Closes #ISSUE
Adds a `Maybe<T>` type to `settings_content`, that makes the distinction
between `null` and omitted settings values explicit. This unlocks a few
more settings in the settings UI
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
We were dropping the entities once we created the buffers, so the weak
entities could never be upgraded. This treats new locations we see the
same as we would for a read/write call and stores the entity so that we
can follow like we normally would.
Release Notes:
- acp: Fix following not working with certain tool calls.
I love keybindings.
I spend way to much time thinking about them.
I also REALLY like working in Zed.
so far, however, I have found the key context system in Zed to be less
flexible than in VSCode.
the HUGE context that is available in VSCode helps you create
keybindings for very specific targeted scenarios.
the tree like structure of the Zed key context means you loose some
information as focus moves throughout the application.
For example, it is not currently possible to create a keybinding in the
editor that will only work when one of the Docks is open, or if a
specific dock is open.
this would be useful in implementing solutions to ideas like #24222
we already have an action for moving focus to the dock, and we have an
action for opening/closing the dock, but to my knowledge (very limited
lol) we cannot determine if that dock *is open* unless we are focused on
it.
I think it is possible to create a more flexible key binding system by
adding more context information to the higher up context ancestors.
while:
```
Workspace right_dock=GitPanel
Dock
GitPanel
Editor
```
may seem redundant, it actually communicates fundamentally different
information than:
```
Workspace right_dock=GitPanel
Pane
Editor
```
the first says "the GitPanel is in the right hand dock AND IT IS
FOCUSED",
while the second means "Focus is on the Editor, and the GitPanel just
happens to be open in the right hand dock"
This change adds a new set of identifiers to the `Workspace` key_context
that will indicate which docks are open and what is the specific panel
that is currently visible in that dock.
examples:
- `left_dock=ProjectPanel`
- `bottom_dock=TerminalPanel`
- `right_dock=GitPanel`
in my testing the following types of keybindings seem to be supported
with this change:
```jsonc
// match for any value of the identifier
"context": "Workspace && bottom_dock"
"context": "Workspace && !bottom_dock"
// match only a specific value to an identifier
"context": "Workspace && bottom_dock=TerminalPanel"
// match only in a child context if the ancestor workspace has the correct identifier
"context": "Workspace && !bottom_dock=DebugPanel > Editor"
```
some screen shots of the context matching in different circumstances:
<img width="2032" height="1167" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-16 at 23 20 34"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/116d0575-a1ae-4577-95b9-8415cda57e52"
/>
<img width="2032" height="1167" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-16 at 23 20 57"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/000fdbb6-80bd-46e9-b668-f4b54ab708d2"
/>
<img width="2032" height="1167" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-16 at 23 21 37"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/7b1c82da-b82f-4e14-a97c-3cd0e71bbca0"
/>
<img width="2032" height="1167" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-16 at 23 21 52"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1fd4b65a-09f7-47a9-a9b7-fdce4252aec3"
/>
<img width="2032" height="1167" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-16 at 23 22 38"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f4c2ac5c-e6f9-4e0e-b683-522b237e3328"
/>
the persistent_name values for `ProjectPanel` and `OutlinePanel` needed
to be updated to not have a space in them in order to pass the
`Identifier` check. all the other Panels already had names that did not
include spaces, so it just makes these conform with the other ones.
I think this is a great place to start with adding more context
identifiers and i think this type of additional information will make it
possible to create really dynamic keybindings!
Release Notes:
- Workspace key context now includes the state of the 3 docks
Reduces peak stack usage in these functions and should generally be a
bit performant.
Display map benchmark results
```
To tab point/to_tab_point/1024
time: [531.40 ns 532.10 ns 532.97 ns]
change: [-2.1824% -2.0054% -1.8125%] (p = 0.00 < 0.05)
Performance has improved.
Found 1 outliers among 100 measurements (1.00%)
1 (1.00%) high severe
To fold point/to_fold_point/1024
time: [530.81 ns 531.30 ns 531.80 ns]
change: [-2.0295% -1.9054% -1.7716%] (p = 0.00 < 0.05)
Performance has improved.
Found 3 outliers among 100 measurements (3.00%)
2 (2.00%) high mild
1 (1.00%) high severe
```
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
Continues the work from #35927 to add a git diff view for stash entries.
[Screencast From 2025-09-17
19-46-01.webm](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ded33782-adef-4696-8e34-3665911c09c7)
Stash entries are [represented as
commits](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-stash#_discussion) except they
have up to 3 parents:
```
.----W (this is the stash entry)
/ /|
-----H----I |
\|
U
```
Where `H` is the `HEAD` commit, `I` is a commit that records the state
of the index, and `U` is another commit that records untracked files
(when using `git stash -u`).
Given this, I modified the existing commit view struct to allow loading
stash and commits entries with git sha identifier so that we can get a
similar git diff view for both of them.
The stash diff is generated by comparing the stash commit with its
parent (`<commit>^` or `H` in the diagram) which generates the same diff
as doing `git stash show -p <stash entry>`. This *can* be
counter-intuitive since a user may expect the comparison to be made
between the stash commit and the current commit (`HEAD`), but given that
the default behavior in git cli is to compare with the stash parent, I
went for that approach.
Hoping to get some feedback from a Zed team member to see if they agree
with this approach.
Release Notes:
- Add git diff view for stash entries
- Add toolbar on git diff view for stash entries
- Prompt before executing a destructive stash action on diff view
- Fix commit view for merge commits (see #38289)
Add new `workspace::NewFileSplit` action which expects a
`SplitDirection` argument, allowing users to programmatically control
the direction of the split in keymaps, for example:
```json
{
"context": "Editor",
"bindings": {
"ctrl-s ctrl-h": ["workspace::NewFileSplit", "left"],
"ctrl-s ctrl-j": ["workspace::NewFileSplit", "down"],
"ctrl-s ctrl-k": ["workspace::NewFileSplit", "up"],
"ctrl-s ctrl-l": ["workspace::NewFileSplit", "right"]
}
}
```
Release Notes:
- Added `workspace::NewFileSplit` action, which can be used to
programmatically split the editor in the provided direction.
Co-authored-by: Rian Drake <rian.drake@rocketwerkz.com>
Co-authored-by: dino <dinojoaocosta@gmail.com>
This is an in-progress work on changing how task scheduler affects
performance of project search. Instead of relying on tasks being
executed at a discretion of the task scheduler, we want to experiment
with having a set of "agents" that prioritize driving in-progress
project search matches to completion over pushing the whole thing to
completion. This should hopefully significantly improve throughput &
latency of project search.
Release Notes:
- Improved project search performance
---------
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <smit@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
Release Notes:
- Added comment language injections for builtin languages. This enables
highlighting of `TODO`s and similar notes with the comment extension
installed.
Signed-off-by: Donnie Adams <donnie@thedadams.com>
Related to #9461, inspired by #39683
`await` and `yield` both seem somewhat debatable on whether they should
be considered the be control flow keywords.
For now I went with:
- `await`: no – The control flow effect of `await` is at a level does
not seem relevant for syntax highlighting.
- `yield`: yes – `yield` directly affects the output of a generator, and
is also included for consistency with Rust (#39683).
Happy to change these either direction.
<img width="1151" height="730" alt="SCR-20251008-izus"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/533ea670-863a-4c5c-aaa5-4a9bfa0bf0dd"
/>
---
Release Notes:
- Improved granularity of keyword highlighting for JS/TS/TSX: Themes can
now specify `keyword.control` for control flow keywords like `if`,
`else`, `return`, etc.
Adding this content after seeing people ask about how to make MCP
servers installed from Zed be picked up by external agents. At the
moment, this varies depending on the agent, and felt relevant to be
documented.
Release Notes:
- N/A
- Notable change is the use of a newtype for `ReplicaId`
- Fixes `WorktreeStore::create_remote_worktree` creating a remote
worktree with the local replica id, though this is not currently used
- Fixes observing the `Agent` (that is following the agent) causing
global clocks to allocate 65535 elements
- Shrinks the size of `Global` a bit. In a local or non-collab remote
session it won't ever allocate still.
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
Let's say you run this:
```
cd ~/proj-a
zed ~/proj-b
```
The `zed` process will execute with `current_dir() = ~/proj-a`, but a
`worktree_root_path() = ~/proj-b`. The old detection was then checking
if the Yarn SDK was installed in `proj-a` to decide whether to set the
tsdk value or not. This was incorrect, as we should instead check for
the SDK presence inside `proj-b`.
Release Notes:
- Fixed the Yarn SDK detection when the Zed pwd is different from the
opened folder.
The page about PHP in the docs doesn’t explain how to use Xdebug. I had
a lof of trouble setting it up the first time, then recently had another
headache trying to get it to work again, because the value for `adapter`
had changed from `PHP` to `Xdebug`.
It’s likely that my example config isn’t perfect or has redundant stuff
or whatever, feel free to amend it.
I also took the liberty to set the Phpactor and Intelephense headings to
level 3 because I felt like they were part of "Choosing a language
server."
Release Notes:
- N/A
# Why
While working on recent PR I have spotted that "Stage" and "Unstage"
buttons in "Uncommited Changes" toolbar are always active, even when
there is no changes made locally.
<img width="1628" height="656" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-10 at 00 49 06"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/6bdb9ded-17c8-4f84-8649-b297162c1992"
/>
# How
Re-use already existing button states for managing the disabled state of
"Uncommited Changes" toolbar buttons when changeset is empty.
Release Notes:
- Added disabled state for "Uncommited Changes" toolbar buttons when
there are no changes present
# Preview
<img width="1728" height="772" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-10 at 08 40 14"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ff41d852-974e-4ce1-9163-ecd30e17d5d8"
/>
Closes#37322
Uses SFTP if available, otherwise falls back to SCP for uploading files
and directories to remote. This fixes an issue on older macOS versions
where outdated SCP can throw an ambiguous target error.
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where extensions wouldn’t work when SSHing into a
remote from older macOS versions.
Though we ship with `basedpyright`, `ruff` and a few other laps for
python, we run them all at once.
Release Notes:
- Only enable `basedpyright` and `ruff` by default when opening Python
files. If you prefer one of the other.
Refactor the find_tab_group method to use the question mark operator for
cleaner error handling, replacing the explicit if-else pattern with a
more concise chained approach.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Signed-off-by: Xiaobo Liu <cppcoffee@gmail.com>