The code already allowed for variable width (multicell) *display* of the
newline omitted character, but there was no way to define it as being
more than one `wchar_t`.
This lets us use a string on console sessions (^J aka newline feed)
instead of an ambiguous character like `@` (used in some versions of
vim for ^M) or `~` (what we were using).
The system version of `wcwidth()` reflects the capabilities of the
system's own virtual terminal's view of the width of the character in
question, while fish's enhanced version (`widechar_wcwidth`) is much too
smart for most login terminals, which generally barely support anything
beyond ASCII text.
If, at startup, it is detected that we are running under a physical
console rather than within a terminal emulator running in a desktop
environment, take that as a hint to use the system-provided `wcwidth`.
The commit began passing the length of the wide string rather than the
length of the narrowed string after conversion via `wcstombs`. We *do*
have the actual length, but it's not (necessarily) the same as the
original value. We need to pass the result of `wcstombs` instead.
This created another local version of the variable just for the if-block.
Can't say I love the space prefix, but then I think we have too many
of these modes anyway.
If you use these to figure out if there _are_ staged files, or dirty
or whatever, you currently need to check the output, which relies on
the configured character.
Instead, we let them also return a useful status.
Notably, this is *not* simply the status of the git call.
__fish_git_prompt_X returns 0 if the repo is X.
This works for untracked, but the "diff" things return 1 if there is a
diff, so we invert the status for them.
See #5748.
[ci skip]
POSIX dictates here that incomplete conversions, like in
printf %d\n 15.2
or
printf %d 14g
are still printed along with any error.
This seems alright, as it allows users to silence stderr to accept incomplete conversions.
This commit implements it, but what's a bit weird is the ordering between stdout and stderr,
causing the error to be printed _after_, like
15
14
15.1: value not completely converted
14,2: value not completely converted
but that seems like a general issue with how we buffer the streams.
(I know that nonfatal_error is a copy of most of fatal_error - I tried
differently, and va_* is weird)
Fixes#5532.
Before this change, - was sorted with other punctuation before
A-Z. Now, it sorts above the rest of the characters.
This has a practical effect on completions, where when there are
both -s and --long with the same description, the short option
is now before the long option in the pager, which is what is now
selected when navigating `foo -<TAB>`. The long options can be
picked out with `foo --<TAB>`. Before, short options which
duplicated a long option literally could not be selected by
any means from the pager.
Fixes#5634
This tweaks wcsfilecmp such that certain punctuation characters will
come after A-Z.
A big win with `set <TAB>` - the __prefixed fish junk now comes
after the stuff users should care about.
Classic case of not seeing `and` as a new command:
`__fish_git_using_command config and anotherthing`
causes `and anotherthing` to be passed as arguments to
`__fish_git_using_command` instead of being executed.
[ci skip]
A function file for a function used only by one completion (and
unlikely to be used anywhere else).
If another user shows up, we can move it out again.
Part of #5279
[ci skip]
This disables an extra round of escaping in the `string replace -r`
replacement string.
Currently, to add a backslash to an a or b (to "escape" it):
string replace -ra '([ab])' '\\\\\\\$1' a
7 backslashes!
This removes one of the layers, so now 3 or 4 works (each one escaped
for the single-quotes, so pcre receives two, which it reads as one literal):
string replace -ra '([ab])' '\\\\$1' a
This is backwards-incompatible as replacement strings will change
meaning, so we put it behind a feature flag.
The name is kinda crappy, though.
Fixes#5474.
As a simple replacement for `wc -l`.
This counts both lines on stdin _and_ arguments.
So if "file" has three lines, then `count a b c < file` will print 6.
And since it counts newlines, like wc, `echo -n foo | count` prints 0.
Mostly related to usage _(L"foo"), keeping in mind the _
macro does a wcstring().c_str() already.
And a smattering of other trivial micro-optimizations certain
to not help tangibly.
This should be the last call to `grep` outside of a script
specifically related to `grep`.
(With the exception of `zpool`, which I've already written, but which
will probably be merged later)