* Define default values for new variables governing new "Default Open".
"Default Open" means to open a file with the Enter key (which of course
can be changed.) The key can be changed in the vimrc, and there is a
variable for specifying the Opener parameters for opening the node. This
lets the user decide whether Enter (or another key) will open a file in
the current tab or a new one, and whether or not to open the file again
in the tab or jump to a window where the file is already open.
* Remove the old mapping for <CR>, a duplicate of 'o'.
<CR> will be defined like all the other keys, in plugin/NERD_tree.vim
* Assign functions to the new <CR> key mapping.
Three separate functions handle directories, files, and bookmarks.
* Rename variables: NERDTreeCustomOpen and NERDTreeCustomOpenArgs
* Add documentation for NERDTreeCustomOpenArgs and NERDTree-<CR>.
* Make key mapping variables be indexed in the Vim help
* Remove angle brackets from <CR> to see if help navigation improves.
* Rename functions from defaultOpen... to customOpen...
* Use separate options for file and directory nodes.
* Update documentation for separate file/directory options.
* Update version number and change log.
* Change CR to <CR> in help tags.
* Fix missing backtick in patch number.
* Update the quickhelp text.
* Update Pull Request template.
* Update change log with simpler formatting of patch number.
* Get NERDTree version number directly from CHANGELOG.md
* Reformat the lists of contributors in the Change Log.
* Initialize the version text, just in case the while loop finds nothing.
* Fix NERDTree opening with the wrong size.
There were two commands that seemed to be causing the NERDTree window to
open in exactly half the screen width. They are:
- silent! execute 'edit ' . t:NERDTreeBufName in _createTreeWin()
- setlocal nobuflisted in _setCommonBufOptions()
These commands were reseting the width of NERDTree. The solution I chose
was to resize the window after creating the new window, and then to set
winfixwidth before setting the other common buffer options.
* Update change log and version number.
* Update CHANGELOG and change it to Markdown format.
* Add PR template with checklist for advancing the version number.
* Update version number.
* Change PR number in change log and PR template.
Directory tree navigation is broken because of directory signs which is
shown in UTF-8.
Cygwin is a Windows application, so it uses ASCII codepages and so
directory signs must be in ASCII, but if to modify
"nerdtree#runningWindows" function there are many other functions break
that convert paths, e.g.
So, the quick and reliable solution is to add a
separate function "nerdtree#runningCygwin" and use it in a specific
place.
Sorting the list of user bookmarks requires care to ensure that Vim's
builtin sort function is called correctly. Previously, this function was
called incorrectly. This is why the sorting of bookmarks never worked.
The offending functions have been removed here and replaced with
"s:Bookmark.CompareBookmarksByName". To understand the necessity for
this change, read ":h sort()" for the requirements of the function
reference argument (esp., note that it must return -1, 0, or 1).
In addition to fixing this problem, the new comparison function will
inspect the "g:NERDTreeBookmarksSort" setting to determine whether
case-sensitivity is preferred in the sort. The documentation has been
modified to accurately reflect this adjustment. The change is also made
in such a way as not to break any existing configurations.
Fixes#361 ("My bookmarks aren't sorted").
So :bprev was failing to jump back to the right buffer. I dont fully
understand this yet, but I'm fairly sure this is because there is a
magic <directory> buffer that we delete when creating a wintree :-/
Anyway, we are explicitly storing the prev buffer again - and updating
it when reusing treewins. It's worky, but there may be a superior way...
Some will have a "NERDTree" buffer variable and others will not. In the
ones that do, getbufvar will return a dictionary. getbufvar will return
an empty string from the other buffers. When looping through the buffers,
let will throw an error if nt already exists and is a different type than
what is trying to be put into it. This easily can be illustrated by these
two statements:
:let x = ""
:let x = {}
E706: Variable type mismatch for: x
This commit gets rid of the variable before setting it so that the
mismatch cannot occur.
This is the counterpart to a PR I just submitted to undotree
(https://github.com/mbbill/undotree/pull/61).
I noticed that my statusline doesn't update properly when using NERDTree to move
between revisions of a file with `go` or `gi`
(https://github.com/wincent/wincent/issues/16). I established that this was
because it was using `'eventignore'` to suppress all autocmds, which in turn
prevents the statusline from updating.
Commenting out the `set eventignore=all` line makes the failure to update go
away, at the cost of firing more autocmds.
I considered adding an option for opting out of this behavior (eg. `let
g:NERDTreeEventignore=0` or something), or rearchitecting my statusline to use
an approach like vim-airline does based on CursorMoved autocmds (see
https://github.com/vim-airline/vim-airline/issues/82; see also
30f078daf5/plugin/airline.vim (L36-L50)
for current implementation), but then realized that a simpler fix is to have
NERDTree just disable only the autocmds that it uses instead of disabling all of
them.
This is probably not enough to unbreak every bit of code in the world that
depends on those autocmds, but it does at least unbreak my use case, because it
allows my `WinLeave` autocmd to run and update the statusline.
Just disable the warning for now. The bookmark system will be replaced
with the project system soon - so no sense putting much effort into
this.
Closes#168
Expand the event system to have explicit Event objects and potentially
many Notifiers. Previously they was only one notifier and one (implied)
event.
A lot of this is stolen from #358.
Add 2 new classes and move code into them from autoload:
* NERDTree. Each nerdtree buffer now has a NERDTree object that holds
the root node and will old other util functions
* UI. Each NERDTree object holds a UI object which is responsible for
rendering, getting the current node, etc
Still a fair few methods to sort through in autoload (many of which will
end up in the above classes) - need sleep though.
On some new versions of vim these files were being loaded before the
main NERD_tree.vim which was causing errors as dependencies werent
loaded in time. Move the classes into lib - so vim wont try to load them
until we tell it