vim-airline does use a different section (path/file) depending on
whether 'acd' is set. Later in the bufferline extesion however, it
unconditionally overwrites the 'file' section, regardless of whether
this section is actually used.
Therefore the bufferline section needs to check this option as well.
fixes#1487
This should not happen, however being a bit more error tolerant
shouldn't hurt, so let's just fall back to 'normal' for the
g:netrw_sort_direction in case it is not defined (which should be the
default anyhow).
fixes#1492
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
Previously, the instructions were displayed in a list without nesting,
and were hard to follow.
Since all the install commands are essentially one-liners,
a table makes it easy to look them up by package manager.
The cache currently prevents e.g. that the wordcount() extensions kicks in the
first time you open a help window. Therefore take the filetype into
consideration as well.
Basically what the title says. First check if the user has Powerline,
fall back to Unicode symbols if he doesn't and fall back to ASCII
symbols if he doesn't have that either.
Vim-airline is not a looker without a Powerline font. This fixes that!
* Ugly separator symbols are hidden
* New branch (ᚠ), line (㏑), maxline (☰) and whitespace (☲) symbols
* Replace old whitespace (✹) symbol in Powerline with the new (☲) more logical one
previously, it could have been skipped, if the old highlighting
attribute was the same as the current one. However, if the group does
not exist, it should still be defined
closes#1404
If a color value of ['', '', 'NONE', 'NONE', ''] is given as value to
the highlighting group, the resulting group definition would look like
this:
hi Normal ctermfg=NONE ctermbg=NONE
which would result in the highlighting group being cleared (or even no
set at all), therefore check that at least one other value exists and if
not fall back to the highlighting definition of the Normal group.