This matches the insert-mode behavior for Vim and Kakoune: if the
current line is empty except for whitespace, `<ret>` should insert a
line ending at the beginning of the line, moving any indentation to the
next line.
The 'revisions' field on History can't be treated as linear: each
Revision in the revisions Vec has a parent link and an optional child
link. We can follow those to unroll the recent history.
When using undo/redo, the history revision can be decremented. In that
case we should apply the inversions since the given revision in
History::changes_since. This prevents panics with jumplist operations
when a session uses undo/redo to move the jumplist selection outside
of the document.
This case panics since undo/redo call View::apply and here, the edit
that moves the jumplist selection out-of-bounds is not yet applied when
View::apply is called in undo/redo. View::apply should only be called
by the EditorView now.
* Add a test case for updating jumplists across windows
* Apply transactions to all views on history changes
This ensures that jumplist selections follow changes in documents, even
when there are multiple views (for example a split where both windows
edit the same document).
* Leave TODOs for cleaning up View::apply
* Use Iterator::reduce to compose history transactions
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Language Servers may signal that they do not support a method in
the initialization result (server capabilities). We can check these
when making LSP requests and hint in the status line when a method
is not supported by the server. This can also prevent crashes in
servers which assume that clients do not send requests for methods
which are disabled in the server capabilities.
There is an existing pattern the LSP client module where a method
returns `Option<impl Future<Output = Result<_>>>` with `None` signaling
no support in the server. This change extends this pattern to the rest
of the client functions. And we log an error to the statusline for
manually triggered LSP calls which return `None`.
Previously, jumplists could grow unchecked. Every transaction is
applied to jumplist selections to ensure that they are up to date
and within document bounds, so this would cause every edit to become
more expensive as jumplist lengths increased throughout a session.
Setting a maximum number of entries limits the cost.
Vim and Neovim limit their jumplists:
* b298fe6cba/src/structs.h (L141)
* e8cc489acc/src/nvim/mark_defs.h (L57)
Notably, Kakoune does not. In Kakoune, changes are applied to jumplist
entries lazily as you hit `<C-o>`/`<C-i>` though, so Kakoune doesn't
have the same growing cost concerns. Kakoune also does not have a
concept of a View which limits the cost further.
Vim and Neovim limit to 100. This seems unreasonably high to me so I've
set this to 30 to start. We can increase if this is problematically
low.
d6323b7cbc changed the behavior of paste
to select the newly inserted text. This is preferrable in normal mode
because it's useful to be able to act on the new text. This behavior
is worse for insert or select mode though:
* In insert mode, the cursor ends up on the last character of the newly
selected text, so further typing inserts text before the last
character.
* In select mode, the current selection is replaced with the new text
selection which doesn't extend the current selection. With this
change, the selection is extended to include the new text.
This aligns the behavior more closely with Kakoune, but it's
coincidental instead of intentional: Kakoune doesn't implement
bracketed paste (AFAIK) which causes this behavior in insert mode,
and Kakoune doesn't have a select mode.
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`).
This change handles a language server exiting. This was a UX sore-spot:
if a language server crashed, Helix did not recognize the exit and
continued to send requests to it. All requests would timeout since they
would not receive responses. This would also hold-up Helix closing
itself down since it would try to gracefully shutdown the server which
is implemented in the LSP spec as a request.
We could attempt to automatically restart the language server on crash.
I left this for future work since that change will need to be slightly
complicated: it will need to cover the case of a language server
repeatedly crashing.
d7d0d5ffb7 resolves completion items on
the idle-timeout event. The `Completion::resolve_completion_item`
function blocks on the LSP request though, which blocks the compositor
and in turn blocks the event loop. So until the language server returns
the resolved completion item, Helix is unable to respond to keypresses
or other LSP messages.
This is typically ok since the resolution request is fast but for some
language servers this can be problematic, and ideally we shouldn't be
blocking like this anyways.
When receiving a `completionItem/resolve` request, the Volar server
sends a `workspace/configuration` request to Helix and blocks itself
on the response, leading to a deadlock. Eventually the resolve request
times out within Helix but Helix is locked up and unresponsive in that
window.
This change resolves the completion item without blocking the
compositor.
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>
This fixes an edge case for completing shellwords. With a file
"a b.txt" in the current directory, the sequence `:open a\<tab>`
will result in the prompt containing `:open aa\ b.txt`. This is
because the length of the input which is trimmed when replacing with
completion is calculated on the part of the input which is parsed by
shellwords and then escaped (in a separate operation), which is lossy.
In this case it loses the trailing backslash.
The fix provided here refactors shellwords to track both the _words_
(shellwords with quotes and escapes resolved) and the _parts_ (chunks
of the input which turned into each word, with separating whitespace
removed). When calculating how much of the input to delete when
replacing with the completion item, we now use the length of the last
part.
This also allows us to eliminate the duplicate work done in the
`ends_with_whitespace` check.
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.
* init
* cargo fmt
* optimisation of the scrollbar render both for Menu and Popup. Toggling off scrollbar for Popup<Menu>, since Menu has its own
* rendering scroll track
* removed unnecessary cast
* improve memory allocation
* small correction
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
If `a\ b.txt` were a local file, `:o a\ <tab>` would fill the prompt
with `:o aa\ b.txt` because the replacement range was calculated using
the shellwords-parsed part. Escaping the part before calculating its
length fixes this edge-case.
This changes the completion items to be rendered with shellword
escaping, so a file `a b.txt` is rendered as `a\ b.txt` which matches
how it should be inputted.
8584b38cfb switched to shellwords for
completion in command-mode. This changes the conditions for choosing
whether to complete the command or use the command's completer.
This change processes the input as shellwords up-front and uses
shellword logic about whitespace to determine whether the command
or argument should be completed.
* 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