Mercurial > vim
view src/ascii.h @ 34194:a522c6c0127b v9.1.0047
patch 9.1.0047: issues with temp curwin/buf while cmdwin is open
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/988f74311c26ea9917e84fbae608de226dba7e5f
Author: Sean Dewar <seandewar@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Wed Aug 16 14:17:36 2023 +0100
patch 9.1.0047: issues with temp curwin/buf while cmdwin is open
Problem: Things that temporarily change/restore curwin/buf (e.g:
win_execute, some autocmds) may break assumptions that
curwin/buf is the cmdwin when "cmdwin_type != 0", causing
issues.
Solution: Expose the cmdwin's real win/buf and check that instead. Also
try to ensure these variables are NULL if "cmdwin_type == 0",
allowing them to be used directly in most cases without
checking cmdwin_type. (Sean Dewar)
Alternatively, we could ban win_execute in the cmdwin and audit all places that
temporarily change/restore curwin/buf, but I didn't notice any problems arising
from allowing this (standard cmdwin restrictions still apply, so things that may
actually break the cmdwin are still forbidden).
closes: #12819
Signed-off-by: Sean Dewar <seandewar@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 23 Jan 2024 23:00:04 +0100 |
parents | fb4c30606b4a |
children |
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/* 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