And hide the cursor again as soon as the user scrolls.
Achieve this through making the 'didfind' variable global.
Also, remove a superfluous call of wnoutrefresh(), as bottombars()
already does that.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?50918.
Reported-by: David Lawrence Ramsey <pooka109@gmail.com>
Things have morphed over time and display_buffer() no longer actually
displays the buffer -- it just displays the title bar, precalculates
the multiline color info, and schedules a refresh of the edit window.
This avoids https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?49912 while at the same time
avoiding to draw the edit window twice in a row -- the first drawing
would use a wrong margin, which results in a visible and irritating
shift left or right of the content upon the second drawing.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?50877.
An iterator should not be called "start_col", because it is only the
starting column at the very beginning.
Also, start_col (after the rename) can never be /larger/ than column.
Allow the user to search in a help text with ^W and M-W.
Achieve this by not writing the help text directly to the screen
but first writing it to a temporary file and then opening this file
in a new buffer, and treating it specially: the normal file-reading
feedback is suppressed, the titlebar shows the headline of the text,
the cursor is hidden, and the menu is limited to just the up and down
movements and searching.
This fulfills https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?28994.
Signed-off-by: Rishabh Dave <rishabhddave@gmail.com>
The interval 2013-2017 for the Free Software Foundation is valid
because in those years there were releases with changes by either
Chris or David, and the GNU maintainers guide advises to mention
a new year in all files of a package, not just in the ones that
actually changed, and be done with it for the rest of the year.
On some terminal emulators, Ctrl+Home and Ctrl+End produce special
keycodes, distinct from plain Home and End. Make the users of those
emulators (and of the Linux console) glad by making ^Home and ^End
do the obvious thing, and the combinations with Shift too.
Use futimens() instead of utime() to change the timestamps on a backup
file. Otherwise, a non-privileged user could create an arbitrary symlink
with the name of the backup file and in this way fool a privileged user
to call utime() on the attacker-chosen file.
Import the relevant gnulib module to make sure futimens() is available.
If the number of columns in the edit window changes (which currently
only happens in two places: in regenerate_screen(), called when the
window is resized; and in main(), when line numbering mode is toggled),
the display will break if we're in softwrap mode and firstcolumn is
nonzero. This is because the column width of softwrapped chunks has
changed, and firstcolumn is no longer the starting column of a chunk,
an assumption that all code using firstcolumn relies on.
To fix this problem, add a new function, ensure_firstcolumn_is_aligned(),
to adjust firstcolumn to the starting column of the chunk it's on, and
use it when the number of columns in the edit window changes.
(Note that this function uses the simplest possible fix, and could
probably be made more sophisticated.)
The new function, update_softwrapped_line(), is called from inside
update_line() when softwrap mode is on, so that existing calls remain
unchanged. It takes no index, instead displaying edittop from column
firstcolumn, and all other lines from column zero.
If current is on edittop, it's displayed using the edittop rules, but
this is not a problem: if current[current_x] is above edittop at column
firstcolumn, it's offscreen, and that should be handled before calling
update_line() anyway.
Together with the preceding bunch of changes,
this fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?47667.
Since all lines can be partially scrolled off the screen now
(except for the top line of the edit window, which is forthcoming),
ensure_line_is_visible() is no longer needed.
Since all lines can be partially scrolled off the screen now
(except for edittop, which is forthcoming), the maxlines global
variable and its computation mechanism are no longer needed.
Add the parameter be_clever to both functions. When be_clever is FALSE,
smart home and dynamic home are disabled in do_home(), and dynamic end is
disabled in do_end(), so that these functions only move to the beginning
or end of the current line or chunk.
This simple home and end functionality is needed to improve do_left()
and do_right()'s horizontal behavior with softwrapped chunks, which is
forthcoming.
These improvements will eventually make do_home() and do_end() take
parameters. Since the global function lists can hold only functions
without parameters, preemptively add do_home_void() and do_end_void(),
and make the global function lists use them.
Add the new functions current_is_above_screen() (which doesn't account
for softwrapped chunks yet, but will when we can scroll edittop partially
off the screen, which is forthcoming), current_is_below_screen() (which
determines whether current[current_x] is past the softwrapped chunk at
the bottom of the screen), and current_is_offscreen() (the union of the
previous two functions).
edit_redraw() and edit_refresh() now use current_is_offscreen() to check
whether they should adjust the viewport, and adjust_viewport() now uses
current_is_above_screen() to determine whether current is on or below
the screen in FLOWING mode.
Add the new function less_than_a_screenful() to accomplish this.
It uses go_back_chunks() to count the number of softwrapped chunks
between the end point and the starting point of the paste.
Now softwrap mode and non-softwrap mode behave the same way when
uncutting fewer than editwinrows rows of text. Accordingly, remove
the call to ensure_line_is_visible(), as it no longer applies.
These functions, go_back_chunks() and go_forward_chunks(), take a number
of softwrapped chunks (screen rows) to move, a pointer to a buffer, and
a location (specifically, a starting column of a softwrapped chunk). If
they move successfully, they will update the buffer pointer and location
to point to the beginning of the softwrapped chunk they moved to.
Since non-softwrap mode is effectively just a subset of softwrap mode
in which every line takes up one chunk, these functions also work in
non-softwrap mode. In this case, their starting column will always be
zero, as it would be in softwrap mode on a line that takes up one chunk.
Nothing uses these functions yet, but that is forthcoming.
With read_file() revamped, it now uses partition_filestruct() indirectly
via ingraft_buffer(), so we can't use partition_filestruct() to replace
marked text in the alternate spell checker anymore without segfaulting.
Add the new function replace_marked_buffer() to accomplish this instead.
Based on replace_buffer(), it uses extract_buffer() to throw away the
marked un-spell-checked text, and then uses read_file() to insert the
spell-checked text at the position where the mark was.
Accordingly, remove unneeded partitioning and related stuff from
do_alt_speller(). Besides pasting the file into the buffer at
current[current_x], ingraft_buffer() also deals with renumbering,
updating totsize, and handling a magicline, so do_alt_speller()
doesn't need to do those anymore.
Move buffer handling and '\r' stripping from read_line() to read_file(),
so that the file gets its format determined and gets stored in its own
buffer entirely in one function. Then use ingraft_buffer() to insert
this new buffer into the current one.
In addition to pasting the file at current[current_x], ingraft_buffer()
also deals with renumbering, the updating of totsize, and the handling
of a magicline, so read_file() doesn't need to do those anymore.
Note that all this makes read_file() depend on the position of
current[current_x] to know where to insert the file. Accordingly,
set current_x to zero in initialize_buffer_text() instead of in
make_new_buffer(), so that replace_buffer() keeps working properly.
Also, rename a parameter to be less cryptic, and remove an entire
condition because the relevant block will never be reached when
getting called from the help routines: if blank_loc is negative,
the function will have bailed out in the preceding if.
When replacements are made, nothing needs to be reset any more
(it was done insufficiently anyway). Just make sure the screen
is refreshed when all is done -- this may be superfluous when
doing interactive replacements, but not when replacing all.
This disallows entering a verbatim ^J (0x0A) when typing text or
search terms, and disallows a verbatim ^@ (0x00) when typing a
filename. Nano beeps when the disallowed code is attempted.
This addresses https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?49897.
In path names and file names, 0x0A means an embedded newline and
should be shown as ^J, but in anything related to the file's data,
0x0A is an encoded NUL and should be displayed as ^@.
So... switch mode at the two main entry points into the "file system"
(reading in a file, and writing out a file), and also when drawing the
titlebar. Switch back to the default mode in the main loop.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?49893.
The byte 0x0A means 0x00 *only* when it is found in nano's internal
representation of a file's data, not when it occurs in a file name.
This fixes the second part of https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?49867.
The fsfromline() function is mostly used by the undo functions, which
are not present in the tiny version. It is also used by the comment/
uncomment feature, but this feature cannot be enabled when --enable-tiny
is in effect.
Convert digits() to take a ssize_t instead of an int, since it's
used on ssize_t line numbers. And properly use the long modifier
when displaying a line number.
Also, conditionalize the digits() prototype.
(The variable 'pletion_line' is not conditionalized with this option, as
it would become messy. The compiler will probably be able to elide it.)
When using --enable-tiny, it is not possible to use --enable-wordcomp,
because the word completion function uses the undo system.
Executing the 'complete_a_word' function will search from the start
of the current buffer for entire words that begin with the fragment
that is before the cursor, and will complete this fragment to the
first word that is found. Each consecutive call of 'complete_a_word'
will search for the next matching word and will complete the fragment
to that. By default the function is bound to the ^] keystroke.
Signed-off-by: Sumedh Pendurkar <sumedh.pendurkar@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@justemail.net>
Achieve this by reusing the code that gives feedback when trying to
save a buffer while using --tempfile and the file has no name yet.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?48622.
It does not update anything -- it just picks a new point from
where to start displaying the buffer. All actual updating of
the screen is done by edit_refresh() and edit_redraw() and such.
It can be activated with --linenumbers on the command line or with
'set linenumbers' in a nanorc file, and it can be toggled with M-#.
Signed-off-by: Faissal Bensefia <faissaloo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@justemail.net>
Add the keycodes and routines to allow the user to forego setting the
mark explicitly (with M-A / ^6) and instead quickly select a few words
or lines by holding down Shift together with the movement keys.
(Some combinations with Shift are swallowed by some terminal emulators.
To work around some of those, the combinations Shift+Alt+Left/Right work
as Shift+Home/End and Shift+Alt+Up/Down work as Shift+PageUp/PageDown.)
For horizontal scrolling, it is not the /desired/ column position that
is relevant for determining whether a line needs to be redrawn after a
cursor movement, but the /actual/ column positions before and after.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?48627,
and fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?48629.
Leave the rest of any escape sequence to be processed normally, which
should be possible because those characters are all in ASCII range.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?48318.
And hard-bind the keys Ctrl+Up and Ctrl+Down to these functions.
Unlike the paragraph-jumping code, these new functions disregard
any indentation, treating only blank lines as separators. They
also do an automatic smart home when that option is set.
This fulfills https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?48291.
This allows the user to specify which other characters, besides the
default alphanumeric ones, should be considered as part of a word, so
that word operations like Ctrl+Left and Ctrl+Right will pass them by.
Using this option overrides the option --wordbounds.
This fulfills https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?47283.
When we get a ^J as verbatim input, it is not possible to include it
into the file buffer or the prompt answer, because this would mean
adding an encoded null to the buffer or answer, and that is not what
the user intended. One option would have been to simply ignore a ^J
in verbatim input. But the choice has been made to act the same way
as when the ^J (0x0A) is found in the file data: start a new line.
That is the same response as to the Enter key, yes -- but the code
for the Enter key is ^M (0x0D), not ^J. So, to be more precise,
rename the relevant variable from 'got_enter' to 'got_newline'.
By moving the test for the only situation where do_comment() does nothing
(when only the magic line is selected) further up front, the add_undo()
can be called before the commenting/uncommenting starts and two variables
and an extra function are made unnecessary.
Store the file sizes from before and after the commenting/uncommenting
in the undo struct, so they can be restored when undoing or redoing.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?48062.
Signed-off-by: Mike Scalora <mike@scalora.org>
This allows for commenting or uncommenting a line or a bunch of lines
with a single keystroke (default binding: M-3). The characters used
for commenting/uncommenting are specified by the active syntax file.
Reviewed-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@justemail.net>
Signed-off-by: Mike Scalora <mike@scalora.org>
Error messages about lock files should not get overwritten by purely
informational messages, only by alerting ones.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?47963.
If during startup there are multiple error messages, currently only the
last one remains and can be read. To improve on that, introduce a short
pause between error messages -- even if it's not enough to read them all,
at least the user will be aware that there are multiple ones.
This also causes a few error messages to beep that currently don't beep,
such as when a file is unwritable.
When verifying that a match is a separate word (during spell checking),
instead of first copying out the word, then passing the word, and then
measuring its length, just pass its length straigtaway.
When we're spell checking, we don't need a special mechanism to detect
we have come full circle: reaching the end-of-buffer means we're done.
So don't bother to reset came_full_circle when we're spell checking
(when begin == NULL) but simply ignore its value.
Add a global variable, 'present_path', so that 'cwd_tab_completion()'
knows where the user is in the browser, so that it can try completions
against names in that directory instead of always against names in the
current working directory (where nano was invoked).
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?47234.
Signed-off-by: Rishabh Dave <rishabhddave@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@justemail.net>
For a little contrast with the function edit_refresh() -- it's
annoying that when you search for the latter you get to see all
the settings of the flag too.
Commit 36ec76a made the wrong change: after a tab that did not list any
file names on the screen, a refresh /is/ needed, because a previous tab
might have listed things on the screen. But at the end of the prompt,
it is not necessary to refresh the edit window if things were listed,
because the window will be refreshed anyway after reading in a file.
This is a remnant from 2001, when things were different. Now, there
is no need to refresh the edit window when tabbing produced no list.
When it did produce a list, it is cleared off later.
Instead of saving the current value of placewewant, then setting the
new value, and then passing the old value to edit_redraw() in seven
different places, just let edit_redraw() do this saving and setting.
In the bargain placewewant is now only recalculated when it matters
-- when allow_update is TRUE -- and not when it's superfluous.
SVN revision 5748 could cause some 'else's to be orphaned.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?47610.
Reported-by: Thomas Rosenau <thomasr@fantasymail.de>
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@justemail.net>
that is taking too long. This fixes Savannah bug #47439.
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a leading underscore as the only difference is not enough.
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the first element, and the insertion of a new element) directly.
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(Note that openfile cannot be NULL here. And in case it is,
nano should crash because DEBUG is enabled.)
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history. This fixes Savannah bug #47124 reported by Mike Frysinger.
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because 'allow_cntrls == FALSE' meant that controls were being filtered.
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This fixes Savannah bug #46904 reported by Mike Frysinger.
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routine isn't getting something from somewhere but just converting it.
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And making the checking for an impatient user into a separate routine.
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not just for the first. This fixes Savannah bug #46511.
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ncurses for the keycodes. This addresses Debian bug #800681.
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This now mirrors unlink_opennode() and delete_opennode().
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more symmetrical: wrapped in add_undo() + update_undo() where needed.
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writing out the file immediately, without prompting.
Patch by David Lawrence Ramsey.
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nor bothering with a separate initialization function when it's used only once.
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has not been built in, since the default values are quite usable.
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from the cursor to the preceding or succeeding word start.
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first asking for its name. Patch was suggested by Seiya Nuta.
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happens but only when checking for keyboard input. It now reports the
SIGWINCH via a special key value to the calling routine, to allow not
only the main editor but also the help viewer and the file browser to
adapt their display to the new size.
Patch by Mahyar Abbaspour, somewhat edited by Benno.
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before finding a unused filename takes an annoying amount of time.
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because the first sounds too much like "found_whole" to me.
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And condensing the renamed function, and making it void because
the result isn't used anyway.
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instead of at the bottom or top, to show it in context.
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switch_to_prevnext_buffer() to support message passthrough
when trying to lock files using multibuffer.
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* New formatter code to support syntaxes like
go which have tools to automatically lint and reformat the text for
you (gofmt), which is lovely. rcfile option formatter, function
text.c:do_formatter() and some other calls.
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And starting to use this to make the code a bit cleaner.
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confusion with CUT_TO_END, which is about end-of-line.
Patch by Mark Majeres.
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having them declared everywhere and passing them around endlessly.
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And undoing line wraps together with their causal text additions, and not as
separate actions because the user did not make them.
Patch by Mark Majeres.
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and handling multibyte characters correctly.
*Patch by Mark Majeres.*
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pastes. This fixes many undo problems and Savannah bug #25585.
*Patch by Mark Majeres.*
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to change its description to Unjustify at the appropriate moment.
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