Closes#19181
When the keystroke was empty ("") the `ime_key` was converted from
`None` to `Some("")` when `with_simulated_ime` was called. That was
leading to not intentional behavior when an empty keystroke was combined
with `shift-up` in a keybinding `["workspace::SendKeystrokes", "shift-up
"]`.
By adding a `key.is_empty()` we make sure the `ime_key` keeps as `None`.
This was manually tested.
Release Notes:
- Fixed empty keystroke with simulated ime
Signed-off-by: Bruno Calza <brunoangelicalza@gmail.com>
This PR adds some helper functions in the `ui` crate that can be used to
get textural representations of keystrokes or key bindings.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Simplify key dispatch code.
Previously we would maintain a cache of key matchers for each context
that
would store the pending input. For the last while we've also stored the
typed prefix on the window. This is redundant, we only need one copy, so
now
it's just stored on the window, which lets us avoid the boilerplate of
keeping
all the matchers in sync.
This stops us from losing multikey bindings when the context on a node
changes
(#11009) (though we still interrupt multikey bindings if the focus
changes).
While in the code, I fixed up a few other things with multi-key bindings
that
were causing problems:
Previously we assumed that all multi-key bindings took precedence over
any
single-key binding, now this is done such that if a user binds a
single-key
binding, it will take precedence over all system-defined multi-key
bindings
(irrespective of the depth in the context tree). This was a common cause
of
confusion for new users trying to bind to `cmd-k` or `ctrl-w` in vim
mode
(#13543).
Previously after a pending multi-key keystroke failed to match, we would
drop
the prefix if it was an input event. Now we correctly replay it
(#14725).
Release Notes:
- Fixed multi-key shortcuts not working across completion menu changes
([#11009](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/11009))
- Fixed multi-key shortcuts discarding earlier input
([#14445](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/14445))
- vim: Fixed `jk` binding preventing you from repeating `j`
([#14725](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/14725))
- vim: Fixed `escape` in normal mode to also clear the selected
register.
- Fixed key maps so user-defined mappings take precedence over builtin
multi-key mappings
([#13543](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13543))
- Fixed a bug where overridden shortcuts would still show in the Command
Palette
It is sometimes desirable to allow modifers to serve as keys themselves
for the purposes of keybinds. For example, the popular keybind in
jetbrains IDEs `shift shift` which opens the file finder.
This change treats modifers in the keymaps as keys themselves if they
are not accompanied by a key they are modifying.
Further this change wires up they key dispatcher to treat modifer change
events as key presses which are considered for matching against
keybinds.
Release Notes:
- Fixes#6460
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
Note:
- We have disabled all tests that rely on Postgres in the Linux CI. We
only really need to test these once, and as macOS is our team's primary
platform, we'll only enable them on macOS for local reproduction.
- We have disabled all tests that rely on the font metrics. We
standardized on Zed Mono in many fonts, but our CoreText Text System and
Cosmic Text System proved to be very different in effect. We should
revisit if we decide to standardize our text system across platforms
(e.g. using Harfbuzz everywhere)
- Extended the condition timeout significantly. Our CI machines are slow
enough that this is causing spurious errors in random tests.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
This PR includes two relevant changes:
- Platform binds (super, windows, cmd) will now parse on all platforms,
regardless of which one is being used. While very counter-intuitive
(this means that `cmd-d` will actually be triggered by `win-d` on
windows) this makes it possible to reuse keymap files across platforms
easily
- There is now a KeyContext `os == linux`, `os == macos` or `os ==
windows` available in keymaps. This allows users to specify certain
blocks of keybinds only for one OS, allowing you to minimize the amount
of keymappings that you have to re-configure for each platform.
Release Notes:
- Added `os` KeyContext, set to either `linux`, `macos` or `windows`
- Fixed keymap parsing errors when `cmd` was used on linux, `super` was
used on mac, etc.
This PR adds support for handling action releases — events that
are fired when the user releases all the modifier keys that were part of
an action-triggering shortcut.
If the user holds modifiers and invokes several actions sequentially via
shortcuts (same or different), only the last action is "released" when
its modifier keys released.
~The following methods were added to `Div`:~
- ~`capture_action_release()`~
- ~`on_action_release()`~
- ~`on_boxed_action_release()`~
~They work similarly to `capture_action()`, `on_action()` and
`on_boxed_action()`.~
See the implementation details in [this
comment](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/8782#issuecomment-2009154646).
Release Notes:
- Added a fast-switch mode to the file finder: hit `p` or `shift-p`
while holding down `cmd` to select a file immediately. (#8258).
Related Issues:
- Implements #8757
- Implements #8258
- Part of #7653
Co-authored-by: @ConradIrwin
Before this change if you had a matching binding and a pending key,
the matching binding happened unconditionally.
Now we will wait a second before triggering that binding to give you
time to complete the action.