When middle-clicking, the s:TreeFileNode.GetSelected() function is
called along the way. If this is done outside of the NERDTree window,
there is not "b:NERDTree" variable, and the "E121: Undefined variable"
exception is thrown. This function was trying to catch only the NERDTree
specific errors; thus, it let the Undefined variable exception slip by.
This commit causes the function to catch all errors.
This PR is a rewrite of the "s:UI.getLineNum()" function. This change
improves the logic and clarity of this function, and it fixes the function's
ability to work with cascades.
Fixes#529.
This change puts the burden on the user to make sure
g:NERDTreeBookmarksFile is correctly set and the path it contains is
present and has the proper permissions. If this is not the case, an
error message is displayed. This is a better solution than to blindly
create the path, when it may actually be impossible to do so.
When NERTDtree opens a file, it compares this new file to all open
buffers to see if it's already open. If the user has 'ignorecase' turned
on then the comparison of "file" and "File" says they're the same, and
NERDTree won't reopen the file. This commit forces a case sensitive
comparison by using the ==# operator.
If the cursor is not already positioned on a node when the bookmark
table is closed, then the resulting position of the cursor is not
determined. Here, we default to positioning the cursor on the
root when the bookmark table is closed.
Also add a new global variable to track when the g:NERDTreeSortOrder
changes. If it has been changed, or when the cached _sortKey value is
uninitialized, then calculate the sort key. This improves processing
speed over the previous commit, and allows on-the-fly changes to the
sort order, (without required vim to be restarted.)
The call to AddDefaultGroupToSortOrder in NERD_tree.vim is redundant
because it's also done every time sortChildren is called. And since the
check is done only once, there's no need for a function either.
sortChildren now just contains the needed if statement.
This commit makes adding, removing and finding key maps an O(1)
operation instead of O(n), where n is the number of pre-existing maps.
In my testing, averaged over 100 iterations, this reduces the time spent
initializing NERDTree at Vim startup from ~73ms to ~9.7ms. That's with
only the default included key maps.
Using the ":clearjumps" command wipes out the jump list for the
current window. This means that the user can't inadvertently jump
out of the NERDTree buffer while using the NERDTree window (i.e., by
using "<C-O>").
When a path is rendered in the Bookmarks area or as the header line of the
tree, it is truncated if there is no enough space for it. But if a path
contains multi-byte characters, it should be truncated by characters, not
bytes, otherwise the path may be truncated between the bytes of a
multi-byte character. To deal with multi-byte characters, use
strdisplaywidth() instead of len() to get the number of display cells, and
use strcharpart() instead of strpart() to truncate a path.
Previously, exiting the NERDTree menu with "Ctrl-C" or "Esc" would
leave the last line of the menu visible. We can avoid this by
redrawing the screen when the menu is aborted in this manner.
If the user wipes out or deletes (:bw or :bd) the NERDTree buffer, there
is still a tab variable that hangs onto the name of that now-missing
buffer. Checking only that variable is not enough to decide whether to
create a new NERDTree or use the existing one. Fortunately, there
already is a function with a more complete check: ExistsForTab()
Previously closing NERDTree while two windows were showing the same
buffer would focus the first window, which was not necessarily the
previously active one.
Instead of obtaining the buffer ID of the previous buffer and
mapping that to the window ID (which is a 1:n mapping) we obtain the
unique window ID and focus the right window after closing NERDTree.
win_getid() and win_gotoid() are available from VIM 7.4.1557 but the
old behavior is used as a fallback if the two functions are not
available.
This commit prevents "NERDTreeUI.getPath()" from returning a "Path"
object even when no tree node was selected. Previously, positioning
your cursor on one of the blank lines above the tree and running...
:echo g:NERDTreeFileNode.GetSelected()
... could potentially return the path for the current working
directory (your working directory needs to be under the tree root).
This is because the constructor for "Path" objects returns a "Path"
for the current working directory when passed an empty string. So,
we need to short circuit the "getPath()" function for lines that
cannot possibly be tree nodes.
This solves the problem for "GetSelected()" because that method uses
the "getPath()" method from the "UI" class to do its work.
Note that this bug only presented for me on *nix systems.
The small change here reverts an attempted bugfix from #785. That
change resulted in the unintended side-effect of closing other
children of the root whenever ":NERDTreeFind" was invoked. This was
disruptive (as reported in #793), so a new method must be found to
solve the problem of ":NERDTreeFind" not opening newly created
files.
Fixes#793.
The ":NERDTreeFind" command calls the "reveal()" method on the
NERDTree root node. The "reveal()" method would, in turn, call the
node's "open()" method. Since the "open()" method would only
initialize the child nodes of the root (i.e., read them from disk)
when the list of child nodes was empty, new paths would not be
included in the list.
This commit will result in the refreshing of the child node list
whenever "reveal()" is called on a directory node (unless it is the
first time the node is being opened... the most efficient option).
The result is that ":NERDTreeFind" will discover newly created paths
that exist on disk but are not cached in the NERDTree.
A stray debugging message is also removed.
Fixes issue #779.