Around 50 columns for the summary is good because it is often used as
heading or as subject in emails. 72 columns for the body is generally
good because some tools do not wrap long lines (`git log` with pager
`less` is a good example). Helix's `:reflow` command is really good to
help with the second point.
Linux kernel documentation says:
> For these reasons, the ``summary`` must be no more than 70-75
> characters, and it must describe both what the patch changes, as well
> as why the patch might be necessary. It is challenging to be both
> succinct and descriptive, but that is what a well-written summary
> should do.
Source:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst#n627
tpope:
https://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html
Commit message style guide for Git:
https://commit.style/
There don't appear to be any regressions from the updates.
Also included is a fix which highlights the "#" as in attributes
as punctuation. This was previously unhighlighted.
The update fixes a bug that caused the external scanner to hang during
error recovery.
Looking at the diff, there are no structural changes in this update.
There are a few new fields and it looks like some edge-case fixes
but nothing that breaks compatibility with the current queries.
* Change default formatter for any language
* Fix clippy error
* Close stdin for Stdio formatters
* Better indentation and pattern matching
* Return Result<Option<...>> for fn format instead of Option
* Remove unwrap for stdin
* Handle FormatterErrors instead of Result<Option<...>>
* Use Transaction instead of LspFormatting
* Use Transaction directly in Document::format
* Perform stdin type formatting asynchronously
* Rename formatter.type values to kebab-case
* Debug format for displaying io::ErrorKind (msrv fix)
* Solve conflict?
* Use only stdio type formatters
* Remove FormatterType enum
* Remove old comment
* Check if the formatter exited correctly
* Add formatter configuration to the book
* Avoid allocations when writing to stdin and formatting errors
* Remove unused import
Co-authored-by: Gokul Soumya <gokulps15@gmail.com>
A few changes to make TSQ highlights better:
* A parsing error has been fixed in the grammar itself
* Previously tree-sitter-tsq did not parse the variables
in predicates like `(#set! injection.language "javascript")`
* Theme nodes as `tag`
* The newly added node to the parser (from the above fix) is
`variable` which takes over the `variable` capture from nodes
* Highlight known predicates as `function` and unsupported
predicates as `error`
* This may help when translating queries from nvim-treesitter.
For example `#any-of?` is a common one used in nvim-treesitter
queries but not implemented in Helix or tree-sitter-cli.
* Inject tree-sitter-regex into `#match?` predicates