* 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.
* transition to nucleo for fuzzy matching
* drop flakey test case
since the picker streams in results now any test that relies
on the picker containing results is potentially flakely
* use crates.io version of nucleo
* Fix typo in commands.rs
Co-authored-by: Skyler Hawthorne <skyler@dead10ck.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Skyler Hawthorne <skyler@dead10ck.com>
YAML indents queries are tweaked to fix auto indent behavior.
A new capture type `indent.always` is introduced to address use cases
where combining indent captures on a single line is desired.
Fixes#6661
This is an unfortunately noisy change: we need to update virtually all
callsites that access the registers. For reads this means passing in the
Editor and for writes this means handling potential failure when we
can't write to a clipboard register.
These come from Kakoune:
* '#' is the selection index register. It's read-only and produces the
selection index numbers, 1-indexed.
* '.' is the selection contents register. It is also read-only and
mirrors the contents of the current selections when read.
We switch the iterators returned from Selection's `fragments` and
`slices` methods to ExactSizeIterators because:
* The selection contents register can simply return the fragments
iterator.
* ExactSizeIterator is already implemented for iterators over Vecs, so
it's essentially free.
* The `len` method can be useful on its own.
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.
* correctly map unsorted positions
* Fix typo
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
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...
* Fix next/prev tree-sitter inconsistency
Before there where different results going to next or previous due to
sorting not dealing with multiple captures that start/end at the same
pos. I chose to prefer longer matches.
* Revert unnecessary change
* Add command for merging non-consecutive ranges
* Add `merge_selections` command to book
* Simplify `merge_ranges`
Heeded the advice of @the-mikedavis to stop iterating over all ranges and simply merge the first and the last range, as the invariants of `Selection` guarantee that the list of ranges is always sorted and never empty.
* Clarify doc comment of `merge_ranges`
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.
Currently, when forward deleting (`delete_char_forward` bound to `del`,
`delete_word_forward`, `kill_to_line_end`) the cursor is moved to the
left in append mode (or generally when the cursor is at the end of the
selection). For example in a document `|abc|def` (|indicates selection)
if enter append mode the cursor is moved to `c` and the selection
becomes: `|abcd|ef`. When deleting forward (`del`) `d` is deleted. The
expectation would be that the selection doesn't shrink so that `del`
again deletes `e` and then `f`. This would look as follows:
`|abcd|ef`
`|abce|f`
`|abcf|`
`|abc |`
This is inline with how other editors like kakoune work.
However, helix currently moves the selection backwards leading to the
following behavior:
`|abcd|ef`
`|abc|ef`
`|ab|ef`
`ef`
This means that `delete_char_forward` essentially acts like
`delete_char_backward` after deleting the first character in append
mode.
To fix the problem the cursor must be moved to the right while deleting
forward (first fix in this commit). Furthermore, when the EOF char is
reached a newline char must be inserted (just like when entering
appendmode) to prevent the cursor from moving to the right
Some deletion operations (especially those that use indentation)
can generate overlapping deletion ranges when using multiple cursors.
To fix that problem a new `Transaction::delete` and
`Transaction:delete_by_selection` function were added. These functions
merge overlapping deletion ranges instead of generating an invalid
transaction. This merging of changes is only possible for deletions
and not for other changes and therefore require its own function.
The function has been used in all commands that currently delete
text by using `Transaction::change_by_selection`.
* 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
char_idx_at_visual_row_offset asssumed that a single line/block break
always corresponded to a vertical offset of 1. However conceal can hide
the line break (in which case the certical offset would be 0) and line
annotations (or softwrapped inlay hints at the end of the line) can insert
addtional vertical lines.
To correctly account for these cases we simply compute the visual offset
of the start of the next block from the previous block instead of the
visual offset of the block end. This means that the line breaks at the
end of the block (however many there may be) are automatically included
and we don't need to manually add 1 to the `row_offset` anymore.
Using `partition_point` ensures we always find the first entry.
With binary search it is "random" (deterministic but implementation
specific) which index is retruned if there are multiple equal elements.
`partition_point` was added to the standard library to cover extactly
the usecase here.
The top of a view is marked by a char idx anchor. That char idx is
usually the first character of the visual line it's on. We use a char
index instead of a line index because the view may start in the middle
of a line with soft wrapping. However, it's possible to temporarily
endup in a state where this anchor is not the first character of the
first visual line. This is pretty rare because edits usually happen
inside/after the view. In most cases we handle this case correctly.
However, if the cursor is before the anchor (but still in view)
there can be crashes or visual artifacts. This is caused by the fact
that visual_offset_from_anchor (and the positioning code in view.rs)
incorrectly assumed that the (cursor) position is always after the
view anchor if the cursor is in view. But if the anchor is not the
first character of the first visual line this is not the case anymore.
In that case crashes and visual artifacts are possible. This commit
fixes that problem by changing `visual_offset_from_anchor` (and
callsites) to properly consider that case.
* 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>
The current test DSL currently has no way to express being at the end of
a line, save for putting an explicit LF or CRLF inside the `#[|]#`. The
problem with this approach is that it can add unintended extra new lines
if used in conjunction with raw strings, which insert newlines for you.
This is a simple attempt to mitigate this problem. If there is an
explicit newline character at the end of the selection, and then it
is immediately followed by the same newline character at the right end
of the selection, this following newline is removed. This way, one can
express a cursor at the end of a line explicitly.
* misc: missing inline, outdated link
* doc: Add new theme keys and config option to book
* fix: don't panic in Tree::try_get(view_id)
Necessary for later, where we could be receiving an LSP response
for a closed window, in which case we don't want to crash while
checking for its existence
* fix: reset idle timer on all mouse events
* refacto: Introduce Overlay::new and InlineAnnotation::new
* refacto: extract make_job_callback from Context::callback
* feat: add LSP display_inlay_hint option to config
* feat: communicate inlay hints support capabilities of helix to LSP server
* feat: Add function to request range of inlay hint from LSP
* feat: Save inlay hints in document, per view
* feat: Update inlay hints on document changes
* feat: Compute inlay hints on idle timeout
* nit: Add todo's about inlay hints for later
* fix: compute text annotations for current view in view.rs, not document.rs
* doc: Improve Document::text_annotations() description
* nit: getters don't use 'get_' in front
* fix: Drop inlay hints annotations on config refresh if necessary
* fix: padding theming for LSP inlay hints
* fix: tracking of outdated inlay hints should not be dependant on document revision (because of undos and such)
* fix: follow LSP spec and don't highlight padding as virtual text
* config: add some LSP inlay hint configs
This commit adds new functions to `Transaction` that allow creating
edits that might potentially overlap. Any change that overlaps
previous changes is ignored. Furthermore, a utility method is added
that also drops selections associated with dropped changes (for
transactions that are created from a selection).
This is needed to avoid crashes when applying multicursor
autocompletions, as the edit from a previous cursor may overlap
with the next cursor/edit.
* Fix#6092
Cause were some incorrect assumptions that missed an edge case in the
`Selection.contains()` calculation. Tests were added accordingly.
* Fix Selection.contains() edge-case handling.
Removing the len check short-circuit was the only thing needed as
pointed out by @dead10ck.
* 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>
* Doc string fix
Delete duplicate `the`
* selection.rs doc string wording
* Remove extra whitespace at end of doc text
---------
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
Open a new document `test.rs` and type the following:
`di//<esc><C-c>`
The margin calculation pushes the range out of bounds for the comment
marker when there are no characters (newline) after it.
thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value:
Char range out of bounds: char range 0..3,
Rope/RopeSlice char length 2', ropey-1.6.0/src/rope.rs:546:37
The debug build catches the error in the transaction: thread 'main'
panicked at 'attempt to subtract with overflow',
helix-core/src/transaction.rs:503:26
* Make `m` textobject look for pairs enclosing selections
Right now, this textobject only looks for pairs that surround the
cursor. This ensures that the pair found encloses each selection, which
is likely to be intuitively what is expected of this textobject.
* Simplification of match code
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* Adjust logic for ensuring surround range encloses selection
Prior, it was missing the case where the start of the selection came
before the opening brace. We also had an off-by-one error where if the
end of the selection was on the closing brace it would not work.
* Refactor to search for the open pair specifically to avoid edge cases
* Adjust wording of autoinfo to reflect new functionality
* Implement tests for surround functionality in new integration style
* Fix handling of skip values
* Fix out of bounds error
* Add `ma` version of tests
* Fix formatting of tests
* Reduce indentation levels for readability, and update comments
* Preserve each selection's direction with enclosing pair surround
* Add test case for multiple cursors resulting in overlap
* Mark known failures as TODO
* Make tests multi-threaded or they fail
* Cargo fmt
* Fix typos in integration test comments
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* properly handle LSP position encoding
* add debug assertion to Transaction::change
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
The loop always iterates the number of times the user specified even
if the beginning/end of the document is reached.
For an extreme demonstration try the following commands, Helix will
hang for several seconds.
100000000w
100000000]c
If the last argument to shellwords ends in a multibyte utf8 character
the entire argument will be dropped.
e.g. `:sh echo test1 test2𒀀` will only output `test1`
Add additional tests based on the code review feedback
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.
* rework positioning/rendering, enables softwrap/virtual text
This commit is a large rework of the core text positioning and
rendering code in helix to remove the assumption that on-screen
columns/lines correspond to text columns/lines.
A generic `DocFormatter` is introduced that positions graphemes on
and is used both for rendering and for movements/scrolling.
Both virtual text support (inline, grapheme overlay and multi-line)
and a capable softwrap implementation is included.
fix picker highlight
cleanup doc formatter, use word bondaries for wrapping
make visual vertical movement a seperate commnad
estimate line gutter width to improve performance
cache cursor position
cleanup and optimize doc formatter
cleanup documentation
fix typos
Co-authored-by: Daniel Hines <d4hines@gmail.com>
update documentation
fix panic in last_visual_line funciton
improve soft-wrap documentation
add extend_visual_line_up/down commands
fix non-visual vertical movement
streamline virtual text highlighting, add softwrap indicator
fix cursor position if softwrap is disabled
improve documentation of text_annotations module
avoid crashes if view anchor is out of bounds
fix: consider horizontal offset when traslation char_idx -> vpos
improve default configuration
fix: mixed up horizontal and vertical offset
reset view position after config reload
apply suggestions from review
disabled softwrap for very small screens to avoid endless spin
fix wrap_indicator setting
fix bar cursor disappearring on the EOF character
add keybinding for linewise vertical movement
fix: inconsistent gutter highlights
improve virtual text API
make scope idx lookup more ergonomic
allow overlapping overlays
correctly track char_pos for virtual text
adjust configuration
deprecate old position fucntions
fix infinite loop in highlight lookup
fix gutter style
fix formatting
document max-line-width interaction with softwrap
change wrap-indicator example to use empty string
fix: rare panic when view is in invalid state (bis)
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* improve documentation for positoning functions
* simplify tests
* fix documentation of Grapheme::width
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* add explicit drop invocation
* Add explicit MoveFn type alias
* add docuntation to Editor::cursor_cache
* fix a few typos
* explain use of allow(deprecated)
* make gj and gk extend in select mode
* remove unneded debug and TODO
* mark tab_width_at #[inline]
* add fast-path to move_vertically_visual in case softwrap is disabled
* rename first_line to first_visual_line
* simplify duplicate if/else
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
increment/decrement (C-a/C-x) had some buggy behavior where selections
could be offset incorrectly or the editor could panic with some edits
that changed the number of characters in a number or date. These stemmed
from the automatic jumping behavior which attempted to find the next
date or integer to increment. The jumping behavior also complicated the
code quite a bit and made the behavior somewhat difficult to predict
when using many cursors.
This change removes the automatic jumping behavior and only increments
or decrements when the full text in a range of a selection is a number
or date. This simplifies the code and fixes the panics and buggy
behaviors from changing the number of characters.
* Add a undo/redo split test case for crossing branches
* history: Switch up/down transaction chaining order
The old code tends to work in practice because, usually, either up_txns
or down_txns are empty. When both have contents though, we can run into
a panic trying to compose them all since they will disagree on the
length of the text. This fixes the panic test case in the parent
commit.
* Show (git) diff signs in gutter (#3890)
Avoid string allocation when git diffing
Incrementally diff using changesets
refactor diffs to be provider indepndent and improve git implementation
remove dependency on zlib-ng
switch to asynchronus diffing with similar
Update helix-vcs/Cargo.toml
fix toml formatting
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
fix typo in documentation
use ropey reexpors from helix-core
fix crash when creating new file
remove useless use if io::Cursor
fix spelling mistakes
implement suggested improvement to repository loading
improve git test isolation
remove lefover comments
Co-authored-by: univerz <univerz@fu-solution.com>
fixed spelling mistake
minor cosmetic changes
fix: set self.differ to None if decoding the diff_base fails
fixup formatting
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
reload diff_base when file is reloaded from disk
switch to imara-diff
Fixup formatting
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Redraw buffer whenever a diff is updated.
Only store hunks instead of changes for individual lines to easily allow
jumping between them
Update to latest gitoxide version
Change default diff gutter position
Only update gutter after timeout
* update diff gutter synchronously, with a timeout
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* address review comments and ensure lock is always aquired
* remove configuration for redraw timeout
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
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.
* 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>
* 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
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.