view runtime/doc/ft_raku.txt @ 32816:939396a5711c v9.0.1722

patch 9.0.1722: wrong error messages when passing wrong types to count() Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/4f389e7c0fe7dfeccfa512a72fa36f9028d57159 Author: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com> Date: Thu Aug 17 22:10:40 2023 +0200 patch 9.0.1722: wrong error messages when passing wrong types to count() Problem: wrong error messages when passing wrong types to count() Solution: fix it This fixes two problems: 1. When passing wrong type to {ic} argument of count(), two error messages are given, the second of which is misleading. 2. When passing wrong type to {comp} argument of count(), the error message doesn't mention that {comp} may be a String. closes: #12825 Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
author Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
date Thu, 17 Aug 2023 22:15:03 +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
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