Mercurial > vim
view runtime/doc/ft_raku.txt @ 33083:79b2eb83f2df v9.0.1827
patch 9.0.1827: xxd: no color support
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/e2528ae11134cdf35c312754b124aba4963d8054
Author: Aapo Rantalainen <aapo.rantalainen@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Aug 31 17:58:13 2023 +0200
patch 9.0.1827: xxd: no color support
Problem: xxd: no color support
Solution: Add color support using xxd -R
Add some basic color support for xxd
The hex-value and value are both colored with the same color depending
on the hex-value, e.g.:
0x00 = white
0xff = blue
printable = green
non-printable = red
tabs and linebreaks = yellow
Each character needs 11 more bytes to contain color. (Same color in a
row could contain only one overhead but the logic how xxd creates colums
must be then changed.) Size of colored output is increased by factor of
~6. Also grepping the output will break when colors is used.
Flag for color is "-R", because less uses "-R".
Color uses parameters auto,always,never same as less and grep (among
others).
E.g.
xxd -R always $FILE | less -R
Add some screen-tests (that currently on work on linux) to verify the
feature works as expected.
closes: #12131
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Aapo Rantalainen <aapo.rantalainen@gmail.com>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 31 Aug 2023 18:15:03 +0200 |
parents | d19b7aee1925 |
children |
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*ft_raku.txt* The Raku programming language filetype *vim-raku* Vim-raku provides syntax highlighting, indentation, and other support for editing Raku programs. 1. Using Unicode in your Raku files |raku-unicode| ============================================================================== 1. Using Unicode in your Raku files *raku-unicode* Defining new operators using Unicode symbols is a good way to make your Raku program easy to read. See: https://perl6advent.wordpress.com/2012/12/18/day-18-formulas-resistance-is-futile/ While Raku does define ASCII alternatives for some common operators (see https://docs.raku.org/language/unicode_ascii), using the full range of Unicode operators is highly desirable. Your operating system provides input facilities, but using the features built in to Vim may be preferable. The natural way to produce these symbols in Vim is to use digraph shortcuts (:help |digraphs-use|). Many of them are defined; type `:digraphs` to get the list. A convenient way to read the list of digraphs is to save them in a file. From the shell: > vim +'redir >/tmp/vim-digraphs-listing.txt' +digraphs +'redir END' +q Some of them are available with standard Vim digraphs: << « /0 ∅ !< ≮ ~ >> » Ob ∘ !> ≯ ~ ., … 00 ∞ (C ⊂ ~ (U ∩ -: ÷ )C ⊃ ~ )U ∪ (_ ⊆ >= ≥ ~ ?= ≅ )_ ⊇ =< ≤ ~ (- ∈ ?= ≅ != ≠ ~ -) ∋ ?- ≃ ~ The Greek alphabet is available with '*' followed by a similar Latin symbol: *p π ~ *t τ ~ *X × ~ Numbers, subscripts and superscripts are available with 's' and 'S': 0s ₀ 0S ⁰ ~ 1s ₁ 1S ¹ ~ 2s ₂ 9S ⁹ ~ But some don't come defined by default. Those are digraph definitions you can add in your ~/.vimrc file. > exec 'digraph \\ ' .. char2nr('∖') exec 'digraph \< ' .. char2nr('≼') exec 'digraph \> ' .. char2nr('≽') exec 'digraph (L ' .. char2nr('⊈') exec 'digraph )L ' .. char2nr('⊉') exec 'digraph (/ ' .. char2nr('⊄') exec 'digraph )/ ' .. char2nr('⊅') exec 'digraph )/ ' .. char2nr('⊅') exec 'digraph U+ ' .. char2nr('⊎') exec 'digraph 0- ' .. char2nr('⊖') " Euler's constant exec 'digraph ne ' .. char2nr('𝑒') " Raku's atomic operations marker exec 'digraph @@ ' .. char2nr('⚛') Alternatively, you can write Insert mode abbreviations that convert ASCII- based operators into their single-character Unicode equivalent. > iabbrev <buffer> !(<) ⊄ iabbrev <buffer> !(<=) ⊈ iabbrev <buffer> !(>) ⊅ iabbrev <buffer> !(>=) ⊉ iabbrev <buffer> !(cont) ∌ iabbrev <buffer> !(elem) ∉ iabbrev <buffer> != ≠ iabbrev <buffer> (&) ∩ iabbrev <buffer> (+) ⊎ iabbrev <buffer> (-) ∖ iabbrev <buffer> (.) ⊍ iabbrev <buffer> (<) ⊂ iabbrev <buffer> (<+) ≼ iabbrev <buffer> (<=) ⊆ iabbrev <buffer> (>) ⊃ iabbrev <buffer> (>+) ≽ iabbrev <buffer> (>=) ⊇ iabbrev <buffer> (\|) ∪ iabbrev <buffer> (^) ⊖ iabbrev <buffer> (atomic) ⚛ iabbrev <buffer> (cont) ∋ iabbrev <buffer> (elem) ∈ iabbrev <buffer> * × iabbrev <buffer> **0 ⁰ iabbrev <buffer> **1 ¹ iabbrev <buffer> **2 ² iabbrev <buffer> **3 ³ iabbrev <buffer> **4 ⁴ iabbrev <buffer> **5 ⁵ iabbrev <buffer> **6 ⁶ iabbrev <buffer> **7 ⁷ iabbrev <buffer> **8 ⁸ iabbrev <buffer> **9 ⁹ iabbrev <buffer> ... … iabbrev <buffer> / ÷ iabbrev <buffer> << « iabbrev <buffer> <<[=]<< «=« iabbrev <buffer> <<[=]>> «=» iabbrev <buffer> <= ≤ iabbrev <buffer> =~= ≅ iabbrev <buffer> >= ≥ iabbrev <buffer> >> » iabbrev <buffer> >>[=]<< »=« iabbrev <buffer> >>[=]>> »=» iabbrev <buffer> Inf ∞ iabbrev <buffer> atomic-add-fetch ⚛+= iabbrev <buffer> atomic-assign ⚛= iabbrev <buffer> atomic-fetch ⚛ iabbrev <buffer> atomic-dec-fetch --⚛ iabbrev <buffer> atomic-fetch-dec ⚛-- iabbrev <buffer> atomic-fetch-inc ⚛++ iabbrev <buffer> atomic-inc-fetch ++⚛ iabbrev <buffer> atomic-sub-fetch ⚛−= iabbrev <buffer> e 𝑒 iabbrev <buffer> o ∘ iabbrev <buffer> pi π iabbrev <buffer> set() ∅ iabbrev <buffer> tau τ < vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: