New look:
```
Fetching 102 grammars
98 up to date git grammars
4 updated grammars
bash now on 275effdfc0edce774acf7d481f9ea195c6c403cd
beancount now on 4cbd1f09cd07c1f1fabf867c2cf354f9da53cc4c
c now on f05e279aedde06a25801c3f2b2cc8ac17fac52ae
c-sharp now on 53a65a908167d6556e1fcdb67f1ee62aac101dda
```
```
Building 102 grammars
100 grammars already built
2 grammars built now
["bash", "rust"]
```
- This ensures that other values than just the arrays are overridden, like nested objects, where it makes sense
- merge_depth is set to 3 so that top-level language features are merged (like 'scope'), but everything deeper is overridden with the user-config
When a new View of a Document is created, a default cursor of 0, 0 is
created, and it does not get normalized to a single width cursor until
at least one movement of the cursor happens. This appears to have no
practical negative effect that I could find, but it makes tests difficult
to work with, since the initial selection is not what you expect it to be.
This changes the initial selection of a new View to be the width of the
first grapheme in the text.
* Use new macro syntax for encoding sequences of keys
* Make convenience helpers for common test pattern
* Use indoc for inline indented raw strings
* Add feature flag for integration testing to disable rendering
This is an optimization for the release CI. The release CI can take
a while since it compiles release builds for all operating systems.
We cut down on duplicate work and overall time by fetching
tree-sitter grammar repositories and then using those repositories
in all later steps. Previously we built all of helix just to run
helix_loader::grammar::fetch_grammars()
which is wasteful on time. With this change we only build the
helix-loader crate.
When handling grammars, fetching and building is done in a thread
pool. Results are communicated over channels and the receiving
channel is closed on first error. This causes subsequent sends to
fail causing a mess in stderr. This ignores all SendErrors causing
only the first error to be printed.
Earlier in the builder we enable C++ (`.cpp(true)`) but only mention
the C compiler in the build failure message. Some grammars that have
C++ external scanners can provoke build failures in this step if a
C++ compiler isn't installed, so mentioning it in the error message
should help out debugging.
We merge the elements of arrays for the top-level array. For
`languages.toml`, this is the array of languages. For any nested
arrays, we simply take the `right` array as-is instead of using
the union of `left` and `right`.
closes#1000
This is a bit of a micro-optimization: in the current setup we waste
a thread in the pool for a local grammar only to println! a message
saying we're skipping fetching because it's a local grammar.
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.