* add reflow command
Users need to be able to hard-wrap text for many applications, including
comments in code, git commit messages, plaintext documentation, etc. It
often falls to the user to manually insert line breaks where appropriate
in order to hard-wrap text.
This commit introduces the "reflow" command (both in the TUI and core
library) to automatically hard-wrap selected text to a given number of
characters (defined by Unicode "extended grapheme clusters"). It handles
lines with a repeated prefix, such as comments ("//") and indentation.
* reflow: consider newlines to be word separators
* replace custom reflow impl with textwrap crate
* Sync reflow command docs with book
* reflow: add default max_line_len language setting
Co-authored-by: Vince Mutolo <vince@mutolo.org>
Allow tab-completion to continue when there is only a single, unambigous
completion target which is a directory. This allows e.g. nested directories
to be quickly drilled down just by hitting <tab> instead of first selecting
the completion then hitting <enter>.
* add run_shell_command
* docgen
* fix command name
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
* refactored Info::new
* show 'Command failed' if execution fails
* TypedCommand takes care of error handling and printing the error to the statusline.
* docgen
* use Popup instead of autoinfo
* remove to_string in format!
* Revert chage in info.rs
* Show "Command succeed" when success
* Fix info.rs
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
When fiddling with paths in a :o prompt, one usually would want Ctrl-W to erase a path segment
rather than the whole path. This is how Ctrl-W works in e.g. (neo)vim out of the box.
Currently A-left move one word left and the behavior will be more
consistent for people coming GUI world if the key was changed to control
given that both browsers and editors like vscode uses C-left right by
default to move word rather than alt.
A-hl currently is not very consistent with hl when next object is
selected, since it may go up/down or left/right and this behavior is
confusing such that some people think it should swap the keys with A-jk,
so it is better to use A-pn since that only specifies two direction.
A-jk have the same issue as in it usually moves right and is not
consistent with the behavior of jk so people may think A-hl is better,
maybe A-oi is better here since A-hl will be swapped to A-pn, A-oi can
convey the meaning of in and out, similar to some window manager keys?
* feat(commands): better handling of buffer-close
Previously, when closing buffer, you would loose cursor position in other docs.
Also, all splits where the buffer was open would be closed.
This PR changes the behavior, if the view has also other buffer
previously viewed it switches back to the last one instead of the view
being closed. As a side effect, since the views are persisted,
the cursor history is persisted as well.
Fixes: https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/issues/1186
* Adjust buffer close behavior
* Remove closed documents from jump history
* Fix after rebase
* Fix ctrl-u on insert behavior
Now should follow vim behavior more
- no longer remove text on cursor
- no longer remove selected text while inserting
- first kill to start non-whitespace, start, previous new line
* Add comment for c-u parts
Select multiple line and open should be based on the whole selection
and not just the line of the cursor, which causes weird behavior like
opening in the middle of the selection which user might not expect.
* added command to extend selection to line above
* fixed view not scrolling up when reaching top of the screen
* refactored shared code into separate impl
* Send active diagnostics to LSP when requesting code actions.
This allows for e.g. clangd to properly send the quickfix code actions
corresponding to those diagnostics as options.
The LSP spec v3.16.0 introduced an opaque `data` member that would allow
the server to persist arbitrary data between the diagnostic and the code
actions request, but this is not supported yet by this commit.
* Reuse existing range_to_lsp_range functionality
hx --health output table's second and third columns were not showing
symbols like ✔ or ✘ to indicate whether LSP or DAP binaries were found.
This change adds these symbols to improve accessibility.
Fixes#1894
Signed-off-by: Nirmal Patel <npate012@gmail.com>
* Make `:write` create nonexistent subdirectories
Prompting as to whether this should take place remains a TODO.
* Move subdirectory creation to new `w!` command
The `file_picker_at_current_directory` command opens the file picker at
the current working directory (CWD). This can be useful when paired with
the built-in `:cd` command which changes the CWD.
It has been mapped to `space F` by default.
During a single HighlightEvent::Source, the highlight spans do not
change and we can merge them into a single style at the beginning
of the event and use it instead of re-computing it for every grapheme
* Add runtime language configuration (#1794)
* Add set-language typable command to change the language of current buffer.
* Add completer for available language options.
* Update set-language to refresh language server as well
* Add language id based config lookup on `syntax::Loader`.
* Add `Document::set_language3` to set programming language based on language
id.
* Update `Editor::refresh_language_server` to try language detection only if
language is not already set.
* Remove language detection from Editor::refresh_language_server
* Move document language detection to where the scratch buffer is saved.
* Rename Document::set_language3 to Document::set_language_by_language_id.
* Remove unnecessary clone in completers::language
when using helix over mosh, the screen doesn't get cleared and
characters get left all over the place until they are overwritten. with
this change, the screen gets properly cleared as soon as helix starts
The search implementation would start searching at the next grapheme
boundary after the previous selection. In case the next occurence of the
needle is immediately after the current selection, this occurence would
not be found (without wraparound) because the first grapheme is skipped.
The correct approach is to use the ensure_grapheme_boundary functions instead
of using the functions that skip unconditionally to the next grapheme.
Currently, the picker's re-using a few bindings which are also present
in the prompt. This causes some editing behaviours to not function on
the picker.
**Ctrl + k** and **Ctrl + j**
This should kill till the end of the line on prompt, but is overridden
by the picker for scrolling. Since there are redundancies (`Ctrl + p`,
`Ctrl + n`), we can remove it from picker.
**Ctrl + f** and **Ctrl + b**
This are used by the prompt for back/forward movement. We could modify
it to be Ctrl + d and Ctrl + u, to match the `vim` behaviour.
* WIP: Rework indentation system
* Add ComplexNode for context-aware indentation (including a proof of concept for assignment statements in rust)
* Add switch statements to Go indents.toml (fixes the second half of issue #1523)
Remove commented-out code
* Migrate all existing indentation queries.
Add more options to ComplexNode and use them to improve C/C++ indentation.
* Add comments & replace Option<Vec<_>> with Vec<_>
* Add more detailed documentation for tree-sitter indentation
* Improve code style in indent.rs
* Use tree-sitter queries for indentation instead of TOML config.
Migrate existing indent queries.
* Add documentation for the new indent queries.
Change xtask docgen to look for indents.scm instead of indents.toml
* Improve code style in indent.rs.
Fix an issue with the rust indent query.
* Move indentation test sources to separate files.
Add `#not-kind-eq?`, `#same-line?` and `#not-same-line` custom predicates.
Improve the rust and c indent queries.
* Fix indent test.
Improve rust indent queries.
* Move indentation tests to integration test folder.
* Improve code style in indent.rs.
Reuse tree-sitter cursors for indentation queries.
* Migrate HCL indent query
* Replace custom loading in indent tests with a designated languages.toml
* Update indent query file name for --health command.
* Fix single-space formatting in indent queries.
* Add explanation for unwrapping.
Co-authored-by: Triton171 <triton0171@gmail.com>
* publish a source tarball with version and grammars
* include_str! the release version from a VERSION file
* remove setting of .version file from tag
don't need this anymore since the file is checked into source
* Move top level lsp config to editor.lsp
This is mainly done to accomodate the new lsp.signature-help config
option that will be introduced in https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/pull/1755
which will have to be accessed by commands. The top level config
struct is split and moved to different places, making the relocation
necessary
* Revert rebase slipup
This avoids costly conversions via byte_to_char (which are then
reversed back into bytes internally in Ropey).
Reduces time spent in slice/byte_to_char from ~24% to ~5%.
When the picker results output is empty, movement actions result in a panic:
```
thread 'main' panicked at 'attempt to calculate the remainder with a divisor of zero', helix-term/src/ui/picker.rs:420:31
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
```
This could be a no-op instead when the matches length is zero.
Currently match is finding the match based on the anchor rather than the
head (cursor) so this behavior is rather unexpected when user is doing
a match but a different item was matched instead when the selection is
more than one character.
This restores much of the behavior that existed before this PR:
helix will build the grammars when compiling. The difference is that
now fetching is also done during the build phase and is done much
more quickly - both shallow and in parallel.
This is a rather large refactor that moves most of the code for
loading, fetching, and building grammars into a new helix-loader
module. This works well with the [[grammars]] syntax for
languages.toml defined earlier: we only have to depend on the types
for GrammarConfiguration in helix-loader and can leave all the
[[language]] entries for helix-core.
The vision with 'use-grammars' is to allow the long-requested feature
of being able to declare your own set of grammars that you would like.
A simple schema with only/except grammar names controls the list
of grammars that is fetched and built. It does not (yet) control which
grammars may be loaded at runtime if they already exist.
build_grammars adapts the functionality that previously came from
helix-syntax to be used at runtime from the command line flags.
fetch_grammars wraps command-line git to perform the same actions
previously done in the scripts in #1560.
helix-syntax mostly existed for the sake of the build task which
checks and compiles the submodules. Since we won't be relying on
that process anymore, it doesn't end up making much sense to have
a very thin crate just for some functions that we could port to
helix-core.
The remaining build-related code is moved to helix-term which will
be able to provide grammar builds through the --build-grammars CLI
flag.
* Move runtime file location definitions to core
* Add basic --health command
* Add language specific --health
* Show summary for all langs with bare --health
* Use TsFeature from xtask for --health
* cargo fmt
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>