This uses the layer parentage information from the parent commit to
traverse the layers. It's a similar API to `tree_sitter:TreeCursor`
but internally it does not use a `tree_sitter::TreeCursor` currently
because that interface is behaving very unexpectedly. Using the
`next_sibling`/`prev_sibling`/`parent` API on `tree_sitter::Node`
reflects the previous code's behavior so this should result in no
surprising changes.
This commit adds a `parent` field to the `LanguageLayer`. This
information is conveniently already available when we parse injections.
This will be used in the child commit to create a type that can
traverse injection layers using this information.
`syn_loader` was replaced rather than interior value being replace,
old value was still being referenced and not updated after `:config-refresh`.
By using `ArcSwap` like for `config`, each `.load()` call will return the most
updated value.
Co-authored-by: kyfan <kyfan@email>
* Added required-root-patterns for situational lsp activation using globbing
* Replaced filter_map with flatten
* updated book to include required-root-patterns option
* fixed wrong function name for path
* Added globset to helix-core. Moved globset building to config parsing.
* Normalize implements AsRef
* cargo fmt
* Revert "cargo fmt"
This reverts commit ca8ce123e8.
* Replace FileType::Suffix with FileType::Glob
Suffix is rather limited and cannot be used to match files which have
semantic meaning based on location + file type (for example, Github
Action workflow files). This patch adds support for a Glob FileType to
replace Suffix, which encompasses the existing behavior & adds
additional file matching functionality.
Globs are standard Unix-style path globs, which are matched against the
absolute path of the file. If the configured glob for a language is a
relative glob (that is, it isn't an absolute path or already starts with
a glob pattern), a glob pattern will be prepended to allow matching
relative paths from any directory.
The order of file type matching is also updated to first match on globs
and then on extension. This is necessary as most cases where
glob-matching is useful will have already been matched by an extension
if glob matching is done last.
* Convert file-types suffixes to globs
* Use globs for filename matching
Trying to match the file-type raw strings against both filename and
extension leads to files with the same name as the extension having the
incorrect syntax.
* Match dockerfiles with suffixes
It's common practice to add a suffix to dockerfiles based on their
context, e.g. `Dockerfile.dev`, `Dockerfile.prod`, etc.
* Make env filetype matching more generic
Match on `.env` or any `.env.*` files.
* Update docs
* Use GlobSet to match all file type globs at once
* Update todo.txt glob patterns
* Consolidate language Configuration and Loader creation
This is a refactor that improves the error handling for creating
the `helix_core::syntax::Loader` from the default and user language
configuration.
* Fix integration tests
* Add additional starlark file-type glob
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
Previously we used the root syntax tree for bracket matching. We can use
the new functionality in `Syntax` for finding the correct syntax tree
for a given byte range though so we use the correct syntax tree within
injections. This improves bracket matching behavior within HTML
injections like script or style tags for example.
`:tree-sitter-subtree` could previously only print subtrees of nodes
in the root injection layer. We can improve on that by finding the layer
that contains the given byte range and printing the subtree within that
layer. That gives more useful results when a selection is within an
injection layer.
* rust-toolchain.toml: bump MSRV to 1.70.0
With Firefox 120 released on 21 November 2023, the MSRV is now 1.70.0.
* Fix cargo fmt with Rust 1.70.0
* Fix cargo clippy with Rust 1.70.0
* Fix cargo doc with Rust 1.70.0
* rust-toolchain.toml: add clippy component
* .github: bump dtolnay/rust-toolchain to 1.70
* helix-term: bump rust-version to 1.70
* helix-view/gutter: use checked_ilog10 to count digits
* helix-core/syntax: use MAIN_SEPARATOR_STR constant
* helix-view/handlers/dap: use Display impl for displaying process spawn error
* WIP: helix-term/commands: use checked math to assert ranges cannot overlap
Previously roots needed to be specified by every language and `[]` was
used as an explicit default. Root files don't make sense for every
language (for example TOML) so I think we should allow languages to
not explicitly mention the key and have the `[]` default automatically.
We only reverted so that the latest release would use a stable
tree-sitter version hosted on crates.io. We do want the improvements
on nightly.
This reverts commit 2ebcc4dbeb.
Pascal and I discussed this and we think it's generally better to
take a 'RopeSlice' rather than a '&Rope'. The code block rendering
function in the markdown component module is a good example for how
this can be useful: we can remove an allocation of a rope and instead
directly turn a '&str' into a 'RopeSlice' which is very cheap.
A change to prefer 'RopeSlice' to '&Rope' whenever the rope isn't
modified would be nice, but it would be a very large diff (around 500+
500-). Starting off with just the syntax functions seems like a nice
middle-ground, and we can remove a Rope allocation because of it.
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
In the past we used two separate queries for combined and normal injections. There was no real reason for this (except historical/slightly easier implementation). Instead, we now use a single query and simply check if an injection corresponds to a combined injection or not.
Call as bytes before slicing, that way you can take bytes that aren't
aligned to chars. Should technically also be slightly faster since you
don't have to check alignment...
Language Servers are now configured in a separate table in `languages.toml`:
```toml
[langauge-server.mylang-lsp]
command = "mylang-lsp"
args = ["--stdio"]
config = { provideFormatter = true }
[language-server.efm-lsp-prettier]
command = "efm-langserver"
[language-server.efm-lsp-prettier.config]
documentFormatting = true
languages = { typescript = [ { formatCommand ="prettier --stdin-filepath ${INPUT}", formatStdin = true } ] }
```
The language server for a language is configured like this (`typescript-language-server` is configured by default):
```toml
[[language]]
name = "typescript"
language-servers = [ { name = "efm-lsp-prettier", only-features = [ "format" ] }, "typescript-language-server" ]
```
or equivalent:
```toml
[[language]]
name = "typescript"
language-servers = [ { name = "typescript-language-server", except-features = [ "format" ] }, "efm-lsp-prettier" ]
```
Each requested LSP feature is priorized in the order of the `language-servers` array.
For example the first `goto-definition` supported language server (in this case `typescript-language-server`) will be taken for the relevant LSP request (command `goto_definition`).
If no `except-features` or `only-features` is given all features for the language server are enabled, as long as the language server supports these. If it doesn't the next language server which supports the feature is tried.
The list of supported features are:
- `format`
- `goto-definition`
- `goto-declaration`
- `goto-type-definition`
- `goto-reference`
- `goto-implementation`
- `signature-help`
- `hover`
- `document-highlight`
- `completion`
- `code-action`
- `workspace-command`
- `document-symbols`
- `workspace-symbols`
- `diagnostics`
- `rename-symbol`
- `inlay-hints`
Another side-effect/difference that comes with this PR, is that only one language server instance is started if different languages use the same language server.
* inject language based on file extension
Nodes can now be captured with "injection.filename". If this capture
contains a valid file extension known to Helix, then the content will
be highlighted as that language.
* inject language by shebang
Nodes can now be captured with "injection.shebang". If this capture
contains a valid shebang line known to Helix, then the content will
be highlighted as the language the shebang calls for.
* add documentation for language injection
* nix: fix highlights
The `@` is now highlighted properly on either side of the function arg.
Also, extending the phases with `buildPhase = prev.buildPhase + ''''`
is now highlighted properly.
Fix highlighting of `''$` style escapes (requires tree-sitter-nix bump)
Fix `inherit` highlighting.
* simplify injection_for_match
Split out injection pair logic into its own method to make the overall
flow easier to follow.
Also transform the top-level function into a method on a
HighlightConfiguration.
* markdown: add shebang injection query
* build(deps): bump bitflags from 1.3.2 to 2.0.2
Bumps [bitflags](https://github.com/bitflags/bitflags) from 1.3.2 to 2.0.2.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/bitflags/bitflags/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/bitflags/bitflags/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/bitflags/bitflags/compare/1.3.2...2.0.2)
---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: bitflags
dependency-type: direct:production
update-type: version-update:semver-major
...
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
* deps: Resolve bitflags 2.0 breaking changes
Bitflags 2.0 release made some breaking changes requiring some small
changes to the Helix codebase.
Almost all of the necessary changes are to manually `#[derive(..)]`
trait implementations which are no longer automatically derived for
all bitflags. All of these were previously automatically derived:
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, Debug, Clone, Copy]
I have derived the minimum traits for each bitflag type.
The other change was to the `.bits` field. This is now a `.bits()`
method so the usage of this has been updated in the `Borders` type.
---------
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* use max_line_width + 1 during softwrap to account for newline char
Helix softwrap implementation always wraps lines so that the newline
character doesn't get cut off so he line wraps one chars earlier then
in other editors. This is necessary, because newline chars are always
selecatble in helix and must never be hidden.
However That means that `max_line_width` currently wraps one char
earlier than expected. The typical definition of line width does not
include the newline character and other helix commands like `:reflow`
also don't count the newline character here.
This commit makes softwrap use `max_line_width + 1` instead of
`max_line_width` to correct the impedance missmatch.
* fix typos
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Lebon <jonathan@jlebon.com>
* Add text-width to config.toml
* text-width: update setting documentation
* rename leftover config item
* remove leftover max-line-length occurrences
* Make `text-width` optional in editor config
When it was only used for `:reflow` it made sense to have a default
value set to `80`, but now that soft-wrapping uses this setting, keeping
a default set to `80` would make soft-wrapping behave more aggressively.
* Allow softwrapping to ignore `text-width`
Softwrapping wraps by default to the viewport width or a configured
`text-width` (whichever's smaller). In some cases we only want to set
`text-width` to use for hard-wrapping and let longer lines flow if they
have enough space. This setting allows that.
* Revert "Make `text-width` optional in editor config"
This reverts commit b247d526d6.
* soft-wrap: allow per-language overrides
* Update book/src/configuration.md
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
* Update book/src/languages.md
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
* Update book/src/configuration.md
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
---------
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Lebon <jonathan@jlebon.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Boehm <alexb@ozrunways.com>
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
The purpose of this change is to remove the mutable self borrow on
`HighlightIterLayer::sort_key` so that we can sort layers with the
correct ordering using the `Vec::sort` function family.
`HighlightIterLayer::sort_key` needs `&mut self` since it calls
`Peekable::peek` which needs `&mut self`. `Vec::sort` functions
only give immutable borrows of the elements to ensure the
correctness of the sort.
We could instead approach this by creating an eager Peekable and using
that instead of `std::iter::Peekable` to wrap `QueryCaptures`:
```rust
struct EagerPeekable<I: Iterator> {
iter: I,
peeked: Option<I::Item>,
}
impl<I: Iterator> EagerPeekable<I> {
fn new(mut iter: I) -> Self {
let peeked = iter.next();
Self { iter, peeked }
}
fn peek(&self) -> Option<&I::Item> {
self.peeked.as_ref()
}
}
impl<I: Iterator> Iterator for EagerPeekable<I> {
type Item = I::Item;
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item> {
std::mem::replace(&mut self.peeked, self.iter.next())
}
}
```
This would be a cleaner approach (notice how `EagerPeekable::peek`
takes `&self` rather than `&mut self`), however this doesn't work in
practice because the Items emitted by the `tree_sitter::QueryCaptures`
Iterator must be consumed before the next Item is returned.
`Iterator::next` on `tree_sitter::QueryCaptures` modifies the
`QueryMatch` returned by the last call of `next`. This behavior is
not currently reflected in the lifetimes/structure of `QueryCaptures`.
This fixes an issue with layers being out of order when using combined
injections since the old code only checked the first range in the
layer. Layers being out of order could cause missing highlights for
combined-injections content.
* significantly improve treesitter performance while editing large files
* Apply stylistic suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* use PartialEq and Hash instead of a freestanding function
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
The current `:tree-sitter-subtree` has a bug for field-names when the
field name belongs to an unnamed child node. Take this ruby example:
def self.method_name
true
end
The subtree given by tree-sitter-cli is:
(singleton_method [2, 0] - [4, 3]
object: (self [2, 4] - [2, 8])
name: (identifier [2, 9] - [2, 20])
body: (body_statement [3, 2] - [3, 6]
(true [3, 2] - [3, 6])))
But the `:tree-sitter-subtree` output was
(singleton_method
object: (self)
body: (identifier)
(body_statement (true)))
The `singleton_method` rule defines the `name` and `body` fields in an
unnamed helper rule `_method_rest` and the old implementation of
`pretty_print_tree_impl` would pass the `field_name` down from the
named `singleton_method` node.
To fix it we switch to the [TreeCursor] API which is recommended by
the tree-sitter docs for traversing the tree. `TreeCursor::field_name`
accurately determines the field name for the current cursor position
even when the node is unnamed.
[TreeCursor]: https://docs.rs/tree-sitter/0.20.9/tree_sitter/struct.TreeCursor.html
* add tree sitter match limit to avoid slowdowns for larger files
Affects all tree sitter queries and should speedup both
syntax highlighting and text object queries.
This has been shown to fix significant slowdowns with textobjects
for rust files as small as 3k loc.
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>