Language Servers are now configured in a separate table in `languages.toml`:
```toml
[langauge-server.mylang-lsp]
command = "mylang-lsp"
args = ["--stdio"]
config = { provideFormatter = true }
[language-server.efm-lsp-prettier]
command = "efm-langserver"
[language-server.efm-lsp-prettier.config]
documentFormatting = true
languages = { typescript = [ { formatCommand ="prettier --stdin-filepath ${INPUT}", formatStdin = true } ] }
```
The language server for a language is configured like this (`typescript-language-server` is configured by default):
```toml
[[language]]
name = "typescript"
language-servers = [ { name = "efm-lsp-prettier", only-features = [ "format" ] }, "typescript-language-server" ]
```
or equivalent:
```toml
[[language]]
name = "typescript"
language-servers = [ { name = "typescript-language-server", except-features = [ "format" ] }, "efm-lsp-prettier" ]
```
Each requested LSP feature is priorized in the order of the `language-servers` array.
For example the first `goto-definition` supported language server (in this case `typescript-language-server`) will be taken for the relevant LSP request (command `goto_definition`).
If no `except-features` or `only-features` is given all features for the language server are enabled, as long as the language server supports these. If it doesn't the next language server which supports the feature is tried.
The list of supported features are:
- `format`
- `goto-definition`
- `goto-declaration`
- `goto-type-definition`
- `goto-reference`
- `goto-implementation`
- `signature-help`
- `hover`
- `document-highlight`
- `completion`
- `code-action`
- `workspace-command`
- `document-symbols`
- `workspace-symbols`
- `diagnostics`
- `rename-symbol`
- `inlay-hints`
Another side-effect/difference that comes with this PR, is that only one language server instance is started if different languages use the same language server.
* inject language based on file extension
Nodes can now be captured with "injection.filename". If this capture
contains a valid file extension known to Helix, then the content will
be highlighted as that language.
* inject language by shebang
Nodes can now be captured with "injection.shebang". If this capture
contains a valid shebang line known to Helix, then the content will
be highlighted as the language the shebang calls for.
* add documentation for language injection
* nix: fix highlights
The `@` is now highlighted properly on either side of the function arg.
Also, extending the phases with `buildPhase = prev.buildPhase + ''''`
is now highlighted properly.
Fix highlighting of `''$` style escapes (requires tree-sitter-nix bump)
Fix `inherit` highlighting.
* simplify injection_for_match
Split out injection pair logic into its own method to make the overall
flow easier to follow.
Also transform the top-level function into a method on a
HighlightConfiguration.
* markdown: add shebang injection query
* Change Odin grammar to `ap29600/tree-sitter-odin`
The previously adopted grammar, `MineBill/tree-sitter-odin`, is unmaintained and mentions my repository as an alternative source.
* update queries
* docgen
* fix queries
* Update runtime/queries/odin/highlights.scm
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* remove `ERROR` query for `odin`
* track the latest rev in `ap29600/tree-sitter-odin`
* runtime/queries/odin/highlights.scm: update rune highlight class
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
Gopkg.toml was used by dep, Go's original dependency management tool.
It was an experiment that culminated in official and built-in support
for Go modules in mid 2018, and dep was deprecated and archived
in mid 2020 per https://github.com/golang/go/issues/38158.
Now, in 2023, Gopkg.toml files are incredibly rare in actively developed
Go projects, as people use go.mod with Go modules instead.
While here, also add go.work as a root file, since that is used by
Go module workspaces, added in Go 1.18 in early 2022.
gopls or commands like `go build` work inside either go.work or go.mod.
These two root files are the same ones used by gopls integrations with
other editors like vim or neovim.
`roots` doesn't support wildcards. As such this root is dropped, and `cabal.project` is added, which is probably the best we can do for Cabal-based projects for now.
The last update introduced a bug with comments where a comment would
be recognized as a message if there were multiple newlines between
the last message or subject and the comment, causing a noticeable
change in highlighting. This change fixes that behavior.
The update includes a fix for comments in commit messages where there
was no space separating the '#' and the comment text.
The comment textobject can be useful occasionally to jump to the
summary part of the commit edit message.
Simple highlight query file with keywords and builtin types
matching. Many VHDL types however are defined in std libraries
which do not currently get matched on.
This is because the grammar doesn't consider them builtin types.
* Switch nix grammar repository location to the new repo. The author
has transferred the repository to 'nix-community'.
* Capture ':' and '...' as 'punctuation.delimiter'.
* Macros that start with underscore were incorrectly marked as
'comment.unused' rather than 'keyword.directive' due to an ordering
issue of those two patterns.
* Recognize escripts as Erlang by the shebang.
* misc: missing inline, outdated link
* doc: Add new theme keys and config option to book
* fix: don't panic in Tree::try_get(view_id)
Necessary for later, where we could be receiving an LSP response
for a closed window, in which case we don't want to crash while
checking for its existence
* fix: reset idle timer on all mouse events
* refacto: Introduce Overlay::new and InlineAnnotation::new
* refacto: extract make_job_callback from Context::callback
* feat: add LSP display_inlay_hint option to config
* feat: communicate inlay hints support capabilities of helix to LSP server
* feat: Add function to request range of inlay hint from LSP
* feat: Save inlay hints in document, per view
* feat: Update inlay hints on document changes
* feat: Compute inlay hints on idle timeout
* nit: Add todo's about inlay hints for later
* fix: compute text annotations for current view in view.rs, not document.rs
* doc: Improve Document::text_annotations() description
* nit: getters don't use 'get_' in front
* fix: Drop inlay hints annotations on config refresh if necessary
* fix: padding theming for LSP inlay hints
* fix: tracking of outdated inlay hints should not be dependant on document revision (because of undos and such)
* fix: follow LSP spec and don't highlight padding as virtual text
* config: add some LSP inlay hint configs
* use max_line_width + 1 during softwrap to account for newline char
Helix softwrap implementation always wraps lines so that the newline
character doesn't get cut off so he line wraps one chars earlier then
in other editors. This is necessary, because newline chars are always
selecatble in helix and must never be hidden.
However That means that `max_line_width` currently wraps one char
earlier than expected. The typical definition of line width does not
include the newline character and other helix commands like `:reflow`
also don't count the newline character here.
This commit makes softwrap use `max_line_width + 1` instead of
`max_line_width` to correct the impedance missmatch.
* fix typos
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Lebon <jonathan@jlebon.com>
* Add text-width to config.toml
* text-width: update setting documentation
* rename leftover config item
* remove leftover max-line-length occurrences
* Make `text-width` optional in editor config
When it was only used for `:reflow` it made sense to have a default
value set to `80`, but now that soft-wrapping uses this setting, keeping
a default set to `80` would make soft-wrapping behave more aggressively.
* Allow softwrapping to ignore `text-width`
Softwrapping wraps by default to the viewport width or a configured
`text-width` (whichever's smaller). In some cases we only want to set
`text-width` to use for hard-wrapping and let longer lines flow if they
have enough space. This setting allows that.
* Revert "Make `text-width` optional in editor config"
This reverts commit b247d526d6.
* soft-wrap: allow per-language overrides
* Update book/src/configuration.md
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
* Update book/src/languages.md
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
* Update book/src/configuration.md
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
---------
Co-authored-by: Pascal Kuthe <pascal.kuthe@semimod.de>
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Lebon <jonathan@jlebon.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Boehm <alexb@ozrunways.com>
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
* Sort buildin functions alphabetically
* fix: Query float type like other numeric types
* Update tree-sitter-sql and update highlights.scm to match grammar
The hub[^1] command-line tool uses a file called `PULLREQ_EDITMSG`[^2].
This file is used to edit the text from of each commit being submitted
in a pull request, and the final content is rendered as markdown by
GitHub.
This commit adds `PULLREQ_EDITMSG` to the list of markdown file-types.
[^1]: https://github.com/github/hub
[^2]: c8e68d548a/commands/pull_request.go (L225)
* highlight(scala): update to fix crash
tree-sitter-scala has recently add a fix to workaround segv crashes in other editors.
Not sure if it happens to Helix as well, but it's probably a good idea to use the latest.
* highlight(scala): String interpolator support
This captures String interpolator as `function`
Co-authored-by: Chris Kipp <ckipp@pm.me>
There have been a lot of changes in tree-sitter/tree-sitter-scala,
including partial support for Scala 3 syntax and breaking changes in
some of the nodes.
This bumps up the grammar to the latest, and adjusts the queries.
Co-authored-by: Anton Sviridov <keynmol@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Kipp <ckipp@pm.me>
The grammar now exposes the delimiter of raw-strings.
We can now inject the inner grammar in cases like:
const char* script = R"js(
alert('hello world!');
)js";
Both the racket and scheme entries used the rkt file-extension. This
commit removes that entry for scheme and so that the racket entry takes
precedence. We explicitly point to the scheme grammar now and setup
queries that inherit from scheme. This should enable using the racket
language server configuration.
This update includes a handful of fixes, a new binary concatenation
operator (already highlighted by the `binary_operator` rule), and a
new `use` language construct. The nodes are backwards compatible but
this update introduces two new nodes for highlighting: `use` and `<-`.
This highlights edoc within Erlang comments. The trick was to have
the Erlang grammar consume newlines and then give them to EDoc in the
injection to use so that line-wise elements could be parsed accurately.
This adds in a couple more roots that are common in Scala.
- `build.sc` which is used in Mill
- `build.gradle` for Scala Gradle projects
- `.scala-build` for scala-cli projects
This PR makes the editor use language=bash when the shebang line uses
zsh. This is in the same line as using language=bash for zsh related
file (~/.zshrc, ~/.zshenv etc.) as we already do.
The change in d801a6693c to search for
suffixes in `file-types` is too permissive: files like the tutor or
`*.txt` files are now mistakenly interpreted as R or perl,
respectively.
This change changes the syntax for specifying a file-types entry that
matches by suffix:
```toml
file-types = [{ suffix = ".git/config" }]
```
And changes the file-type detection to first search for any non-suffix
patterns and then search for suffixes only with the file-types entries
marked explicitly as suffixes.
* feat(syntax): add strategy to associate file to language through pattern
File path will match if it ends with any of the file types provided in the config.
Also used this feature to add support for the .git/config and .ssh/config files
* Add /etc/ssh/ssh_config to languages.toml
* cargo xtask docgen
* Update languages.md
* Update languages.md
* Update book/src/languages.md
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
* Update book/src/languages.md
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
Marksman is an LSP server for Markdown: https://github.com/artempyanykh/marksman
It supports a bunch of LSP features: symbols, references, rename, diag,
etc. and already has integrations with emacs, neovim, and vscode.
Around 50 columns for the summary is good because it is often used as
heading or as subject in emails. 72 columns for the body is generally
good because some tools do not wrap long lines (`git log` with pager
`less` is a good example). Helix's `:reflow` command is really good to
help with the second point.
Linux kernel documentation says:
> For these reasons, the ``summary`` must be no more than 70-75
> characters, and it must describe both what the patch changes, as well
> as why the patch might be necessary. It is challenging to be both
> succinct and descriptive, but that is what a well-written summary
> should do.
Source:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst#n627
tpope:
https://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html
Commit message style guide for Git:
https://commit.style/
There don't appear to be any regressions from the updates.
Also included is a fix which highlights the "#" as in attributes
as punctuation. This was previously unhighlighted.
The update fixes a bug that caused the external scanner to hang during
error recovery.
Looking at the diff, there are no structural changes in this update.
There are a few new fields and it looks like some edge-case fixes
but nothing that breaks compatibility with the current queries.
* Change default formatter for any language
* Fix clippy error
* Close stdin for Stdio formatters
* Better indentation and pattern matching
* Return Result<Option<...>> for fn format instead of Option
* Remove unwrap for stdin
* Handle FormatterErrors instead of Result<Option<...>>
* Use Transaction instead of LspFormatting
* Use Transaction directly in Document::format
* Perform stdin type formatting asynchronously
* Rename formatter.type values to kebab-case
* Debug format for displaying io::ErrorKind (msrv fix)
* Solve conflict?
* Use only stdio type formatters
* Remove FormatterType enum
* Remove old comment
* Check if the formatter exited correctly
* Add formatter configuration to the book
* Avoid allocations when writing to stdin and formatting errors
* Remove unused import
Co-authored-by: Gokul Soumya <gokulps15@gmail.com>
A few changes to make TSQ highlights better:
* A parsing error has been fixed in the grammar itself
* Previously tree-sitter-tsq did not parse the variables
in predicates like `(#set! injection.language "javascript")`
* Theme nodes as `tag`
* The newly added node to the parser (from the above fix) is
`variable` which takes over the `variable` capture from nodes
* Highlight known predicates as `function` and unsupported
predicates as `error`
* This may help when translating queries from nvim-treesitter.
For example `#any-of?` is a common one used in nvim-treesitter
queries but not implemented in Helix or tree-sitter-cli.
* Inject tree-sitter-regex into `#match?` predicates
* branch message with current branch and diverged branch has been
added to the parser
* scissors used in verbose commits are marked as a punctuation
delimiter
* we could use comment instead since they're visually the
same but IMO this works better
This includes a fix for the new HTML highlights introduced a few
parent commits back:
["\"" (attribute_name)] @string
Would get tripped up and the entire line would be highlighted as
a string. Now `\"` is a valid escape.
I'm switching to my fork as the primary repo as the upstream hasn't
been touched in over a year (mostly because stability afaict) but
it has no watchers currently so I'm not hopeful that my PR will
be merged.
The update to the grammar itself covers the case where the document
is a single expression without a trailing newline such as "min(A, B)".
A small change to the parser now parses these expressions correctly
which improves the display of the function head in the signature
help popup.
The update to the queries marks 'andalso', 'orelse', 'not', etc. as
`@keyword.operator` which improves the look - it looks odd to see
operators that are words highlighted the same as tokens like '->'
or '=:='.
* Added a default lsp server for Java in languages.toml
* Added a default lsp server for Java in languages.toml cont.
Co-authored-by: Jacob Thompson <a01657923@usu.edu>
HEEx is a templating engine on top of Elixir's EEx templating
language specific to HTML that is included in Phoenix.LiveView
(though I think the plan is to eventually include it in base
Phoenix). It's a superset of EEx with some additional features
like components and slots.
The injections don't work perfectly because the Elixir grammar is
newline sensitive (the _terminator rule). See
https://github.com/elixir-lang/tree-sitter-elixir/issues/24
for more information.
The new revision handles a case that I come across often: a stab
clause (i.e. '->') with an empty right hand side:
Enum.map(xs, fn x ->
end)
The old version would parse the "end" token as an error.
This is technically valid syntax but more importantly it comes up
very often when editing, and the old revision would flicker between
the keyword highlight and the warning highlight.
After the incremental parsing rewrite for injections (which was released
in 22.03 https://helix-editor.com/news/release-22-03-highlights/#incremental-injection-parsing-rewrite),
we can now do combined injections which lets us pull in some templating
grammars. The most notable of those is embedded-template - a pretty
straightforward grammar that covers ERB and EJS.
The grammar and highlights queries are shared between the two but they have
different injections.
It looks like a24fb17b2a (and
855e438f55) broke the typescript
highlights because typescript
; inherits: javascript
but it doesn't have those named nodes in its grammar.
So instead we can separate out JSX into its own language and copy
over everything from javascript and supplement it with the new
JSX highlights. Luckily there isn't too much duplication, just the
language configuration parts - we can re-use the parser with the
languages.toml `grammar` key and most of the queries with `inherits`.
news:
- tree-sitter-elixir now powers Elixir syntax highlighting on github.com
- GitHub now supports code-navigation for Elixir repos via
tree-sitter-elixir
changes:
- modules now use the `@module` highlight, which was added upstream to
tree-sitter
- it seems appropriate to use `@namespace` to follow helix convention
- added nullary range operator (e.g. `Enum.to_list(..) == []`), a new syntax
for elixir 1.14
- a fix for stab clause nodes mis-highlighting when the right hand side of
the stab clause contained multiple simple expressions
changes:
- typed fields within records which do not declare a default
value are now correctly highlighted as record fields
- the EEP49 'maybe' form is now parsed
- fixes for highlights for 'begin' and 'after' tokens
changes:
- any text following a (scissors) is now contained in one (message)
- this vastly improves performance on large verbose commits:
no more slowness on huge commits
Here we perform a shallow fetch using builtins.fetchTree. In order
to make this work, we need to specify the `ref' for any repository
that doesn't have `master' as its default branch (I'm not sure why
this limitation exists since we don't need this when performing
the shallow fetch in `--grammar build')
This `ref' field is ignored by helix, so I have left it undocumented
for now, but I could be open to documenting it.
This is a rather large refactor that moves most of the code for
loading, fetching, and building grammars into a new helix-loader
module. This works well with the [[grammars]] syntax for
languages.toml defined earlier: we only have to depend on the types
for GrammarConfiguration in helix-loader and can leave all the
[[language]] entries for helix-core.
Here we add syntax to the languages.toml languge
[[grammar]]
name = "<name>"
source = { .. }
Which can be used to specify a tree-sitter grammar separately of
the language that defines it, and we make this distinction for
two reasons:
* In later commits, we will separate this code from helix-core
and bring it to a new helix-loader crate. Using separate schemas
for language and grammar configurations allows for a nice divide
between the types needed to be declared in helix-loader and in
helix-core/syntax
* Two different languages may use the same grammar. This is currently
the case with llvm-mir-yaml and yaml. We could accomplish a config
that works for this with just `[[languages]]`, but it gets a bit
dicey with languages depending on one another. If you enable
llvm-mir-yaml and disable yaml, does helix still need to fetch and
build tree-sitter-yaml? It could be a matter of interpretation.
* impl auto pairs config
Implements configuration for which pairs of tokens get auto completed.
In order to help with this, the logic for when *not* to auto complete
has been generalized from a specific hardcoded list of characters to
simply testing if the next/prev char is alphanumeric.
It is possible to configure a global list of pairs as well as at the
language level. The language config will take precedence over the
global config.
* rename AutoPair -> Pair
* clean up insert_char command
* remove Rc
* remove some explicit cloning with another impl
* fix lint
* review comments
* global auto-pairs = false takes precedence over language settings
* make clippy happy
* print out editor config on startup
* move auto pairs accessor into Document
* rearrange auto pair doc comment
* use pattern in Froms
* Add kotlin language
Queries taken from https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter/blob/master/queries/kotlin seem to work well enough for my needs though I don't use kotlin heavily.
* Update lang-support doc
* Updates the kotlin highlight query to use helixs scopes
* Updates the queries from PR feedback
* Adds 'shallow = true' to gitmodules
* Removes kotlin locals.scm
* Remove blank line
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
* Add tree-sitter-twig grammer and highlights
The gammar itself is quite basic, but is much better than nothing
for working with real files consisting mostly of html.
* Docgen for newly added grammar
This commit builds on #1460, #1571, and others, adding the .zshenv
file and all files with the zsh extension to the file-types using
bash syntax-highlighting.
After the changes to upgrade and reenable tree-sitter-haskell #1417
for the purpose of enabling Haskell syntax highlighting #1384, we
might as well take the final step.
* Add Graphql language support
* Fix docs gen
* Add JS Graphql injection query
* Updates based on PR feedback
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
* Add experimental tree-sitter-lean
* Run docgen
* Copy over the queries from lean.nvim
* Update .gitmodules
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
* Update lean highlights and run docgen
* Update runtime/queries/lean/injections.scm
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <michael.davis@nfiindustries.com>
* Lean: Move variable matcher to bottom
* Update runtime/queries/lean/locals.scm
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <michael.davis@nfiindustries.com>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <michael.davis@nfiindustries.com>
* add show_subtree command for viewing tree-sitter subtree in Popup
* remove '.slice(..)' from show_subtree command
* name docs and subtree Popups 'hover'