The next patch wants to add state that should be reset when we clear the
pager, which will happen in this function.
This reverts commit b25b291d38.
No functional change.
The pager's rendering_needs_update() function detects some but not all
scenarios where a rendering is stale. In particular, it does not compare
the completion strings.
To make this work, we manually invalidate the pager rendering whenever we
update completion strings. The history pager needs the same functionality,
so let's move it into the pager.
No functional change.
This addresses code review feedback to not couple the purely visual
concept of cursor style with the logical concept of the selection size.
Instead this now uses a dedicated variable
`$fish_select_char_after_cursor` to determine whether to extend the
selection beyond the cursor:
* fish_select_char_after_cursor = 1 or unset -> extend selection
* all other cases -> place the selection end that the cursor
This fixes the handling of the right end of the selection. Currently the
right end is considered to be at the cursor position + 1. When using a
`block` or `underline` cursor this is arguably correct, because the
cursor has a width of 1 and spans from the current position to the next:
```
x x [x x x̲] x
```
This is incorrect though (or at least very unintuitive), when using a
`line` cursor:
```
x x [x x|x] x
```
This commit changes the strategy for determining the end of the
selection in the following way:
* If the current cursor as determined by `$fish_cursor_<bind_mode>` is
set to `line`, then a cursor width of `0` is assumed.
* In all other cases, including `block` and `underscore` as well as when
no value is set we retain the previous behavior of assuming a cursor
width of `1`.
```
x x [x x x̲] x
x x [x x|]x x
```
This change should not affect many users, because the selection is
probably used most by vi-mode users, who are also likely to use a
block cursor.
ESCAPE_ALL is not really a helpful name. Also it's the most common flag.
Let's make it the default so we can remove this unhelpful name.
While at it, let's add a default value for the flags argument, which helps
most callers.
The absence of ESCAPE_ALL makes it only escape nonprintable characters
(with some exceptions). We use this for displaying strings in the completion
pager as well as for the human-readable output of "set", "set -S", "bind"
and "functions".
No functional change.
Almost all edits to our commandline are funneled through
reader_data_t::push_edit(). Notable exceptions are undo/redo (which move
across existing edits instead). Due to an oversight, undo/redo fail to
trigger commandline update hooks. Fix that.
Our behavior of triggering hooks only for the search field looks weird. I
reckon that the command line eventually catches up, but this means we trigger
some hooks redundantly. Once we figure that out we can remove the new function.
command_line_has_transient_edit tracks the actual command line, not the
pager search field. We accidentally reset it after modifying the search field
which causes unexpected behavior - the commandline added by the completion
pager remains even after I press Escape.
Previously, the search text is used to find out which part of the
updated command line should be highlighted during a history search. This
approach will cause the incorrect part to be highlighted when the line
contains multiple instances of the search text.
To address this, we have to find out exactly where to highlight, i.e.
the offset of the current token in the command line (0 if not a token
search) plus the offset of the search text in the match.
This concerns what happens if the user types e.g. `grep --i` and grep or
its completions have not yet been loaded. Previously we would "bounce to
the main thread" from within the autosuggestion thread to load grep's
completions. However under concurrent execution, this may deadlock as the
main thread is waiting for something else.
In the new implementation, complete simply records the commands that it
would autoload, and returns them back to the caller, where the caller can
decide how to handle them.
In general iothread_perform_on_main risks deadlock under concurrent
execution and we should try to get rid of it.
There should be no user-visible change from this fix.
The fix for #3481 caused us to save the screen status after external
commands were run, fixing an unnecessary abandon-line when switching
modes. But we may also run commands not directly as part of a binding,
but instead via an on-variable event, e.g. for fish_bind_mode.
Extend this fix to all bindings, guarded by changes to exec_count. Now
any time an external command runs as part of a binding we should pick up
changes to the tty and not abandon the line.
Fixes#3481 again.
This concerns running a key binding which invokes a command. If that
command modifies the tty, then fish will spot the modification later and
then react to it by redrawing the prompt. However tty modifications may
be benign or desirable; for example switching the cursor from a line to
a block. Fix this by re-fstating the tty after running external
commands.
Fixes#3481
Previously, `kill-whole-line` kills the line and its following
newline. This is insufficient when we are on the last line, because
it would not actually clear the line. The cursor would stay on the
line, which is not the correct behavior for bindings like `dd`.
Also, `cc` in vi-mode used `kill-whole-line`, which is not correct
because it should not remove any newlines. We have to introduce
another special input function (`kill-inner-line`) to fix this.
Hitting tab on "echo **" will often result in more than 256 matches.
Commit 143757e8c (Expand wildcards on tab, 2021-11-27) describes this scenario
> If the expansion would produce more than 256 items, we flash the command
> line and do nothing, since it would make the commandline overfull.
Yet we actually erase the "**" token, which seems wrong since we already
flash the command line. Fix this, at the cost of making the code a bit uglier.
I tried to write a test in tests/pexpects/wildcard_tab.py but that doesn't
seem to work because pexpect provides only a "dumb" terminal. I wonder if we
can test what we write to the screen without depending on a terminal emulator.
Prior to this change, if you tab-completed a token with a wildcard (glob), we
would invoke ordinary completions. Instead, expand the wildcard, replacing
the wildcard with the result of expansions. If the wildcard fails to expand,
flash the command line to signal an error and do not modify it.
Example:
> touch file(seq 4)
> echo file*<tab>
becomes:
> echo file1 file2 file3 file4
whereas before the tab would have just added a space.
Some things to note:
1. If the expansion would produce more than 256 items, we flash the command
line and do nothing, since it would make the commandline overfull.
2. The wildcard token can be brought back through Undo (ctrl-Z).
3. This only kicks in if the wildcard is in the "path component
containing the cursor." If the wildcard is in a previous component,
we continue using completions as normal.
Fixes#954.
fish reads the tty modes at startup, and tries to restore them to the
original values on exit, to be polite. However this causes problems when
fish is run in a pipeline with another process which also messes with the
tty modes. Example:
fish -c 'echo foo' | vim -
Here vim's manipulation of the tty would race with fish, and often vim
would end up with broken modes.
Only restore the tty if we are interactive. Fixes#8705.
A history search ends when you move the cursor, but the commandline inserted by
history search is still marked as transient. This means that the next history
search will clear the transient commandline. This means we are dropping an undo
point, for example:
echo 11
echo 1
echo autosuggestion
echo^P # commandline is "echo 1"
^A # stop history search
^P # commandline is "echo 11"
^Z # Bug: commandline goes back to "echo", but it should be "echo 1"
In the worst case, we are switching from line-search to token-search (see
the attached test case). Clearing the transient edit means the line is gone
and only the token is left on the command line.
fish outputs the result of fish_title inside an escape sequence, which
happens to be terminated by \a (BEL). It may happen that the initial
output is interrupted; fish then emits the closing BEL and that makes an
annoying beep. Output the fish_title all at once, even if a signal is
delivered (so we don't get "stuck inside" the sequence).
This is related to #8628 in that it's a "torn escape sequence."
`read` allows specifying the initial command line text. This was
text got accidentally ignored starting in a32248277f. Fix this
regression and add a test.
Fixes#8633
Cygwin tests are failing because cygwin has a low limit of only 64 fds in
select(). Extend select_wrapper_t to also support using poll(), according to
a FISH_USE_POLL new define. All systems now use poll() except for Mac.
Rename select_wrapper_t to fd_readable_set_t since now it may not wrap
select().
This allows the deep-cmdsub.fish test to pass on Cygwin.
Use the remaining_to_disclose count to determine if all completions
are shown (allows consistent behavior between short and long completion
lists).
Closes#8485
On a commandline like "ls arg" (cursor at end) we do not expand
abbrevations on enter. OTOH, on "ls " we do expand. This can be
frustrating because it means that the two obvious ways to suppress
abbrevation expansion (C-Space or post-expansion C-Z) cannot be used to
suppress expansion of a command without arguments. (One workaround is
"ls #".)
Only expand-on-execute if the cursor is at the command name (no space
in between).
This is a strict improvement for realistic scenarios, because if there
is a space, the user has already expressed the intent to not expand
the abbreviation. (I hope no one is using recursive abbreviations.)
Closes#8423