Mercurial > vim
view src/ascii.h @ 33914:966a1af141b0 v9.0.2157
patch 9.0.2157: Vim9: incorrectly parses :def func definitions
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/e4a450a87ba532cbfe1c4e97cac378eaafc3ae39
Author: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Date: Fri Dec 8 20:57:38 2023 +0100
patch 9.0.2157: Vim9: incorrectly parses :def func definitions
Problem: Vim9: incorrectly parses :def func definitions
Solution: check for more context when parsing function args
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Incorrectly parses def function definitions
Vim currently allows to define the following vim9 function:
def Func(f=
)
enddef
It currently thinks a Lambda is following the `=` but it doesn't check,
that there is actually an expression following. So when such a think is
encountered, remember that an expression should be following.
If no expression is coming in the next few lines, fail parsing the
function arguments, which will Vim no longer accept such a function.
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 11 Dec 2023 18:00:02 +0100 |
parents | fb4c30606b4a |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
/* vi:set ts=8 sts=4 sw=4 noet: * * VIM - Vi IMproved by Bram Moolenaar * * Do ":help uganda" in Vim to read copying and usage conditions. * Do ":help credits" in Vim to see a list of people who contributed. */ /* * Definitions of various common control characters. */ #define CharOrd(x) ((x) < 'a' ? (x) - 'A' : (x) - 'a') #define CharOrdLow(x) ((x) - 'a') #define CharOrdUp(x) ((x) - 'A') #define ROT13(c, a) (((((c) - (a)) + 13) % 26) + (a)) #define NUL '\000' #define BELL '\007' #define BS '\010' #define TAB '\011' #define NL '\012' #define NL_STR (char_u *)"\012" #define FF '\014' #define CAR '\015' // CR is used by Mac OS X #define ESC '\033' #define ESC_STR (char_u *)"\033" #define ESC_STR_nc "\033" #define DEL 0x7f #define DEL_STR (char_u *)"\177" #define POUND 0xA3 #define Ctrl_chr(x) (TOUPPER_ASC(x) ^ 0x40) // '?' -> DEL, '@' -> ^@, etc. #define Meta(x) ((x) | 0x80) #define CTRL_F_STR "\006" #define CTRL_H_STR "\010" #define CTRL_V_STR "\026" #define Ctrl_AT 0 // @ #define Ctrl_A 1 #define Ctrl_B 2 #define Ctrl_C 3 #define Ctrl_D 4 #define Ctrl_E 5 #define Ctrl_F 6 #define Ctrl_G 7 #define Ctrl_H 8 #define Ctrl_I 9 #define Ctrl_J 10 #define Ctrl_K 11 #define Ctrl_L 12 #define Ctrl_M 13 #define Ctrl_N 14 #define Ctrl_O 15 #define Ctrl_P 16 #define Ctrl_Q 17 #define Ctrl_R 18 #define Ctrl_S 19 #define Ctrl_T 20 #define Ctrl_U 21 #define Ctrl_V 22 #define Ctrl_W 23 #define Ctrl_X 24 #define Ctrl_Y 25 #define Ctrl_Z 26 // CTRL- [ Left Square Bracket == ESC #define Ctrl_BSL 28 // \ BackSLash #define Ctrl_RSB 29 // ] Right Square Bracket #define Ctrl_HAT 30 // ^ #define Ctrl__ 31 #define CSI 0x9b // Control Sequence Introducer #define CSI_STR "\233" #define DCS 0x90 // Device Control String #define OSC 0x9d // Operating System Command #define STERM 0x9c // String Terminator /* * Character that separates dir names in a path. * For MS-DOS, WIN32 and OS/2 we use a backslash. A slash mostly works * fine, but there are places where it doesn't (e.g. in a command name). * For Acorn we use a dot. */ #ifdef BACKSLASH_IN_FILENAME # define PATHSEP psepc # define PATHSEPSTR pseps #else # define PATHSEP '/' # define PATHSEPSTR "/" #endif