This reverts commit 40199266b6.
The issue with the commit is: ContentMask<Pixels>::intersect is doing
intersection of corner radii which makes inner containers use the max
corner radius out of all the parents when it should be more complex to
correctly clip children (clip sorting..?)
Release Notes:
- N/A
We don’t know the background color behind a non-opaque editor, so we
should skip contrast correction in that case. This prevents
single-editor mode (which is always transparent) from showing weird text
colors when text is selected.
We can’t account for the actual background during contrast correction
because we compute contrast outside gpui, while the actual color
blending happens inside gpui during drawing.
<img width="522" height="145" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/6ee71475-f666-482d-87e6-15cf4c4fceef"
/>
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where Command Palette text looked faded when selected.
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/37144
Adjusts `editor::DeleteToPreviousWordStart`,
`editor::DeleteToNextWordEnd`, `editor::DeleteToNextSubwordEnd` and
`editor::DeleteToPreviousSubwordStart` actions to
* take whitespace sequences with length >= 2 into account and stop after
removing them (whilst movement would also include the word after such
sequences)
* take current language's brackets into account and stop after removing
the text before them
The latter is configurable and can be disabled with `"ignore_brackets":
true` parameter in the action.
Release Notes:
- Improved word deletions to consider whitespace sequences and brackets
by default
Follow up to https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/30598
This PR introduces the `display_options` field in the
`CompletionResponse`, allowing a code context menu width to be
dynamically dictated based on its larger item. This will allow us to
have the @-mentions and slash commands completion menus in the agent
panel not be bigger than it needs to be. It may also be relevant/useful
in the future for other use cases.
For now, we set all instances of code context menus to use a fixed
width, as defined in the PR linked above, which means this PR shouldn't
cause any visual change.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-authored-by: Michael Sloan <mgsloan+github@gmail.com>
Closes#37249
We no longer show edit prediction when composing IME since it isn't
useful for unfinished alphabet.
Release Notes:
- Fixed edit predictions showing up during partial IME composition.
Closes #ISSUE
This PR includes the necessary work to get `EditorSettings` showing up
in the settings UI. Including making the `path` field on
`SettingsUiItem`'s optional so that top level items such as
`EditorSettings` which have `Settings::KEY = None` (i.e. are treated
like `serde(flatten)`) have their paths computed correctly for JSON
reading/updating.
It includes the first examples of a pattern I expect to continue with
the `SettingsUi` work with respect to settings reorganization, that
being adding missing defaults, and adding explicit values (or aliases)
to settings which previously relied on `null` being a value for optional
fields.
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
Closes #ISSUE
Initially, the `SettingsUi` trait was tied to `Settings`, however, given
that the `Settings::FileContent` type (which may be the same as the type
that implements `Settings`) will be the type that more directly maps to
the JSON structure (and therefore have the documentation, correct field
names (or `serde` rename attributes), etc) it makes more sense to have
the deriving of `SettingsUi` occur on the `FileContent` type rather than
the `Settings` type.
In order for this to work a relatively important change had to be made
to the derive macro, that being that it now "unwraps" options into their
inner type, so a field with type `Option<Foo>` where `Foo: SettingsUi`
will treat the field as if it were just `Foo`, expecting there to be a
default set in `default.json`. This imposes some restrictions on what
`Settings::FileContent` can be as seen in 1e19398 where `FileContent`
itself can't be optional without manually implementing `SettingsUi`, as
well as introducing some risk that if the `FileContent` type has
`serde(default)`, the default value will override the default value from
`default.json` in the UI even though it may differ (but it should!).
A future PR should probably replace the other settings with `FileContent
= Option<T>` (all of which currently have `T == bool`) with wrapper
structs and have `KEY = None` so the further niceties
`derive(SettingsUi)` will provide such as path renaming, custom UI, auto
naming and doc comment extraction can be used.
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
This updates `editor: rewrap` to work within doc comments, based on the
code that extends such comments on newline. I added some tests, and I've
tested it out in JS, C and PHP. (Though PHP depends on
https://github.com/zed-extensions/php/pull/40)
Closes#19794Closes#18221
**Caveat:**
~~This will not rewrap an existing single-line block comment, such as
the one provided in #18221:~~ this will now rewrap as expected
```c
/* we can triangulate any convex polygon by picking a vertex and connecting it to the next two vertices; we first read two vertices, and then, for every subsequent vertex, we can form a triangle by connecting it to the first and previous vertex */
```
However, it will rewrap a similar comment if it is shaped like a doc
comment. In other words, this will rewrap as expected:
```c
/*
* we can triangulate any convex polygon by picking a vertex and connecting it to the next two vertices; we first read two vertices, and then, for every subsequent vertex, we can form a triangle by connecting it to the first and previous vertex
*/
```
This seems like a reasonable improvement and limitation to me,
especially as a first step.
cc @smitbarmase because I think that you've been making a lot of the
`newline` and `rewrap` changes recently. (Thank you for those, by the
way!)
Release Notes:
- Added support for rewrap in block comments.
---------
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
## Goal
This PR creates the initial settings ui structure with the primary goal
of making a settings UI that is
- Comprehensive: All settings are available through the UI
- Correct: Easy to understand the underlying JSON file from the UI
- Intuitive
- Easy to implement per setting so that UI is not a hindrance to future
settings changes
### Structure
The overall structure is settings layer -> data layer -> ui layer.
The settings layer is the pre-existing settings definitions, that
implement the `Settings` trait. The data layer is constructed from
settings primarily through the `SettingsUi` trait, and it's associated
derive macro. The data layer tracks the grouping of the settings, the
json path of the settings, and a data representation of how to render
the controls for the setting in the UI, that is either a marker value
for the component to use (avoiding a dependency on the `ui` crate) or a
custom render function.
Abstracting the data layer from the ui layer allows crates depending on
`settings` to implement their own UI without having to add additional UI
dependencies, thus avoiding circular dependencies. In cases where custom
UI is desired, and a creating a custom render function in the same crate
is infeasible due to circular dependencies, the current solution is to
implement a marker for the component in the `settings` crate, and then
handle the rendering of that component in `settings_ui`.
### Foundation
This PR creates a macro and a trait both called `SettingsUi`. The
`SettingsUi` trait is added as a new trait bound on the `Settings`
trait, this allows the type system to guarantee that all settings
implement UI functionality. The macro is used to derived the trait for
most types, and can be modified through attributes for unique cases as
well.
A derive-macro is used to generate the settings UI trait impl, allowing
it the UI generation to be generated from the static information in our
code base (`default.json`, Struct/Enum names, field names, `serde`
attributes, etc). This allows the UI to be auto-generated for the most
part, and ensures consistency across the UI.
#### Immediate Follow ups
- Add a new `SettingsPath` trait that will be a trait bound on
`SettingsUi` and `Settings`
- This trait will replace the `Settings::key` value to enable
`SettingsUi` to infer the json path of it's derived type
- Figure out how to render `Option<T> where T: SettingsUi` correctly
- Handle `serde` attributes in the `SettingsUi` proc macro to correctly
get json path from a type's field and identity
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Ben Kunkle <ben@zed.dev>
Add support for scrolling the contents rendered aside an
`editor::code_context_menus::CodeContextMenu` by introducing the
`scroll_aside` method.
For now this method is only implemented for the
`CodeContextMenu::Completions` variant, which will scroll the aside
contents for an `editor::code_context_menus::CompletionsMenu` element,
as a `ScrollHandle` is added to the aside content that is rendered.
In order to be possible to trigger this via keybindings, a new editor
action is introduced, `ContextMenuScrollAside`, which accepts a number
of lines or pages to scroll the content by.
Lastly, the default keymaps for both MacOS and Linux, as well as for
Zed's vim mode, are updated to ensure that the following keybindings are
supported when a completion menu is open and the completion item's
documentation is rendered aside:
- `ctrl-e`
- `ctrl-y`
- `ctrl-d`
- `ctrl-u`
### Recording
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/02043763-87ea-46f5-9768-00e907127b69
---
Closes#13194
Release Notes:
- Added support for scrolling the documentation panel shown alongside
the completion menu in the editor with `cltr-d`, `ctrl-u`, `ctrl-e` and
`ctrl-y`
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: MrSubidubi <finn@zed.dev>
Closes#35787Closes#17890Closes#28789Closes#36495
How it works:
For highlights (and selections) within the visible rows of the editor,
we split them row by row. This is efficient since the number of visible
rows is constant. For each row, all highlights and selections, which may
overlap, are flattened using a line sweep. This produces non-overlapping
consecutive segments for each row, each with a blended background color.
Next, for each row, we split text runs into smaller runs to adjust its
color using APCA contrast. Since both text runs and segment are
non-overlapping and consecutive, we can use two-pointer on them to do
this.
For example, a text run for the variable red might be split into two
runs if a highlight partially covers it. As a result, one part may
appear as red, while the other appears as a lighter red, depending on
the background behind it.
Result:
<img width="1458" height="949" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4814c93d-12e7-4b4d-8542-d912acccfb8e"
/>
<img width="1459" height="952" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9e497b6c-3e66-43e8-8e5b-f634dd5ee8d3"
/>
<img width="1457" height="621" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8dfa6ce5-f46b-45b9-8008-66169d5aecd4"
/>
Release Notes:
- Improved text contrast when selected or highlighted in the editor.
This pull request refactors the `KeybindingKeystroke` struct and related
code to improve platform abstraction. The changes centralize
platform-specific logic within `KeybindingKeystroke` and update its
usage throughout the codebase, making the API more consistent and less
error-prone.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR adds the ability for a user to select one or more blocks of text
and wrap each selection in an HTML tag — which works by placing multiple
cursors inside the open and close tags so the appropriate element name
can be typed in to all places simultaneously.
This is similar to the emmet "Wrap with Abbreviation" functionality
discussed in #15588 but is a simpler version that does not rely on
Emmet's language server.
Here's a preview of the feature in action:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1931e717-136c-4766-a585-e4ba939d9adf
Some notes and questions:
- The current implementation is a hardcoded with regards to supported
languages. I'd love some direction on how much of this information to
push into the relevant language structs.
- I can see this feature as something that languages added by an
extension would want to enable support for — is this something you'd
want?
- The syntax is hardcoded to support HTML/XML/JSX-like languages. I
don't suppose this is a problem but figured I'd point it out anyway.
- I called it "Wrap in tag" but open to whatever naming you feel is
appropriate.
- The implementation doesn't use `manipulate_lines` — I wasn't sure how
make use of that without extra overhead / bookkeeping — does this seem
fine?
- I could also investigate adding wrap in abbreviation support by
communicating with the Emmet language server but I think I'll need some
direction on how to handle Emmet's custom LSP message. I could do this
either in addition to or instead of this feature — though imo this
feature is a nice "shortcut" regardless.
Release Notes:
- Added a new "Wrap Selections in Tag" action that lets you wrap one or
more selections in tags based on language. Works in HTML, JSX, and
similar languages, and places cursors inside both opening and closing
tags so you can type the tag name once and apply it everywhere.
---------
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
Enables LSP log tracing in both remote collab and remote ssh
environments.
Server logs and server RPC traces can now be viewed remotely, and the
LSP button is now shown in such projects too.
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/28557
Co-Authored-By: Kirill <kirill@zed.dev>
Co-Authored-By: Lukas <lukas@zed.dev>
Release Notes:
- Enabled LSP log tracing in both remote collab and remote ssh
environments
---------
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <kirill@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukas@zed.dev>
This is a pure refactor that consolidates all SSH remoting logic such
that it should be straightforward to add another transport to the
remoting system.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla.c.maki@gmail.com>
Closes#36300
This PR follows Windows conventions by introducing
`KeybindingKeystroke`, so shortcuts now show up as `ctrl-shift-4`
instead of `ctrl-$`.
It also fixes issues with keyboard layouts: when `use_key_equivalents`
is set to true, keys are remapped based on their virtual key codes. For
example, `ctrl-\` on a standard English layout will be mapped to
`ctrl-ё` on a Russian layout.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Kate <kate@zed.dev>
<img width="1988" height="1420" alt="multi-buffer-icons-git-diff"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/48f9722f-ca09-4aa7-ad7a-0b7e85f440d9"
/>
Unfortunately, `cargo format` decided to reformat everything. Probably,
because of hitting the right margin, no idea. The essence of this change
is the following:
```rust
.map(|path_header| {
let filename = filename
.map(SharedString::from)
.unwrap_or_else(|| "untitled".into());
let path = path::Path::new(filename.as_str());
let icon =
FileIcons::get_icon(path, cx).unwrap_or_default();
let icon = Icon::from_path(icon).color(Color::Muted);
let label = Label::new(filename).single_line().when_some(
file_status,
|el, status| {
el.color(if status.is_conflicted() {
Color::Conflict
} else if status.is_modified() {
Color::Modified
} else if status.is_deleted() {
Color::Disabled
} else {
Color::Created
})
.when(status.is_deleted(), |el| el.strikethrough())
},
);
path_header.child(icon).child(label)
})
```
Release Notes:
- Added file icons to multi buffer view
Flycheck commands are global and makes sense to fall back to looking up
project's rust-analyzer even if the commands are run on a non-rust
buffer. If multiple rust-analyzers are found in the project, avoid
ambiguous commands and bail (as before).
Closes #ISSUE
Release Notes:
- Made it possible to run rust-analyzer's flycheck actions from anywhere
in the project
This fixes a panic I randomly ran into whilst mistyping in the command
palette: I accidentally ran `pane: swap item right`in a state where no
items were opened in my active pane. We were checking for `index + 1 ==
self.items.len()` there when it really should be `>=`, as otherwise in
the case of no items this panics.
This PR fixes the bug, adds a test for both the panic as well as the
actions themselves (they were untested previously). Lastly (and mostly),
this also cleans up a bit around existing actions to update them with
how we generally handle actions now.
Release Notes:
- Fixed a panic that could occur with the `pane: swap item right`
action.
Users now accept ToS from Zed's website when they sign in to Zed the
first time. So it's no longer possible that a signed in account could
not have accepted the ToS.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla.c.maki@gmail.com>
Introduce `min_words_query_len` threshold for automatic word completion
display, and set it to 3 by default.
Re-enable word completions in Markdown and Plaintext.
Release Notes:
- Introduced `min_words_query_len` threshold for automatic word
completion display, and set it to 3 by default to make them less
intrusive
## Summary
Fixes cursor movement behavior in protected files (like Default
Settings) when pressing backspace or delete keys.
Previously, these keys would cause unwanted cursor movement instead of
being ignored as expected in read-only files.
## Changes
- Added read-only checks to `backspace()` and `delete()` methods in the
editor
- Consistent with existing pattern used by other editing methods
(`indent()`, `outdent()`, `undo()`, etc.)
## Test Plan
1. Open Default Settings in Zed
2. Place cursor at arbitrary position (not at start/end of file)
3. Press backspace - cursor should remain in place (no movement)
4. Press delete - cursor should remain in place (no movement)
Fixes#36302
Release Notes:
- Fixed backspace and delete keys moving caret in protected files
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Closes#34445
Now we open a multi-buffer consisting of buffers that have updated,
renamed file imports.
Only local is handled, for now.
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where renaming a file would not update imports in
related files if they are not already open.
Instead of holding a connection for potentially long LSP queries (e.g.
rust-analyzer might take minutes to look up a definition), disconnect
right after sending the initial request and handle the follow-up
responses later.
As a bonus, this allows to cancel previously sent request on the local
Collab clients' side due to this, as instead of holding and serving the
old connection, local clients now can stop previous requests, if needed.
Current PR does not convert all LSP requests to the new paradigm, but
the problematic ones, deprecating `MultiLspQuery` and moving all its
requests to the new paradigm.
Release Notes:
- Improved resource usage when querying LSP over Collab
---------
Co-authored-by: David Kleingeld <git@davidsk.dev>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: David Kleingeld <davidsk@zed.dev>
This may be responsible for a panic that we've been seeing with
increased frequency in agent2 threads.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
This removes around 900 unnecessary clones, ranging from cloning a few
ints all the way to large data structures and images.
A lot of these were fixed using `cargo clippy --fix --workspace
--all-targets`, however it often breaks other lints and needs to be run
again. This was then followed up with some manual fixing.
I understand this is a large diff, but all the changes are pretty
trivial. Rust is doing some heavy lifting here for us. Once I get it up
to speed with main, I'd appreciate this getting merged rather sooner
than later.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR is one step in a series of refactors to prepare for having
"remote" projects that do not use SSH. The main use cases for this are
WSL and dev containers.
Release Notes:
- N/A