures = { {
documentation = "",
label = "TestEntity.TestEntity()",
parameters = {}
} }
}
In 3.16 of the specification `activeSignature` is defined as `uinteger`
and therefore negative values shouldn't be allowed, but within 3.15 it
was defined as `number` which makes me think we can be a bit lenient in
this case and handle them.
The expected behavior is quite clear:
The active signature. If omitted or the value lies outside the
range of `signatures` the value defaults to zero or is ignored if
the `SignatureHelp` has no signatures.
Fixes an error:
util.lua:1685: attempt to get length of local 'lines' (a nil value)
util.lua:1685: in function 'trim_empty_lines'
handlers.lua:334: in function 'textDocument/signatureHelp'