view src/testdir/test_wordcount.vim @ 33399:95db67c7b754 v9.0.1958

patch 9.0.1958: cannot complete option values Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/900894b09a95398dfc75599e9f0aa2ea25723384 Author: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com> Date: Fri Sep 29 20:42:32 2023 +0200 patch 9.0.1958: cannot complete option values Problem: cannot complete option values Solution: Add completion functions for several options Add cmdline tab-completion for setting string options Add tab-completion for setting string options on the cmdline using `:set=` (along with `:set+=` and `:set-=`). The existing tab completion for setting options currently only works when nothing is typed yet, and it only fills in with the existing value, e.g. when the user does `:set diffopt=<Tab>` it will be completed to `set diffopt=internal,filler,closeoff` and nothing else. This isn't too useful as a user usually wants auto-complete to suggest all the possible values, such as 'iblank', or 'algorithm:patience'. For set= and set+=, this adds a new optional callback function for each option that can be invoked when doing completion. This allows for each option to have control over how completion works. For example, in 'diffopt', it will suggest the default enumeration, but if `algorithm:` is selected, it will further suggest different algorithm types like 'meyers' and 'patience'. When using set=, the existing option value will be filled in as the first choice to preserve the existing behavior. When using set+= this won't happen as it doesn't make sense. For flag list options (e.g. 'mouse' and 'guioptions'), completion will take into account existing typed values (and in the case of set+=, the existing option value) to make sure it doesn't suggest duplicates. For set-=, there is a new `ExpandSettingSubtract` function which will handle flag list and comma-separated options smartly, by only suggesting values that currently exist in the option. Note that Vim has some existing code that adds special handling for 'filetype', 'syntax', and misc dir options like 'backupdir'. This change preserves them as they already work, instead of converting to the new callback API for each option. closes: #13182 Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
author Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
date Fri, 29 Sep 2023 20:45:04 +0200
parents 08940efa6b4e
children
line wrap: on
line source

" Test for wordcount() function

func Test_wordcount()
  let save_enc = &enc
  set encoding=utf-8
  set selection=inclusive fileformat=unix fileformats=unix

  new

  " Test 1: empty window
  call assert_equal({'chars': 0, 'cursor_chars': 0, 'words': 0, 'cursor_words': 0,
				\ 'bytes': 0, 'cursor_bytes': 0}, wordcount())

  " Test 2: some words, cursor at start
  call append(1, 'one two three')
  call cursor([1, 1, 0])
  call assert_equal({'chars': 15, 'cursor_chars': 1, 'words': 3, 'cursor_words': 0,
				\ 'bytes': 15, 'cursor_bytes': 1}, wordcount())

  " Test 3: some words, cursor at end
  %d _
  call append(1, 'one two three')
  call cursor([2, 99, 0])
  call assert_equal({'chars': 15, 'cursor_chars': 14, 'words': 3, 'cursor_words': 3,
				\ 'bytes': 15, 'cursor_bytes': 14}, wordcount())

  " Test 4: some words, cursor at end, ve=all
  set ve=all
  %d _
  call append(1, 'one two three')
  call cursor([2, 99, 0])
  call assert_equal({'chars': 15, 'cursor_chars': 15, 'words': 3, 'cursor_words': 3,
				\ 'bytes': 15, 'cursor_bytes': 15}, wordcount())
  set ve=

  " Test 5: several lines with words
  %d _
  call append(1, ['one two three', 'one two three', 'one two three'])
  call cursor([4, 99, 0])
  call assert_equal({'chars': 43, 'cursor_chars': 42, 'words': 9, 'cursor_words': 9,
				\ 'bytes': 43, 'cursor_bytes': 42}, wordcount())

  " Test 6: one line with BOM set
  %d _
  call append(1, 'one two three')
  set bomb
  w! Xtest
  call cursor([2, 99, 0])
  call assert_equal({'chars': 15, 'cursor_chars': 14, 'words': 3, 'cursor_words': 3,
				\ 'bytes': 18, 'cursor_bytes': 14}, wordcount())
  set nobomb
  w!
  call delete('Xtest')

  " Test 7: one line with multibyte words
  %d _
  call append(1, ['Äne M¤ne Müh'])
  call cursor([2, 99, 0])
  call assert_equal({'chars': 14, 'cursor_chars': 13, 'words': 3, 'cursor_words': 3,
				\ 'bytes': 17, 'cursor_bytes': 16}, wordcount())

  " Test 8: several lines with multibyte words
  %d _
  call append(1, ['Äne M¤ne Müh', 'und raus bist dü!'])
  call cursor([3, 99, 0])
  call assert_equal({'chars': 32, 'cursor_chars': 31, 'words': 7, 'cursor_words': 7,
				\ 'bytes': 36, 'cursor_bytes': 35}, wordcount())

  " Visual map to capture wordcount() in visual mode
  vnoremap <expr> <F2> execute("let g:visual_stat = wordcount()")

  " Test 9: visual mode, complete buffer
  let g:visual_stat = {}
  %d _
  call append(1, ['Äne M¤ne Müh', 'und raus bist dü!'])
  " start visual mode and select the complete buffer
  0
  exe "normal V2j\<F2>y"
  call assert_equal({'chars': 32, 'words': 7, 'bytes': 36, 'visual_chars': 32,
				\ 'visual_words': 7, 'visual_bytes': 36}, g:visual_stat)

  " Test 10: visual mode (empty)
  %d _
  call append(1, ['Äne M¤ne Müh', 'und raus bist dü!'])
  " start visual mode and select the complete buffer
  0
  exe "normal v$\<F2>y"
  call assert_equal({'chars': 32, 'words': 7, 'bytes': 36, 'visual_chars': 1,
				\ 'visual_words': 0, 'visual_bytes': 1}, g:visual_stat)

  " Test 11: visual mode, single line
  %d _
  call append(1, ['Äne M¤ne Müh', 'und raus bist dü!'])
  " start visual mode and select the complete buffer
  2
  exe "normal 0v$\<F2>y"
  call assert_equal({'chars': 32, 'words': 7, 'bytes': 36, 'visual_chars': 13,
				\ 'visual_words': 3, 'visual_bytes': 16}, g:visual_stat)

  set selection& fileformat& fileformats&
  let &enc = save_enc
  enew!
  close
endfunc

" vim: shiftwidth=2 sts=2 expandtab