Commit Graph

687 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Johannes Altmanninger
24e4fdd695 Support "bind xyz" again
This was used in Vi mode (for yiw and "*p) so rejecting it is a bit reckless.
2024-04-20 13:34:08 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
e571774c97 Make alt-d on empty commandline call dirh again
alt-d used to do that until evil merge[*] 213e90704 (Merge remote-tracking branch
'upstream/master' into bind_mode, 2014-01-15) which changed the order of
the \ed bindings such that the smart dirh version would be shadowed by the
simpler ones.

[*] git blame alone failed to find it because it skips merge commits.
2024-04-20 12:11:30 +02:00
Fabian Boehm
6558c0a8e5 key: Actually do engage legacy mode if first char is control
This was already in the comment.

Fixes #10450
2024-04-18 22:18:51 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
bdd478bbd0 Disable focus reporting on non-tmux again for now
We sometimes leak ^[[I and ^[[O focus reporting events when run from VSCode's
"Run python file" button in the top right corner. To reproduce I installed
the ms-python extension set the VSCode default shell to fish and repeatedly
ran a script that does "time.sleep(1)". I believe VSCode synthesizes keys
and triggers a race condition.

We can probably fix this but I'm not sure when I'll get to it (given how
relatively unimportant this feature is).

So let's go back to the old behavior of only enabling focus reporting in tmux.

I believe that tmux is affected by the same VSCode issue (also on 3.7.1 I
think) but I haven't been able to get tmux to emit focus reporting sequences
yet.  Still, keep it to not regress cursor shape (#4788).  So far this is
the only motivation for focus reporting and I believe it is only relevant
for terminals that can split windows (though there are a bunch that do).

Closes #10448
2024-04-18 10:38:15 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
9af6a64fd2 Fix bad contrast in search match highlighting
This is another problem that has been bothering me for years: as mentioned
in 1dd901e52 (Maintain cursor in history prefix search, 2024-04-12), up-arrow
search highlights search matches but the contrast is really bad, especially in
command position, because the search matches --background=brblack is combined
with whatever foreground syntax highlighting the command has.  The history
pager had a similar problem (for the selected history item) but circumented
it by disabling syntax highlighting altogether for the selected item.

fish_color_search_match's foreground component is ignored.
Let's use it instead of syntax highlighting.

This fixes the contrast on some default colorschemes but the bryellow
foreground looks weirdly like an error/warning on some terminals.  Change it
to white. This needs a hack because we don't have a canonical way to tell
if a uvar has been set by the user. Fortunately the foreground component
hasn't been used at all so far, so we're not so much changing it as much as
initializing it.
2024-04-15 09:40:21 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
27b1f28108 Minimize key parsing fallback logic and update changelog 2024-04-15 09:40:21 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
a37629f869 fish_clipboard_copy: indent multiline commands
See also the earlier commits.

Closes #10437
2024-04-15 09:20:44 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
611a0572b1 builtins type/functions: indent interactively-defined functions
This means that in case no editor is defined, "fish_indent" is now required
to fix the indentation.

Fixes #8603
2024-04-15 08:32:31 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
222673f339 edit_command_buffer: send indented commandline to editor
Indented multiline commandlines look ugly in an external editor.  Also,
fish doesn't properly handle the case when the editor runs fish_indent.
Fix is by indenting when exporting the commandline and un-indenting when
importing the commandline again.

Unindent only if the file is properly indented (meaning at least by the
amount fish would use).  Another complication is that we need to offset
cursor positions by the indentation.

This approach exposes "fish_indent --only-indent" and "--only-unindent"
though I don't imagine they are useful for others so I'm not sure if this
is the right place and whether we should even document it.

One alternative is to add "commandline --indented" to handle indentation
transparently.
So  "commandline --indented" would print a indented lines,
and "commandline --indented 'if true' '    echo'" would remove the unecessary
indentation before replacing the commandline.
That would probably simplify the logic for the cursor position offset.
2024-04-15 08:32:31 +02:00
Anurag Singh
7369516871 whitespace 2024-04-15 08:31:16 +02:00
Anurag Singh
c044d5e3f0 add history append subcommand 2024-04-15 08:31:16 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
29b309dd5f shift-delete to delete current history search match
Popular operating systems support shift-delete to delete the selected item
in an autocompletion widgets.  We already support this in the history pager.
Let's do the same for up-arrow history search.

Related discussion: https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/9515
2024-04-13 20:23:51 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
00432df420 Trigger abbreviations after inserting process separators
On

    a;

we don't expand the abbreviation because the cursor is right of semicolon,
not on the command token. Fix this by making sure that we call expand-abbr
with the cursor on the semicolon which is the end of the command token.
(Now that our bind command execution order is less surprising, this is doable.)

This means that we need to fix the cursor after successfully expanding
an abbreviation. Do this by setting the position explicitly even when no
--set-position is in effect.

An earlier version of this patch used

    bind space self-insert backward-char expand-abbr or forward-char

The problem with that (as a failing test shows) was that given "abbr m
myabbr", after typing "m space ctrl-z", the cursor would be after the "m",
not after the space.  The second space removes the space, not changing the
cursor position, which is weird.  I initially tried to fix this by adding
a hack to the undo group logic, to always restore the cursor position from
when begin-undo-group was used.

    bind space self-insert begin-undo-group backward-char expand-abbr end-undo-group or forward-char

However this made test_torn_escapes.py fail for mysterious reasons.
I believe this is because that test registers and triggers a SIGUSR1 handler;
since the signal handler will rearrange char events, that probably messes
with the undo group guards.

I resorted to adding a tailor-made readline cmd. We could probably remove
it and give the new behavior to expand-abbr, not sure.

Fixes #9730
2024-04-13 20:11:11 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
29dc307111 Insert some completions with quotes instead of backslashes
File names that have lots of spaces look quite ugly when inserted as
completions because every space will have a backslash.

Add an initial heuristic to decide when to use quotes instead of
backslash escapes.

Quote when
1. it's not an autosuggestion
2. we replace the token or insert a fresh one
3. we will add a space at the end

In future we could relax some of these requirements.

Requirement 2 means we don't quote when appending to an existing token.
Need to find a natural behavior here.

Re 3, if the completion adds no space, users will probably want to add more
characters, which looks a bit weird if the token has a trailing quote.
We could relax this requirement for directory completions, so «ls so»
completes to «ls 'some dir with spaces'/».

Closes #5433
2024-04-13 15:34:21 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
1dd901e521 Maintain cursor in history prefix search
The search term highlighting looks looks really bad on the default theme
because the command is highlighted as dark blue and the search term adds
a dark background.  If this new feature motivates us to finally fix this,
that would be great.

Closes #10430
2024-04-12 13:08:52 +02:00
Lia Lenckowski
90cffb18a1 complete brightnessctl flags 2024-04-12 12:53:55 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
9158395d10 Fix __fish_list_current_token and friends for multiline commandlines
Some of these handled multiline prompts but not multiline command lines. We
first need to move the cursor to the end of the commandline, then we can
print a message.  Finally, we need to move the cursor back to where it was.
2024-04-12 12:00:24 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
a583fe7230 "commandline -f foo" to skip queue and execute immediately
Commit c3cd68dda (Process shell commands from bindings like regular char
events, 2024-03-02) mentions a "weird ordering difference".
The issue is that "commandline -f foo" goes through the input
queue while other commands are executed directly.
For example

    bind ctrl-g "commandline -f end-of-line; commandline -i x"

is executed in the wrong order. Fix that.

This doesn't yet work for "commandline -f exit" but that can be fixed easily.

It's hard to imagine anyone would rely on the existing behavior.  "commandline
-f" in bindings is mostly used for repainting the commandline.
2024-04-09 00:22:41 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
7fd018e851 Minor changelog update 2024-04-09 00:07:27 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
3b9e3e251b Emit OSC 133 sequences to mark prompt/command output regions
This allows terminals like foot and kitty to
* scroll to the previous/next prompt with ctrl-shift-{z,x}
* pipe the last command's output to a pager with ctrl-shift-g

Kitty has existing fish shell integration
shell-integration/fish/vendor_conf.d/kitty-shell-integration.fish which we
can simplify now. They keep a state variable to decide which of prompt start,
command start or command end to output.  I think with our implementation
this is no longer necessary, at least I couldn't reproduce any difference.
We also don't need to hook into fish_cancel or fish_posterror like they do;
only in the one place where we actually draw the prompt.

As mentioned in the above shell integration script, kitty disables reflow
when it sees an OSC 133 marker, so we need to do it ourselves,
otherwise the prompt will go blank after a terminal resize.

Closes #10352
2024-04-06 22:22:56 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
f285e85b0c Enable focus reporting only just before reading from stdin
Some terminals send the focus-in sequences ("^[I") whenever focus reporting is
enabled.  We enable focus reporting whenever we are finished running a command.
If we run two commands without reading in between, the focus sequences
will show up on the terminal.

Fix this by enabling focus-reporting as late as possible.

This fixes the problem with `^[I` showing up when running "cat" in
gnome-terminal https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10411.

This begs the question if we should do the same for CSI u and bracketed paste.
It's difficult to answer that; let's hope we find motivating test cases.
If we enable CSI u too late, we might misinterpret key presses, so for now
we still enable those as early as possible.

Also, since we now read immediately after enabling focus events, we can get
rid of the hack where we defer enabling them until after the first prompt.
When I start a fresh terminal, the ^[I no longer shows up.
2024-04-06 11:22:19 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
cb58a30bf2 Report $PWD changes unconditionally
Similar to 20bbdb68f (Set terminal title unconditionally, 2024-03-30).

While at it, get rid of a few unnecessary guards (we are never called from
a command substitution, so the check only adds confusion).
2024-04-03 13:14:02 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
af1b599818 On redo, restore pre-undo cursor position 2024-04-03 13:09:27 +02:00
Fabian Boehm
53961c7759 Fix doc formatting
This is RST, not markdown
2024-04-02 17:39:39 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
8bf8b10f68 Extended & human-friendly keys
See the changelog additions for user-visible changes.

Since we enable/disable terminal protocols whenever we pass terminal ownership,
tests can no longer run in parallel on the same terminal.

For the same reason, readline shortcuts in the gdb REPL will not work anymore.
As a remedy, use gdbserver, or lobby for CSI u support in libreadline.

Add sleep to some tests, otherwise they fall (both in CI and locally).

There are two weird failures on FreeBSD remaining, disable them for now
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/10359/checks?check_run_id=23330096362

Design and implementation borrows heavily from Kakoune.

In future, we should try to implement more of the kitty progressive
enhancements.

Closes #10359
2024-04-02 14:35:16 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
20bbdb68fa Set terminal title unconditionally
Terminal titles are set with an OSC 0 sequence.  I don't think we want to
support terminals that react badly to unknown OSC (or CSI) sequences.

So let's remove our feature detection.

This will fix future false negatives along the lines of
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/10037
2024-04-02 14:35:16 +02:00
Fabian Boehm
b535213ac0 CHANGELOG abbr decorators 2024-03-27 22:13:27 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
58e477fab3 Changelog Vi mode changes
Closes #10338
2024-03-23 14:26:08 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
c3cd68dda5 Process shell commands from bindings like regular char events
A long standing issue is that bindings cannot mix special input functions
and shell commands. For example,

    bind x end-of-line "commandline -i x"

silently does nothing. Instead we have to do lift everything to shell commands

    bind x "commandline -f end-of-line; commandline -i x"

for no good reason.

Additionally, there is a weird ordering difference between special input
functions and shell commands. Special input functions are pushed into the
the queue whereas shell commands are executed immediately.

This weird ordering means that the above "bind x" still doesn't work as
expected, because "commandline -i" is processed before "end-of-line".

Finally, this is all implemented via weird hack to allow recursive use of
a mutable reference to the reader state.

Fix all of this by processing shell commands the same as both special input
functions and regular chars. Hopefully this doesn't break anything.

Fixes #8186
Fixes #10360
Closes #9398
2024-03-23 10:06:11 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
232483d89a History pager to only operate on the line at cursor
Multiline search strings are weirdly broken (inserting control characters
in the command line) and probably not very useful anyway.
On the other hand I often want to compose a multi-line command
from single-line commands I ran previously.

Let's support this case by limiting the initial search string to the current
line; and replace only that line.

Alternatively this could operate on jobs (that is, replace a surrounding
"foo | bar") instead of using line boundaries.
2024-03-23 09:54:18 +01:00
David Adam
a551432f5c Merge branch 'Integration_3.7.1' 2024-03-19 20:14:40 +08:00
David Adam
80394ea4e3 Release 3.7.1 2024-03-19 11:40:45 +08:00
David Adam
445fba4464 CHANGELOG: work on 3.7.1 2024-03-18 22:53:13 +08:00
David Adam
98662ae076 CHANGELOG: work on 3.7.1 2024-03-18 22:26:49 +08:00
Johannes Altmanninger
bc246d87b2 Add closed issues and PRs to 3.8 changelog
I used below script to list all GitHub issues and PRs that are not yet
mentioned in the changelog. It's almost empty now.

While at it, curate the "notable" section and move some entries around,
notably from "interactive improvements"  to "bindings".

```shell
ms="fish next-3.x"
{
    gh issue list --state closed --milestone "$ms" -L 500
    gh pr list --state all --search "milestone:\"$ms\"" -L 500
} | sort -n | while IFS='
' read line; do
    set -- $line
    grep -qE '\W'$1 CHANGELOG.rst ||
    echo https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/$1 "$line"
done
```
2024-03-17 11:41:32 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
068f92ce7e Changelog update 2024-03-16 10:31:01 +01:00
Fabian Boehm
9b9cfc207f CHANGELOG for 3.7.1 2024-03-13 18:24:01 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
d8d491741b edit_command_buffer: preserve external editor's cursor position
Unless the editor changed to a different file for some reason.

Note that the Kakoune integration uses -always to export the cursor even if
the user temporarily suppressed hooks - possibly a "fish_indent" hook.
2024-03-10 11:08:12 +01:00
Fabian Boehm
f60b6e6cd4 CHANGELOG 2024-02-27 16:28:20 +01:00
Fabian Boehm
8712bd5a4b CHANGELOG terminfo 2024-02-22 20:15:24 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
0627c9d9af Render control characters as Unicode Control Pictures
Inserting Tab or Backspace characters causes weird glitches. Sometimes it's
useful to paste tabs as part of a code block.

Render tabs as "␉" and so on for other ASCII control characters, see
https://unicode-table.com/en/blocks/control-pictures/. This fixes the
width-related glitches.

You can see it in action by inserting some control characters into the
command line:

	set chars
	for x in (seq 1 0x1F)
		set -a chars (printf "%02x\\\\x%02x" $x $x)
	end
	eval set chars $chars
	commandline -i "echo '" $chars

Fixes #6923
Fixes #5274
Closes #7295

We could extend this approach to display a fallback symbol for every unknown
nonprintable character, not just ASCII control characters.

In future we might want to support tab properly.
2024-02-15 01:39:45 +01:00
Henrik Hørlück Berg
59fa7479ee
Add documentation and release notes for #10282 2024-02-11 12:43:13 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
47aa79813d Open command script in external editor on Alt+o
Fish functions are great for configuring fish but they don't integrate
seamlessly with the rest of the system. For tasks that can run outside fish,
writing scripts is the natural approach.

To edit my scripts I frequently run

    $EDITOR (which my-script)

Would be great to reduce the amount typing for this common case (the names
of editor and scripts are usually short, so that's a lot of typing spent on
the boring part).

Our Alt+o binding opens the file at the cursor in a pager.  When the cursor
is in command position, it doesn't do anything (unless the command is actually
a valid file path). Let's make it open the resolved file path in an editor.

In future, we should teach this binding to delegate to "funced" upon seeing
a function instead of a script. I didn't do it yet because funced prints
messages, so it will mess with the commandline rendering if used from
a binding.  (The fact that funced encourages overwriting functions that
ship with fish is worrysome. Also I'm not sure why funced doesn't open the
function's source file directly (if not sourced from stdin). Persisting the
function should probably be the default.)

Alternative approach: I think other shells expand "=my-script" to
"/path/to/my-script".  That is certainly an option -- if we do that we'd want
to teach fish to complete command names after "=".  Since I don't remember
scenarios where I care about the full path of a script beyond opening it in
my editor, I didn't look further into this.

Closes #10266
2024-02-07 00:07:47 +01:00
Fabian Boehm
ea5adcac9d CHANGELOG: Work on next release
Including some preliminary bits on packaging.
2024-02-04 09:47:21 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
b768b9d3f5 Use fuzzy subsequence completion for options names as well
Version 2.1.0 introduced subsequence matching for completions but as the
changelog entry mentions, "This feature [...] is not yet implemented for
options (like ``--foobar``)".  Add it. Seems like a strict improvement,
pretty much.
2024-01-27 17:57:48 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
368017905e builtin commandline: -x for expanded tokens, supplanting -o
Issue #10194 reports Cobra completions do

    set -l args (commandline -opc)
    eval $args[1] __complete $args[2..] (commandline -ct | string escape)

The intent behind "eval" is to expand variables and tildes in "$args".
Fair enough. Several of our own completions do the same, see the next commit.

The problem with "commandline -o" + "eval" is that the former already
removes quotes that are  relevant for "eval". This becomes a problem if $args
contains quoted () or {}, for example this command will wrongly execute a
command substituion:

    git --work-tree='(launch-missiles)' <TAB>

It is possible to escape the string the tokens before running eval, but
then there will be no expansion of variables etc.  The problem is that
"commandline -o" only unescapes tokens so they end up in a weird state
somewhere in-between what the user typed and the expanded version.

Remove the need for "eval" by introducing "commandline -x" which expands
things like variables and braces. This enables custom completion scripts to
be aware of shell variables without eval, see the added test for completions
to "make -C $var/some/dir ".

This means that essentially all third party scripts should migrate from
"commandline -o" to "commandline -x". For example

    set -l tokens
    if commandline -x >/dev/null 2>&1
        set tokens (commandline -xpc)
    else
        set tokens (commandline -opc)
    end

Since this is mainly used for completions, the expansion skips command
substitutions.  They are passed through as-is (instead of cancelling or
expanding to nothing) to make custom completion scripts work reasonably well
in the common case. Of course there are cases where we would want to expand
command substitutions here, so I'm not sure.
2024-01-27 09:28:06 +01:00
Fabian Boehm
b8b062eb84 docs: Update qmark-noglob status
Note: The version number needs to be adjusted
2024-01-25 18:47:41 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
5dfcfa336b edit_command_buffer: if aliasee is a recognized editor, pass cursor position too
If I alias "e" to "emacsclient" it will probably accept the same options.
Let's dereference the alias so we can detect support for passing the cursor
position in more cases.

This does not solve the problem for recursive cases (e.g. alias of another
alias). If we want to handle that we would need cycle detection.
2024-01-21 09:39:59 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
fff8e8163b Control-C to simply clear commandline buffer again
Commit 5f849d0 changed control-C to print an inverted ^C and then a newline.

The original motivation was

> In bash if you type something and press ctrl-c then the content of the line
> is preserved and the cursor is moved to a new line. In fish the ctrl-c just
> clears the line. For me the behaviour of bash is a bit better, because it
> allows me to type something then press ctrl-c and I have the typed string
> in the log for further reference.

This sounds like a valid use case in some scenarios but I think that most
abandoned commands are noise. After all, the user erased them. Also, now that
we have undo that can be used to get back a limited set of canceled commands.

I believe the original motivation for existing behavior (in other shells) was
that TERM=dumb does not support erasing characters. Similarly, other shells
like to leave behind other artifacts, for example when using tab-completion
or in their interactive menus but we generally don't.

Control-C is the obvious way to quickly clear a multi-line commandline.
IPython does the same. For the other behavior we have Alt-# although that's
probably not very well-known.

Restore the old Control-C behavior of simply clearing the command line.

Our unused __fish_cancel_commandline still prints the ^C. For folks who
have explicitly bound ^C to that, it's probably better to keep the existing
behavior, so let's leave this one.

Previous attempt at #4713 fizzled.

Closes #10213
2024-01-17 19:54:57 +01:00
Fabian Boehm
4286b049ca docs: Fix two formatting errors
sphinx *really* needs an empty line after a `::` code block starter
2024-01-05 16:49:49 +01:00