Be more careful with sign extension issues stemming from the differences in how
an untyped literal is promoted to an integer vs how a typed (and signed) `char`
is promoted to an integer.
Also convert some `const[expr] static xxx` to `const[expr] xxx` where it makes
sense to let the compiler deduce on its own whether or not to allocate storage
for a constant variable rather than imposing our view that it should have STATIC
storage set aside for it.
A few call sites were not making use of the `XXX_LEN` definitions and were
calling `strlen(XXX)` - these have been updated to use `const_strlen(XXX)`
instead.
I'm not sure if any toolchains will have raise any issues with these changes...
CI will tell!
Let's hope this doesn't causes build failures for e.g. musl: I just
know it's good on macOS and our Linux CI.
It's been a long time.
One fix this brings, is I discovered we #include assert.h or cassert
in a lot of places. If those ever happen to be in a file that doesn't
include common.h, or we are before common.h gets included, we're
unawaringly working with the system 'assert' macro again, which
may get disabled for debug builds or at least has different
behavior on crash. We undef 'assert' and redefine it in common.h.
Those were all eliminated, except in one catch-22 spot for
maybe.h: it can't include common.h. A fix might be to
make a fish_assert.h that *usually* common.h exports.
1. Bravely use a real enum for has_arg, despite the warnings.
2. Use some C++11 initializers so we don't have to pass an int for this
parameter.
No functional change expected here.
This introduces a new variable, $fish_color_option, that can be used
to highlight options differently.
Options are tokens starting with `-`, but only up to (and including!)
the first `--`.
Fixes#8292.
In many cases we currently discard escaped newlines, since they
are often unnecessary (when used around &|;). Escaped newlines
are useful for structuring argument lists. Allow them for variable
assignments since they are similar.
Closes#7955
fish_indent used to increment the indentation level whenever we saw an escaped
newline. This broke because of recent changes to parse_util_compute_indents().
Since parse_util_compute_indents() function already indents continuations
there is not much to do for fish_indent - we can simply query the indentation
level of the newline. Reshuffle the code since we need to pass the offset
of the newline. Maybe this can even be simplified further.
Fixes#7720
This may slightly improve performance by allowing the compiler greater
visibility into what is happing on top of not executing at runtime in
some hot paths, but more importantly, it gets rid of magic constants in a
few different places.
This introduces a new variable $fish_color_keyword that will be used
to highlight keywords. If it's not defined, we fall back on
$fish_color_command as before.
An issue here is that most of our keywords have this weird duality of
also being builtins *if* executed without an argument or with
`--help`.
This means that e.g.
if
is highlighted as a command until you start typing
if t
and then it turns keyword.
Now that we have multiple clients of count_preceding_backslashes, factor
it out from fish_indent into wcstringutil.h, and then use the shared
implementation.
It could be nice to use a heuristic for this in future, but for now let's
stick to the old behavior so we can keep formatting scripts without occasional
bad formatting changes.
A heuristic could also be used to break lines after |, && or || but I don't
think there is much need for that at the moment.
Closes#7252
This used to be used to determine which token contained the cursor, so
as to highlight potential paths. But now we highlight all potential paths,
so we can remove the field.
Also return the number of failed files.
I decided to *just* print the filenames (newline-separated because
NULLs are annoying here) to make it easier to deal with.
See #7251.
Prior to this change, when emitting gap text (comments, newlines, etc),
fish_indent would use the indentation of the text at the end of the gap.
But this has the wrong result for this case:
begin
command
# comment
end
as the comment would get the indent of the 'end'. Instead use the indent
computed for the gap text itself.
Addresses one case of #7252.
Prior to this change, fish would "resolve" highlight specs to rgb colors
right before use. This requires a series of variable lookups; profiling
showed 30% of draw time was spent here.
Switch to caching these (within a single redraw only).
fish_color_match is a variable which controls syntax highlighting for
matching quotes and parens, but only with interactive `read` with shell
highlighting disabled. It seems unlikely that anybody cares about this.
This switches fish_indent from parsing with parse_tree
to the new ast.
This is the most difficult transition because the new ast retains less
lexical information than the old parse tree. The strategy is:
1. Use parse_util_compute_indents to compute indenting for each token.
2. Compute the "gap text" between the text of significant tokens. This
contains whitespace, comments, etc.
3. "Fix up" the gap text while leaving the significant tokens alone.
This is the first commit of a series intended to replace the existing
"parse tree" machinery. It adds a new abstract syntax tree and uses a more
normal recursive descent parser.
Initially there are no users of the new ast. The following commits will
replace parse_tree -> ast for all usages.
I kinda hate how fussy clang-format is. It reflows text
constantly (line limit), forces things onto one line *except* when
they're too long, and wants to turn this:
```c++
return true;;
```
into this:
```c++
return true;
;
```
instead of, you know, eliminating the second semicolon?
Anyway, it is what it is and we use it, I'll just look into getting some
more slack.
Things like
```fish
\
echo foo
```
or
```fish
echo foo; \
echo bar
```
are a formatting blunder and should be handled.
This makes it so the escaped newline is removed, and the
semicolon/token_type_end handling will then put the statements on
different lines.
One case this doesn't handle brilliantly is an escaped newline after a
pipe:
```fish
echo foo | \
cat
```
is turned into
```fish
echo foo | cat
```
which here works great, but in long pipelines can cause issues.
Pipes at the end of the line cause fish to continue parsing on the
next line, so this can just be written as
```fish
echo foo |
cat
```
for now.
This tries to see if quotes guard some expansion from happening. If it
detects a "weird" character it'll leave the quotes in place, even in
some cases where it might not trigger.
So
for i in 'c' 'color'
turns into
for i in c color
The rationale here is that these quotes are useless, wasting
space (and line length), but more importantly that they are
superstitions. They don't do anything, but look like they do.
The counter argument is that they can be kept in case of later
changes, or that they make the intent clear - "this is supposed to be
a string we pass".
This commit recognizes an existing pattern: many operations need some
combination of a set of variables, a way to detect cancellation, and
sometimes a parser. For example, tab completion needs a parser to execute
custom completions, the variable set, should cancel on SIGINT. Background
autosuggestions don't need a parser, but they do need the variables and
should cancel if the user types something new. Etc.
This introduces a new triple operation_context_t that wraps these concepts
up. This simplifies many method signatures and argument passing.