The VimExpressionToPythonType function automatically convert a number
represented as a string to an integer. This causes an error when used to
evaluate a filetype set to a number as the result is split on the dot character
to get a list of filetypes and an integer cannot be split. Use vim.eval and
ToUnicode instead.
If no buffer exists for a given filename, the GetBufferNumberForFilename
function will create a buffer for that file by default. This behavior is
unexpected given the name of that function and may lead to performance issues
when ycmd returns diagnostics for a lot of files with no corresponding buffers.
The default behavior for that function should be to not create a buffer.
Calling directly the omnifunc may move the cursor position. This is the case
with the default Vim omnifunc for C-family languages (ccomplete#Complete) which
calls searchdecl to find a declaration. This function is supposed to move the
cursor to the found declaration but it doesn't when called through the omni
completion mapping (CTRL-X CTRL-O). So, we restore the cursor position after
calling the omnifunc.
The 'hidden' option is a global option, not a buffer one. If this option is
false, we should check if the 'bufhidden' option, which is local to the buffer,
is set to 'hide'. If so, the buffer can be hidden despite the 'hidden' option
being false.
[READY] Use codepoint offsets in identifier functions
`CurrentIdentifierFinished` and `LastEnteredCharIsIdentifierChar` incorrectly use byte offsets with unicode lines (`CurrentColumn` returns a byte offset and `CurrentLineContents` a unicode string). This leads to weird bugs when there is a non-ASCII character on the current line:
![unicode-identifier-bug](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10026824/27256590-34b27c8c-53ba-11e7-8032-b98f0c7e0b14.gif)
This is fixed by converting byte offsets to codepoint ones through the `ByteOffsetToCodepointOffset` function.
This changes the behavior of these two functions when the current column position is invalid. Both functions returned false in that case. They now return as if the current column were at the end of the line. In practice, this doesn't really matter since the position of the current column should always be valid.
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CurrentIdentifierFinished and LastEnteredCharIsIdentifierChar incorrectly use
byte offsets with unicode lines. Convert those offsets to codepoint offsets.
Send the request as the unloaded buffer instead of the current buffer
for the BufferUnload event notification. This fixes the issue where
the filetype of the current buffer is not the same as the unloaded
buffer one, making the ycmd server uses the wrong completer when
handling the request.
When an error occurs during completions, a message is displayed on
the status line. If this message is longer than the width of the
current window, Vim will prompt the user to press enter or type a
command to hide the message, interrupting user workflow. We prevent
that by truncating the message to window width.
Merge PostMultiLineNotice, EchoText, and EchoTextVimWidth functions
into PostVimMessage.
When columns are clamped to not be past the contents of the line for
highlighting diagnostics, we need to account for the column end not
being included in the diagnostic range.
Open the quickfix window to full width at the bottom of the screen with
its height set to fit all entries. This behavior can be overridden by
using the YcmQuickFixOpened autocommand.
Add a new section for autocommands in the documentation.
Update GoTo and ReplaceChunks tests.
On Python 3, evaluating a Vim expression will raise a unicode exception
if it contains an invalid sequence of bytes for the current encoding.
We can't really do anything about it because this is the way Vim and
Python 3 interact. However, we can prevent this situation to occur by
not evaluating Vim data that we have no control over: in particular,
the Vim globals. This is done by:
- adding one by one the YCM default options instead of extending the
Vim globals with them;
- only evaluating the Vim global variable names (and not their values)
when building the YCM options for the ycmd server.
vim.eval returns a str() object on py2, but our internal strings are all unicode().
We use vimsupport.VimExpressionToPythonType to wrap the conversion complexities.
On Windows and Python 2, the full exception message from IOError
in CheckFilename will contain the filepath formatted as a unicode
string. Since the filepath is already added in the RuntimeError
message, use the strerror attribute to only display the error.
Python 3 is much stricter around mixing bytes with unicode (and by
"stricter," I mean it doesn't allow it at all) so we're making
vimsupport only return `unicode` objects (`str` on py3). The idea is
that YCM (and ycmd) internals only ever deal with unicode.
We simply apply the changes to each file in turn. The existing replacement
logic is unchanged, except that it now no longer implicitly assumes we are
talking about the current buffer.
If a buffer is not visible for the requested file name, we open it in
a horizontal split, make the edits, then hide the window. Because this
can cause UI flickering, and leave hidden, modified buffers around, we
issue a warning to the user stating the number of files for which we are
going to do this. We pop up the quickfix list at the end of applying
the edits to allow the user to see what we changed.
If the user opts to abort due to, say, the file being open in another
window, we simply raise an error and give up, as undoing the changes
is too complex to do programatically, but trivial to do manually in such
a rare case.
Vim's QuickFix lists require 1-based columns, which is what is returned
from ycmd's commands.
As noted in the comments, the Vim documentation for setqflist is
somewhat vague about this "byte offset", but it is confirmed to mean
"1-based column number" both in testing and in :help getqflist.