previously, when both tabs and buffers were displayed in the tabline, it
was not immediately obvious which side belongs to a buffer and which one
to a tab. Therefore, add [buffers]/[tabs] labels consistently.
The function shows the line number of the first error/warning that appears in the current buffer. If there are 20 warnings and the first warning exists on line 33, then vim-airline would show "W:20(L33)".
One can change how the line number is represented using: `g:airline#extensions#ale#open_lnum_symbol` and `airline#extensions#ale#close_lnum_symbol`
This enables the highlighting caching only when the variable
g:airline_highlighting_cache is set to 1
Should make airline faster and more performant, because we can save a
lot of expensive C core calls. However, when redefining highlighting
groups, it might not correctly reset the cache.
Indicates:
- whether the file is considered to be main or local
- whether the viewer is opened
- whether the compilation is running
- whether the compilation is continuous
Added:
* `vimtex` existence check
* variables documentation
TODO: readme and a screenshot
Update readme.md
Update doc
Update screenshot url
The denite extension functions return the content of some buffer-local
variables. Those variables are not defined, the first time the they are
accessed and therefore, the statusline is not updated later when
g:airline_skip_empty_sections is set.
So disable this variable in this window, by setting the
w:airline_skip_empty_section=0 variable in the denite window.
closes#1454
Adding an option to prevent windows from being closed when a buffer in
the tabline is middle clicked and the clicked buffer is currently open
in a window.
When this option is enabled, instead of closing the window a new buffer
will be opened in all of the windows editing the clicked buffer instead.
This is my first pull request AND my first experience with vimscript, so
my apologies if this is a bit sloppy 😄
The syntastic plugin recommends to adjust the statusline.
This does not apply for vim-airline for obvious reasons. Therefore
mention that this recommendation does not apply for us.
This is a little bit a hack, because by the time the separators are
added, it is not clear, if the following section is empty, therefore
we need to parse the content of the following section and eval the
expressions to find out, if this is empty
Remarks:
- catch all exceptions when eval'ing statusline
- make sure, that the seperators are highlighted
even when skipping empty regions (highlight group
names need to be adjusted)
- if a section is defined as empty, it will be removed completly from
the statusline. This means, it won't be called on the next update
and may not refresh properly (e.g. when the whitespace check
triggers, therefore, the whitesapce extension has to call an
explicit redraw whenever it is supposed to be refreshed)
Solution: Use the current one from ctrlspace 5.0 + minor style fixes
Problem: CtrlSpace 5.0 does no longer work with airline
Solution: Modify the ctrlspace extension to call the new APIs
The statusline work fine but the custom ctrlspace function
somehow/somewhere gets overridden and I could not figure out where.
Therefore the user must add
let g:CtrlSpaceStatuslineFunction = "airline#extensions#ctrlspace#statusline()"
to its .vimrc.
Problem: Ctrlspace 5.0 does not integrate well into tabline
Solution: Write a tabline extensions for ctrlspace 5.0.
The extensions is capable of showing both tabs and buffers, but only the
buffers of a current tab are shown.
This is an extension to the whitespace extension.
It can now detect, if there is mixed indentation used within a file,
e.g. (using space for indentation on some lines and using tabs on other
lines.
This fixes#560
This will show a little not-existing sign in a buffer,
if that file lives in a git/hg repository but does not exists
there yet. Use `:let g:airline_symbols.notexists='!'` to configure
the '!' as symbol. By default, will use U+2204 symbol
To not impact performance by shelling out a lot, the result is cached
until the buffer is written or a shell command is issued.
Should work with mercurial and git.
fixes#925
1) Make sure airline_error and airline_warning highlighting are
different, so that the correct separator will be drawn. This
fixes#982.
2) allow to deactivate %(%) to workaround a vim bug, that may cause
leaking of colors from one section to the next and adding additional
spaces. This needs to be fixed upstream:
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/vim_dev/sb1jmVirXPU/mPhvDnZ-CwAJ
Possibly, also related to neovim/neovim#4147
Use `:let airline#extensions#default#section_use_groupitems = 0`
to disable grouping of statusline items
meaning that branches retrieved from those are now displayed side by
side. The order can be customised with g:airline#extensions#branch#vcs_priority.
The VCS name is now prepended to the branch name to be able to tell
which is which. The VSCCommand behaviour is unchanged.
Also restructured the code a little bit, and made found_fugitive_head
variable behave as its name suggests.
Currently, vim-airline uses hard-coded '\s$' to check for trailing
whitespace. However you might want to check for different values.
Therefore, set the variable
g:airline#extensions#whitespace#trailing_regexp to the required regexp
value.
closes#663
1) allow for custom formatting of the output of the wordcount formatter
This allows for formatting numbers correctly e.g. 1,042 in English
locale and 1.042 in German locale.
2) cache values, so that no on every cursor move the wordcount needs to
be recalculated.
This commit adds a couple of new settings so that it's possible to hide
the tab type (all the way to the right) and the symbol which represents
the close button.
The settings and their defaults:
let g:airline#extensions#tabline#show_tab_type = 1
let g:airline#extensions#tabline#close_symbol = 'X'
New option airline#extensions#ctrlp#show_adjacent_modes allows users to
toggle showing the previous and next modes. The default is the same
behavior as before: show the modes.
Add documentation for new option.
These modes are useful if you switch forward and back through ctrlp's
functionality, but they are visual noise if you don't.