Closes#8628
Release Notes:
- Added support for resizing the current pane using vim keybinds with
the intention to follow the functionality of vim
- "ctrl-w +" to make a pane taller
- "ctrl-w -" to make the pane shorter
- "ctrl-w >" to make a pane wider
- "ctrl-w <" to make the pane narrower
- Changed vim pre_count and post_count to globals to allow for other
crates to use the vim count. In this case, it allows for resizing by
more than one unit. For example, "10 ctrl-w -" will decrease the height
of the pane 10 times more than "ctrl-w -"
- This pr does **not** add keybinds for making all panes in an axis
equal size and does **not** add support for resizing docks. This is
mentioned because these could be implied by the original issue
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
Closes#19417
Release Notes:
- vim : Added `r` and `a` as aliases for `[` and `<` text objects
(copying vim-surround).
- vim: (breaking change) rebound the function argument text object to
`g`.
- vim: Fixed surrounds to allow `b`/`B`/`r`/`a` anywhere you could use
`(`, `{`, `[`, `<`.
---
- vim: Added `b`, `B`, `r`, `s`, `a` as aliases for `()`, `{}`, `[]`,
`<>` in vim surround mode.
- Adds a new `surround_alias` function where aliases are defined.
- This function is used in `find_surround_pairs` to substitute the
chosen text with the alias
- The keymap is also modified to add support for Square and Angle
brackets when changing surrounds. These two were added to follow the
example of Tim Pope's ubiquitous `vim-surround` plugin.
- I had to overwrite the `vim::Argument` keybind in order to do this. I
moved it to use the `g` modifier. I realize this is a breaking change
and will happily move the `vim::AngleBracket` keymap to a different
letter if you'd like to avoid this. I'm just trying to keep with
convention. Ideally, Users would be able to define surround aliases
themselves in the config file but that's a much bigger task than I'm
able to do right now.
- I also added tests for the new aliases.
Thanks for making such a clean and organized codebase. I was able to
find the relevant section of code rather quickly thanks to this.
Performing `ysa")` on `"Hello World"` should produce `("Hello World")`.
Instead it places the parens inside the quotes (i.e. `"(Hello World)"`).
This PR fixes the behavior by preserving the `around` flag from the
operator sequence.
Closes#12976 and partially fixes#13841
Release Notes:
- Fixed the behavior of surrounding a text object in vim.
Closes#13579
A major painpoint in the Vim crate has been life-cycle management. We
used to have one global Vim instance that tried to track per-editor
state; this led to a number of subtle issues (e.g. #13579, the mode
indicator being global, and quick toggling between windows letting vim
mode's notion of the active editor get out of sync).
This PR changes the internal structure of the code so that there is now
one `Vim` instance per `Editor` (stored as an `Addon`); and the global
stuff is separated out. This fixes the above problems, and tidies up a
bunch of the mess in the codebase.
Release Notes:
* vim: Fixed accidental visual mode in project search and go to
references
([#13579](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13579)).
Adds support for surrounding text in visual/visual-line/visual-block
mode by re-using the `AddSurrounds` operator. There is no default
binding though so the user must follow the instructions to enable it.
Note that the behaviour varies slightly for the visual-line and
visual-block modes. In visual-line mode the surrounds are placed on
separate lines (the vim-surround extension also indents the contents but
I opted not to as that behaviour is less important with the use of code
formatters). In visual-block mode each of the selected regions is
surrounded and the cursor returns to the beginning of the selection
after the action is complete.
Release Notes:
- Added action to surround text in visual mode (no default binding).
Fixes#13122

In the past, Zed used a single switch called `autoclose` to control both
`autoclose` and `auto_surround` functionalities:
+ `autoclose`: when input '(', append ')' automatically.
+ `auto_surround`: when select text and input '(', surround text with
'(' and ')' automatically.
This PR separates `auto_surround` from `autoclose` to support `<`.
Previously, if `autoclose` of `<` was set to `false`, `auto_surround`
couldn't be used. However, setting `autoclose` to `true` would affect
the default behavior of simple expression. For example, `a < b` would
become `a <> b`.
For more information, see #13187.
Fix#12898.
Release Notes:
- Added support for `auto_surround`
([#12898](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/12898)).
This cleans up the neovim-backed vim tests:
- removed exempted tests (we'll rely on bug reports to find missing edge
cases)
- moved all assertions into non-async fn's so that failures are
reporting on the right file/line
- removed the NeovimBackedBindingTestContext
- renamed a few things to make them clearer
- reduced the number of permutations tested in some cases to reduce
slowest test from 60s to 5s
Release Notes:
- N/A
For #11084 In the case of an indentation in front of the current line,
it may also be necessary to deal with the start point of the selected
range
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
For #4965
There are still some minor issues:
1. When change the surround and delete the surround, we should also
decide whether there are spaces inside after deleting/replacing
according to whether it is open parentheses, and replace them
accordingly, but at present, delete and change, haven't done this
adaptation for current pr, I'm not sure if I can fit it in the back or
if it needs to be fitted together.
2. In the selection mode, pressing s plus brackets should also trigger
the Add Surrounds function, but this MR has not adapted the selection
mode for the time being, I think we need to support different add
behaviors for the three selection modes.(Currently in select mode, s is
used for Substitute)
3. For the current change surrounds, if the user does not find the
bracket that needs to be matched after entering cs, but it is a valid
bracket, and will wait for the second input before failing, the better
practice here should be to return to normal mode if the first bracket is
not found
4. I reused BracketPair in language, but two of its properties weren't
used in this mr, so I'm not sure if I should create a new struct with
only start and end, which would have less code
I'm not sure which ones need to be changed in the first issue, and which
ones can be revised in the future, and it seems that they can be solved
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>