Manual pages requested for output may undergo formatting
arranged by some roff-descendant program. Lines longer
than MANWIDTH or COLUMNS or real-estate width of a device
(with support for horizontal scrolling considered) can be
divided at either blank characters and/or at groups of word
characters (syllables) according to supported hyphenation
rules (although page authors are free to disable hyphenation
or prevent particular words from being hyphenated).
Groff‘s manual describes it as follows:
5.1.2 Hyphenation
Since the odds are not great for finding a set of words, for
every output line, which fit nicely on a line without
inserting excessive amounts of space between words, gtroff
hyphenates words so that it can justify lines without
inserting too much space between words. It uses an internal
hyphenation algorithm (a simplified version of the algorithm
used within TeX) to indicate which words can be hyphenated
and how to do so. When a word is hyphenated, the first part
of the word is added to the current filled line being output
(with an attached hyphen), and the other portion is added to
the next line to be filled.
It would be expedient for autoload/dist/man.vim (along with
syntax/man.vim‘s highlighting and ftplugin/man.vim‘s Ctrl-],
\K mappings) to allow for hyphenation of cross-references
to manual pages.
For example,
# Launch Vim [v9.0; patched: 1-1378, 1499] as follows:
MANWIDTH=80 vim --not-a-term +MANPAGER '+Man man' '+/conv(1)' '+norm B'
# Press Ctrl-] with cursor on _m_: "... use man‐
# conv(1) directly."_______________________[^]
#
# (Man v2.11.2)
# Launch Vim as follows:
MANWIDTH=80 vim --not-a-term +MANPAGER '+Man git' '+/config(1)' '+norm B'
# Press Ctrl-] with cursor on _g_: "... in git-
# config(1) for a more ..."_______________[^]
#
# (Git v2.39.2)
Co-authored-by: Aliaksei Budavei <0x000c70@gmail.com>
Functions col and cursor count each tab (0x9) as a byte, and
are complementary. On the other hand, the | command motion
takes into consideration how many screen columns a tab does
occupy and may move cursor to a column closer to the start
of line than col would report at that position.
The provided changes prefer the cursor function to the | command.
Co-authored-by: Aliaksei Budavei <0x000c70@gmail.com>
* Dedicate upcoming Vim 9.1 to Bram
Also replace in a few more places Brams email address and mention new
maintainers.
* Remove Bram from any Maintainer role
* runtime: Align Header
* it's mailing list not mailinglist
This is a collection of various PRs from github that all require a minor
patch number:
1) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12612
Do not conflate dictionary key with end of block
2) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12729:
When saving and restoring 'undolevels', the constructs `&undolevels` and
`:set undolevels` are problematic.
The construct `&undolevels` reads an unpredictable value; it will be the
local option value (if one has been set), or the global option value
(otherwise), making it unsuitable for saving a value for later
restoration.
Similarly, if a local option value has been set for 'undolevels',
temporarily modifying the option via `:set undolevels` changes the local
value as well as the global value, requiring extra work to restore both
values.
Saving and restoring the option value in one step via the construct
`:let &undolevels = &undolevels` appears to make no changes to the
'undolevels' option, but if a local option has been set to a different
value than the global option, it has the unintended effect of changing
the global 'undolevels' value to the local value.
Update the documentation to explain these issues and recommend explicit
use of global and local option values when saving and restoring. Update
some unit tests to use `g:undolevels`.
3) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12702:
Problem: Pip requirements files are not recognized.
Solution: Add a pattern to match pip requirements files.
4) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12688:
Add indent file and tests for ABB Rapid
5) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12668:
Use Lua 5.1 numeric escapes in tests and add to CI
Only Lua 5.2+ and LuaJIT understand hexadecimal escapes in strings. Lua
5.1 only supports decimal escapes:
> A character in a string can also be specified by its numerical value
> using the escape sequence \ddd, where ddd is a sequence of up to three
> decimal digits. (Note that if a numerical escape is to be followed by a
> digit, it must be expressed using exactly three digits.) Strings in Lua
> can contain any 8-bit value, including embedded zeros, which can be
> specified as '\0'.
To make sure this works with Lua 5.4 and Lua 5.1 change the Vim CI to
run with Lua 5.1 as well as Lua 5.4
6) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12631:
Add hurl filetype detection
7) https://github.com/vim/vim/pull/12573:
Problem: Files for haskell persistent library are not recognized
Solution: Add pattern persistentmodels for haskell persistent library
closes: #12612closes: #12729closes: #12702closes: #12688closes: #12668closes: #12631closes: #12573
Co-authored-by: lacygoill <lacygoill@lacygoill.me>
Co-authored-by: Michael Henry <drmikehenry@drmikehenry.com>
Co-authored-by: ObserverOfTime <chronobserver@disroot.org>
Co-authored-by: KnoP-01 <knosowski@graeffrobotics.de>
Co-authored-by: James McCoy <jamessan@jamessan.com>
Co-authored-by: Jacob Pfeifer <jacob@pfeifer.dev>
Co-authored-by: Borys Lykah <lykahb@fastmail.com>
Problem: Some "gomod" files are not recognized.
Solution: Check for "go.mod" file name before checking out the contents.
(Omar El Halabi, closes#12462)
Problem: .fs files are falsely recognized as forth files.
Solution: Check 100 lines for something that looks like forth. (Johan
Kotlinski, closes#12219, closes#11988)
Problem: Conflict between supercollider and scala filetype detection.
Solution: Do not check for "Class : Method", it can appear in both
filetypes. (Chris Kipp, closes#11699)