Problem: Cannot distinguish Normal and Terminal-Normal mode.
Solution: Make mode() return "nt" for Terminal-Normal mode. (issue vim/vim#8856)
72406a4bd2
Problem: Some plugins have structure `lua/nvim-someplugin/..`
Since `-` is not allowed in vim function names, healthcheck names in
lua and in vim can not have the same name (typically vim will use `_`
instead of `-`).
Solution: Normalize the names before checking for duplicates.
This is a simple fix for #15899, as it should at least stop calling
`prepareRename` on servers that don't support renaming.
I imagine a better fix would be to inspect the actual value for, but
that requires some plumbing changes on how capabilities are evaluated
before sending requests out.
Co-authored-by: francisco souza <fsouza@users.noreply.github.com>
Users can pass string values for severities that match with the enum
names (e.g. "Warn" or "Info") which are converted to the corresponding
numerical value in `to_severity`. Invalid strings were simply left
as-is, which caused confusing errors later on. Instead, report an
invalid severity string right up front to make the problem clear.
When entering terminal mode, cursorlineopt is no longer entirely
disabled. Instead, it's set to `number`. Doing so ensures that users
using `set cursorline` combined with `set cursorlineopt=number` have
consistent highlighting of the line numbers, instead of this being
disabled when entering terminal mode.
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
Co-authored-by: Sean Dewar <seandewar@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: OS/2 and MS-DOS are still mentioned, even though support was
removed long ago.
Solution: Update documentation. (Yegappan Lakshmanan, closesvim/vim#5368)
6f345a1458
* fix(runtime/health): mitigate issues with duplicate healthchecks
Previously if a healthcheck was found as Lua and Vim it was executed
both times.
This new implementations prefers Lua, therefore if two are found It only
runs the Lua one, this way a plugin can mantain both implementations the
Lua one with the method `check()` and the autoload function `#check()`
(for none HEAD nvim versions).
**Note: This will require plugins to use `check()` as the function name,
since the autoload function that wraps the lua implementation won't be
called**
* docs(health): use spaces and don't overuse backtics
followup to #15259
Adds the following API functions.
- nvim_buf_set_mark(buf, name, line, col)
* Set marks in a buffer.
- nvim_buf_del_mark(buf, name)
* Delete a mark that belongs to buffer.
- nvim_del_mark(name)
* Delete a global mark.
- nvim_get_mark(name)
* Get a global mark.
Tests:
- Adds test to all the new api functions, and adds more for the existing
nvim_buf_get_mark.
* Tests include failure cases.
Documentation:
- Adds documentation for all the new functions, and improves the
existing fucntion docs.
* Add optional second table argument to vim.json.decode which takes
a table 'luanil' which can include the 'object' and/or 'array' keys. These
options use luanil when converting NULL in json objects and arrays
respectively. The default behavior matches the original lua-cjson.
* Remove recursive_convert_NIL function from rpc.lua, use
vim.json.decode with luanil = { object = true } instead. This removes a hotpath
in the json deserialization pipeline by dropping keys with json NULL
values throughout the deserialized table.
- Refactor health.vim to discover lua healthcheck in the runtime
directories lua/**/health{/init}.lua
- Support healthchecks for lua submodules e.g :checkhealth vim.lsp and
also support wildcard "*" at the end for all submodules
:checkhealth vim*
- Refactor health.vim to use variable scope instead of output capturing
- Create health.lua module to wrap report functions and future
extensibility.
- Move away from searching just in the runtimepath, use
`nvim_get_runtime_file` due to #15632
Example:
Plugin linter in rtp can declare it's checkhealts in lua module
`lua/linter/health{/init}.lua` that returns a table with a method
"check" that when executed calls the report functions provided by the
builtin lua module require("health").
The plugin also has a submodule `/lua/linter/providers` in which it
defines `/lua/linter/providers/health{/init}.lua`
This plugin healthcheck can now be run by the ex command:
`:checkhealth linter linter.providers`
Also calling all submodules can be done by:
`:checkhealth linter*
And "linter" and "linter.provider" would be discovered when:
`:checkhealth`
Always make calls to `vim.diagnostic.set` call `vim.diagnostic.show`.
This creates an easier to reason about code path and is also less
surprising when users wish to override override `vim.diagnostic.show`
with custom behavior and `vim.diagnostic.set` is called with empty
diagnostics.
Functionally, the end result is the same: when `show` is called with an
empty diagnostics list, it just calls `hide` and then returns, which is
exactly what `reset` does right now.
N, W, S, E are all inclusive, i.e., always anchor to the exact corner of the
window (including border). This line may also need change in this case (change
0 to -1):
This is most consistent and easiest to reason about, especially with GUIs whose
border do not need to have width/height of 1/1 in cell units.
Fix#15789
Many vim.diagnostic functions expect the user to pass in a namespace id.
This PR allows the user to list active diagnostic namespaces:
```lua
:lua print(vim.inspect(vim.diagnostic.get_namespaces()))
{
[7] = {
name = "vim.lsp.client-1",
opts = {},
sign_group = "vim.diagnostic.vim.lsp.client-1"
}
}
```
Continuation of https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/15202
A plugin like telescope could override it with a fancy implementation
and then users would get the telescope-ui within each plugin that
utilizes the vim.ui.select function.
There are some plugins which override the `textDocument/codeAction`
handler solely to provide a different UI. With custom client commands and
soon codeAction resolve support, it becomes more difficult to implement
the handler right - so having a dedicated way to override the picking
function will be useful.
In vim.lsp.buf.references, the key vim.type_idx (which evaluates to a
boolean) was set to equal vim.types.dictionary. This resulted in a
boolean key in json which is not allowed by the json spec, and which
lua-cjson fails to serialize.