When, in the 'while' loop for a full justify, 'filebot_inpar' becomes
TRUE, it means that EOF has been reached and find_paragraph() should
not be called again. To allow 'filebot_inpar' to convey this meaning,
it should not be set to TRUE elsewhere, so another boolean is needed
for setting the correct length of the final line of the cutbuffer.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?55086.
The removal of the x-coordinate handling affected this. Reshuffle things
so that we can check for it after we have moved (the same way we check for
it at the beginning of the function before we move) without having to set
'quote_len' and 'par_len' unnecessarily.
Also, adjust some comments accordingly.
Move detecting the final line of the paragraph to find_paragraph(),
since a paragraph of which the final line is the last line of the
buffer will still be that way after being justified.
Also, move all x-coordinate handling to do_justify(), since it only
applies to the current buffer.
Move a few references to the current buffer to do_justify(). Also,
the check for being at the end of the buffer needs to be done after the
first paragraph is found, so that the existing behavior of finding an
initial paragraph regardless of cursor position is preserved.
The functions do_para_begin() and do_para_end() can now move through any
buffer, while the functions do_para_begin_void() and do_para_end_void()
operate on the current buffer. The latter function also returns TRUE
if the last line in the buffer is part of the paragraph.
Remove the handling of 'edittop', 'totsize', and the mark, to make the
function more general, which is needed to make it undoable eventually.
This breaks the function somewhat. Fixes for this are forthcoming.
The function assumes that it works on the current buffer by handling
'totsize' and the mark. Remove this handling to make the function
more general, which is needed to make it undoable eventually.
This breaks the function somewhat. Fixes for this are forthcoming.
Using --zap or -Z on the command line, or 'set zap' in a nanorc file,
makes the <Bsp> and <Del> keys erase selected text (a marked region)
as they do in some other editors, and without affecting the cutbuffer.
This fulfills https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54837.
Requested-by: Liu Hao <lh_mouse@126.com>
Signed-off-by: Brand Huntsman <alpha@qzx.com>
This function allows the user to "make space": annihilating lines or
regions while keeping intact for pasting the stuff in the cutbuffer
that was cut or copied earlier.
Signed-off-by: Brand Huntsman <alpha@qzx.com>
Return immediately to editing mode when there are no messages for
the original file and the user does not wish to open any of the
included files that do have messages.
Also, reword the message that the linter gives then, and leave it
on the status bar (just like when Cancel is pressed).
The help lines will help differentiate this mode from normal editing
mode, and will tell the user how to jump to other messages.
This is a third step to address https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54714.
When something is spotlighted, it should survive a refresh of
the screen and an excursion to a help text, so the spotlight
should get painted whenever the edit window is drawn.
This fully fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54721.
The new function, justify_paragraph(), takes a quote length and a
paragraph length (which it should get from find_paragraph()), and
runs the paragraph at (current, current_x) through justify_format().
Move some fragments out of the justifying loop, and adjust/clarify comments
to account for the changes. This will allow some of the code to be cleaned
up and simplified in the next commits.
Only for BACK and DEL was the first call to update_undo() -- all other
types of action would call add_undo() first, so for them the action in
update_undo() would never be different, but the line number might have
changed (like for ENTER and INSERT), so for them exceptions needed to
be made, which was wasteful.
This addresses https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54728.
When using the internal spell checker, the message gets overwritten
immediately by "Creating misspelled word list...", and when using
the external spell checker, nano immediately exits from curses mode
and thus the message disappears (when in a terminal emulator) or it
soon gets wiped by the spell checker (when on a Linux console), thus
creating a little flash on the bottom row, which we can do without.
In the past, SIGWINCHes were responded to immediately (which was madness),
but since commit 75d64e67 all a SIGWINCH does is set a flag so that, when
the time comes to update the screen, nano knows the dimensions may have
changed. The mentioned commit removed most blockings and unblockings of
SIGWINCH, but not this one.
That is, wait with deleting words until they start under cursor,
so the user can see which word is goin to be eaten, and join lines
only when the cursor already sits at the edge of a line.
If find_paragraph() detects that we're not in a paragraph, it moves
forward a paragraph and then backward to that paragraph's beginning.
Make it check whether we're in a paragraph before moving backward
(since there might not *be* any more paragraphs), to prevent going
forth-and-back and never reaching the end of the buffer.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54573.
And restore the cursor to this position when redoing the cut+insert.
Also remove two unneeded conditions.
This fully fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54466.
When piping the buffer (or the marked region) to an external command,
we should wait not only for the external command to terminate but also
for the data-sending process, so that it will release its resources.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54499.
With-help-from: Marco Diego Aurélio Mesquita <marcodiegomesquita@gmail.com>
When undoing/redoing an alternate spell check (of the entire file
or of a backwards marked region), put the cursor back where it was
when the spell check was invoked/finished.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54466.
Since the last version, the user can filter an entire buffer through
an external command. This external command can also be a formatting
program, so there is no longer any need for this specific and special
formatter command.
Print routines are not asynchronous-safe.
But... the only reason the call of kill() could return an error code
is when the relevant process has already terminated -- which is not
a problem, because that was the goal of calling kill().
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54409.
Reported-by: Daniel Kozovsky <dkozovsk@redhat.com>
The undo item for ENTER should record the file size *before* the amount
of auto-indentation whitespace is added to it.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54344.
Reported-by: Liu Hao <lh_mouse@126.com>
Instead of being entirely silent when ^] is hit after whitespace
or punctuation, report what is lacking -- similar to M-] saying
"Not a bracket" when the cursor is not sitting on a bracket.
This makes the ^] keystroke more discoverable.
Take our cue from undoing/redoing line joins: when they take place on
the magicline without --nonewlines, they produce undo/redo items that
don't do anything to the text, but still position the cursor properly.
Reshuffle a bit of code so that we can do the same for magicline cuts.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54032.
The variable 'last_action' is set at the end of these functions,
serving to prevent a fresh action from being merged with an older
action further down on the stack. Setting 'last_action' before
exiting from undo()/redo() makes no sense.
Also adjust a sideways related old Changelog item.
The macro stuff, however, is basically my code: I told him exactly
how to do it, and I changed most of the patch before applying it.
Also, put myself in second place, as I've just about overtaken David
in the duration of maintainership.
The paragraph-aware indenting is needed only when automatic long-line
wrapping is on (that is, when not using 'nowrap': when writing prose).
When writing code, the user most likely uses --nowrap, which will make
nano indent a new line always to the same amount as the preceding line
-- when --autoindent is in effect, of course.
When doing autoindentation, and the next line is not the start of
a new paragraph, then use the indentation of that line for the new
line, as it is more likely to have the desired indentation -- the
current line might be the start of the paragraph and thus could
have a deviant indentation.
Pico wraps at the last blank character before or on the target column;
if there is no such blank, then it will wrap at the first blank *after*
the target column -- when it can wrap, it will wrap. Nano should do
the same (and judging from the comments, it intended to do the same),
instead of turning the paragraph into a single unwrapped line.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?53986.
First step to the next buffer, and then iterate until we either
find a match or are back at the buffer where we started.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?53970.
Signed-off-by: Marco Diego Aurélio Mesquita <address@hidden>
The two help lines will be redrawn in main() only when the current
menu is not MMAIN. So, set it to MLINTER as soon as the help lines
are cleared, just before preparing to invoke the linter.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?53967.
Reported-by: Marco Diego Aurélio Mesquita <marcodiegomesquita@gmail.com>