Bind the toggling of a bookmark to <Alt+Insert>, and the jumping to the
previous and next bookmark to <Alt+PageUp> and <Alt+PageDown>, so that
these functions are available by default.
Signed-off-by: Marco Diego Aurélio Mesquita <marcodiegomesquita@gmail.com>
With the 'bookmark' function, the user can place a bookmark on any
line in the buffer. Multiple lines can be bookmarked in this way.
With 'prevbookmark' and 'nextbookmark', the user can then easily
return to the bookmarked lines. The search for a bookmark wraps
around, as if start and end of buffer are connected.
[However, in this implementation, when a bookmarked line is deleted,
the bookmark is deleted too. This is undesirable. Also, when such
a deleted line is pasted elsewhere, the bookmark reappears with it,
and when pasted multiple times, the bookmark will be there as many
times. This is thoroughly undesirable. These behaviors will be
changed in a later commit.]
A bookmark is not yet visible in any way.
This fulfills https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?57577.
Requested-by: Ken Tyler <kent@werple.net.au>
Signed-off-by: Marco Diego Aurélio Mesquita <marcodiegomesquita@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@telfort.nl>
This has the pleasing effect of not changing the linestruct of the
succeeding line when a line is cut.
This addresses https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?56226.
Instead of duplicating information, just refer to 'man nanorc'.
Also reshuffle a paragraph, and add a suggestion to just select
the syntax files that will actually get used.
It should give the same result as 'wc -w' as long as the content
of 'wordchars' does not affect the counting.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?58123.
Bug existed since version 2.6.2, since the --wordchars option was
introduced in commit 6f12992c.
First the clause for the intro text and the normal lines, and then the
clause for the continuation lines (that are narrower and indented).
Also, avoid blanking the status bar when initializing the subwindows
anyway, and avoid an unneeded resfreshing call -- the bottombars()
function will take care of that.
Normally, when undoing an <Enter> that created automatic indentation,
the created whitespace should be skipped when rejoining the two lines.
In other words: take the data starting from tail_x in the second line.
But when the <Enter> occurred at the end of leading whitespace, then
that whitespace has disappeared from the original line and it should
be copied back in from the second line. That is: from x is zero.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?58108.
Reported-by: Liu Hao <lh_mouse@126.com>
Bug existed since version 4.9, commit 1961c052.
Avoid having to decrement the count in order to offset the increment
at the end of the loop.
Also, declare a variable on a separate line, and rename it.
When using --nonewlines and the cursor has arrived at the end of the
final line, each press of M-6 would add another copy of that line to
the cutbuffer. That is clearly not the right behavior.
Also, give feedback when a press of M-6 does not actually copy anything.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?58088.
The bug was old -- it existed since before version 2.2.0.
First cutting the text to be copied (before copying it back into the
buffer) had unwanted side effects: it moved the cursor, and changed
the linestructs of the current line and the line where the mark was.
[This takes thirty more lines, but the idea is to later get rid of
the partitioning routines entirely.]