For historical reasons the rebinding code allows binding F13...F16,
which on most terminals are typable with Shift plus F1...F4. But,
at least on an Xfce Terminal, Shift plus F1...F12 produce F13...F24.
On a Linux console, Shift plus F1...F8 produce F13...F20. So: allow
to bind the full shifted F13...F24 range. It costs no extra code
and makes things more rounded.
For extensionless files, recognize C/C++ ones from the mode name
between the -*- marks on the first line.
This addresses https://savannah.gnu.org/patch/?9719.
Inspired-by: Devin Hussey <husseydevin@gmail.com>
The 'tabgives' command is syntax-specific and should be followed by a
string containing the character(s) that a single press of the <Tab> key
should produce -- most likely a single TAB or a small bunch of spaces,
but any string is allowed. This overrides the 'tabstospaces' option.
When one wants to make sure <Tab> inserts always four spaces and never
a TAB when editing a Python file, one could add to one's nanorc:
extendsyntax python tabgives " "
where there are four spaces between the quotes. And when one wants
to ensure, when editing a Makefile, that <Tab> always inserts a TAB
and never spaces, independent of what tabstospaces is set to, one
could add to one's nanorc:
extendsyntax makefile tabgives " "
where there is a literal TAB character between the quotes.
This fulfills https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?53661,
Requested-by: Andrew Pennebaker <andrew.pennebaker@gmail.com>
And addresses https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54760.
Requested-by: Henry van Megen <hvanmegen@gmail.com>
And addresses part of https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?54775.
Requested-by: Dirkjan Ochtman <dirkjan@ochtman.nl>
The regcomp() function from glibc-2.27 (and older) considers the
bracket expression ['-.] to be invalid -- mistakenly. Avoid using
any range expression in the relevant regex and instead enumerate
all acceptable characters.
This avoids https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?56766.
And generally improve the regex for coloring Perl variable names.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?56713.
With-help-from: Brand Huntsman <alpha@qzx.com>
Bug existed since the Perl syntax was introduced,
in version 1.2.2, commit 70047eef.
Require that a comment starts at the start of a line or is preceded by
whitespace. This prevents most hash signs used for other purposes (and
what follows them) getting colored as comments.
This brings color to CakePHP template files, and to CUDA files.
This addresses https://bugs.debian.org/932192.
Requested-by: Jérôme Bardot <bardot.jerome@gmail.com>
The quotes of an empty string ('' or "") should be colored just like
those of a non-empty string, because otherwise the text *between* two
empty strings on the same line gets colored.
Add an extra rule to discolor triple quotes again to not make them
look like valid by themselves.
Also, remove six superfluous backslashes.
This addresses https://savannah.gnu.org/patch/?9801.
Reported-by: Ryan Westlund <rlwestlund@gmail.com>
Some of these directives are now colored in their entirety, while for
a few others it's still just the keyword itself that is colored.
Signed-off-by: Liu Hao <lh_mouse@126.com>
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@telfort.nl>
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>
Assume that 'print' and 'exec' are statements when they are followed
by whitespace, and are functions otherwise. This does not highlight
"print'x'" nor "print{x}", but these statements are poor style.
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Mintz <bmintz@protonmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@telfort.nl>
Also, don't partially color "..." as an operator, because it isn't,
and color also the unary operator "#".
Signed-off-by: Mark-Weston <markweston@cock.li>
Adding "[abc]*" does not restrict the recognized header line in any way.
Also, improve the header-line regex for shell scripts, because it should
not match "barunscript" (for example).
Plus one that automake recognizes: if. Color them only at the start
of a line. Also color all possible assignment sequences (surrounded
by spaces to not color the ones in shell fragments), and add some
comments.
Recognize not just "Makefile" but also "makefile" and "GNUmakefile".
And recognize these only when they are the full filenames, not when
they are the tail part of a longer name.
Signed-off-by: Cristian Caloghera <cristi.caloghera@gmail.com>
When 'afterends' is set and Ctrl+Right or Shift+Ctrl+Right is pressed,
nano will stop at the ends of words instead of their beginnings.
Signed-off-by: Mark-Weston <markweston@cock.li>
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@telfort.nl>
The fragment "\<\." can never match anything because \< matches the
beginning of a word but "." is not a word character.
Replace \< with \B (the empty string not at the edge of a word).
Signed-off-by: Tom Levy <tomlevy93@gmail.com>
The list now includes all the Lua 5.3 functions listed on
https://www.lua.org/manual/5.3/#index.
Also, remove the coloring of just the library name, so that
only known library functions get highlighted.
Signed-off-by: Tom Levy <tomlevy93@gmail.com>
Since a "0x" by itself is invalid. Also add word boundaries, so that
e.g. "00x1" (which is invalid) does not get partial highlighting.
Also remove some redundant backslashes from the strings regex.
Signed-off-by: Tom Levy <tomlevy93@gmail.com>
Functions such as "io.close" should only be highlighted when the
package name ("io") is a word by itself, otherwise code such as
"fooio.close" gets unexpected partial highlighting.
Signed-off-by: Tom Levy <tomlevy93@gmail.com>
Also, remove the coloring of special single-quoted strings as they
get recolored by the subsequent general string-coloring command.
And remove the coloring of all-uppercase words, as other editors
do not color those either.
It's better to color some invalid things as if valid than the other
way around. So, as strings can validly contain any number of double
quotes, just accept *anything* between the delimiting double quotes
and demand that the closing quote is followed by whitespace or EOL.
Since file-5.10 (end of 2011), libmagic identifies a C file in most
cases as "C source" instead of as "C program". Nano's magic strings
for some other files didn't match any more what file-5.32 currently
produces, either. So, they have been adjusted, new ones added, and
old ones deleted.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?52445.
The succeeding character was needed to avoid miscolorings due to nano
getting confused about starts and ends. But since commit 7ef5c532,
nano should be getting the starts and ends always right, so... undo
"temporary" commit 7b2ea405 from two years ago.
This addresses https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51526.
Reported-by: <exodus6395@googlemail.com>
The new option 'set selectedcolor' applies to marked text, to the
currently selected file in the file browser, and to the highlighted
match during interactive search-and-replace.