When I initially released this project, I released it under my own copyright. I
have since then worked on it in my 20% time at Google (and want to continue
doing this) and my life becomes much simpler if the copyright is Google's.
From the perspective of how this project is run and managed, **NOTHING**
changes. YCM is not a Google product, merely a project run by someone who just
happens to work for Google.
Please note that the license of the project is **NOT** changing.
People sending in future pull requests will have to sign the Google
[CLA](https://developers.google.com/open-source/cla/individual) (you can sign
online at the bottom of that page) before those pull requests could be merged
in. People who sent in pull requests that were merged in the past will get an
email from me asking them to sign the CLA as well.
This reverts commit 182848050e.
The reason we are reverting this is because removing signs in a loop causes
flicker. The only non-flicker approach is to remove all signs in a buffer with
"sign unplace buffer=<buffer-num>".
So no compatibility with other plugins for us.
If the user had a hidden buffer and a recent version of Vim, the screen would
flicker every time the user typed. This was caused by a Vim bug.
On every key press, we end up calling GetUnsavedAndCurrentBufferData(), which
calls GetBufferOption( buffer_object, 'ft' ). If the buffer_object represents a
hidden buffer, Vim would flicker.
This would happen because we'd call "buffer_object.options[ 'ft' ]" in recent
versions of Vim, and that line of code causes Vim to flicker. I don't know why.
We're extracting the 'ft' value without going through buffer_object.options, and
that works just fine.
Fixes#669.
Now, "foobar.h" will be changed to insert "foo" if the text after the cursor is
"bar.h". This already worked for "foobar" and "bar", but the overlap search
would stop before a non-word character. This has now been resolved.
Previously we'd show a Python traceback if the user asked for a detailed
diagnostic in a file that wasn't supported by Clang (something written in Python
perhaps). Now we show an nice, far less scary message informing the user of
this.
Fixes#748.
Previously, we'd implicitly turn off future notices about unknown extra conf
files if we already raised one exception about it. This breaks when the user
ends up not receiving the "unknown extra conf, load?" message.
Now we only turn off the notice as a result of the user saying "don't load this"
so that if the first request fails to reach them, they'll get a second (and
third etc) request about it.
Fixes#615
We pass shell=True to Popen so that OmniSharp is not started inside a
new visible window under Windows. And since we use shell=True, we pass
the command to execute as a string, as recommended by Python's docs
(also, it won't work when passed as a sequence anyway :) ).