Previously, commands such as `r<tab>` (replace with tab) or `t<tab>`
(select till tab) had no effect. This is because `KeyCode::Tab` needs
special treatment (like `KeyCode::Enter`).
PR #4134 switched the autocomplete menu from alphabetical to fuzzy
sorting. This commit removes the still existing filtering by prefix and
should enable full fuzzy sorting of the autocomplete menu.
closes#3084, #1807
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
The text within the command palette used a custom format to display
the keybinding for a command. This change switches to the key sequence
format that we use for pending keys and macros.
d6323b7cbc introduced a regression for
shell commands like `|`, `!`, and `<A-!>` which caused the new
selections to be incorrect. This caused a panic when piping (`|`)
would cause the new range to extend past the document end.
The paste version of this bug was fixed in
48a3965ab4.
This change also inherits the direction of the new range from the old
range and adds integration tests to ensure that the behavior isn't
broken in the future.
* dynamically resize line number gutter width
* removing digits lower-bound, permitting spacer
* removing max line num char limit; adding notes; qualified successors; notes
* updating tests to use new line number width when testing views
* linenr width based on document line count
* using min width of 2 so line numbers relative is useful
* lint rolling; removing unnecessary type parameter lifetime
* merge change resolution
* reformat code
* rename row_styler to style; add int_log resource
* adding spacer to gutters default; updating book config entry
* adding view.inner_height(), swap for loop for iterator
* reverting change of current! to view! now that doc is not needed
* Fix range offsets in multi-selection paste
d6323b7cbc introduced a regression with
multi-selection paste where pasting would not adjust the ranges
correctly. To fix it, we need to track the total number of characters
inserted in each changed selection and use that offset to slide each
new range forwards.
* Inherit selection directions on paste
* Add an integration-test for multi-selection pasting
The sequence "_y"_p panics because the blackhole register contains an
empty values vec. This causes a panic when pasting since it unwraps
a `slice::last`.
This follows changes in Kakoune to the same effects:
* p/<space>p: 266d1c37d0
* !/<A-!>: 85b78dda2e
Selecting the new data inserted by shell or pasting is often more
useful than retaining a selection of the pre-paste/insert content.
When backward-deleting a character, if this character and the following
character form a Pair, we want to delete both. However, there is a bug
that deletes both characters also if both characters are closers of some
Pair.
This commit fixes that by adding an additional check that the deleted
character should be an opener in a Pair.
Closes https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/issues/4544.
This bug occurs on `shell_insert_output` and `shell_append_output`
commands.
The previous implementation would create a child process using the Rust
stdlib's `Command` builder. However, when nothing should be piped in
from the editor, the default value for `stdin` would be used. According
to the Rust stdlib documentation that is `Stdio::inherit` which will
make the child process inherit the parent process' stdin. This would
cause the terminal to freeze.
This change will set the child process' stdin to `Stdio::null` whenever
it doesn't pipe it. In the `if` statement where this change was made
there was an extra condition for windows that I am not sure if would
require some special treatment.
This complicates the code a little but it often divides by two the number of allocations done by
the functions. LSP labels especially can easily be called dozens of time in a single menu popup,
when listing references for example.
When we do auto formatting, the code that takes the LSP's response and applies
the changes to the document are just getting the currently focused view and
giving that to the function, basically always assuming that the document that
we're applying the change to is in focus, and not in a background view.
This is usually fine for a single view, even if it's a buffer in the
background, because it's still the same view and the selection will get updated
accordingly for when you switch back to it. But it's obviously a problem for
when there are multiple views, because if you don't have the target document in
focus, it will ask the document to update the wrong view, hence the crash.
The problem with this is picking which view to apply any selection change to.
In the absence of any more data points on the views themselves, we simply pick
the first view associated with the document we are saving.
The way that document writes are handled are by submitting them to the
async job pool, which are all executed opportunistically out of order. It
was discovered that this can lead to write inconsistencies when there
are multiple writes to the same file in quick succession.
This seeks to fix this problem by removing document writes from the
general pool of jobs and into its own specialized event. Now when a
user submits a write with one of the write commands, a request is simply
queued up in a new mpsc channel that each Document makes to handle its own
writes. This way, if multiple writes are submitted on the same document,
they are executed in order, while still allowing concurrent writes for
different documents.
Undo/redo/earlier/later call `Document::apply_impl` which applies
transactions to the document. These transactions also need to be
applied to the view as in 0aedef0.
It is easy to forget to call `Document::apply` and/or `View::apply` in
the correct order. This commit introduces a helper function which
closes over both calls.
This change adds View::apply calls for all Document::apply call-sites,
ensuring that changes to a document do not leave invalid entries in
the View's jumplist.
This change automatically tracks pending text for for commands which use
on-next-key callbacks. For example, `t` will await the next key event
and "t" will be shown in the bottom right-hand corner to show that we're
in a pending state.
Previously, the text for these on-next-key commands needed to be
hard-coded into the command definition which had some drawbacks:
* It was easy to forget to write and clear the pending text.
* If a command was remapped in a custom config, the pending text would
still show the old key.
With this change, pending text is automatically tracked based on the
key events that lead to the command being executed. This works even
when the command is remapped in config and when the on-next-key
callback is nested under some key sequence (for example `mi`).