Turns out --force is just in the way for most people, and at least for default
bindings it's easy to reset them.
Also, it makes :config-source fail when config.py contains keybindings.
Closes#3049
In python3.4, there is a circular dependency between the config module
and configmodel.bind. This is resolved by dependency injection. The
config/keyconfig instances are embedded in a struct passed to every
completion function, so the functions no longer depend on the modules.
This will also enable completion functions to access other previously
inaccessible info, such as the window id.
See #2814.
If the completion model would stay the same, just keep it and update the
filter pattern rather than instantiating a new model each time the
pattern changes.
Instead of add_list and add_sqltable, the completion model now supports
add_category, and callees either pass in a SqlCategory or ListCategory. This
makes unit testing much easier.
This also folds CompletionFilterModel into the ListCategory class.
For URL completion, time-based sorting is handled by the SQL model.
All the other models use simple alphabetical sorting. This allowed cleaning up
some logic in the sortfilter, removing DUMB_SORT, and removing the
completion.Role.sort.
This also removes the userdata completion field as it was only used in url
completion and is no longer necessary with the SQL model.
The new completion API no longer needs either of these. Instead of
referencing an enum member, cmdutils.argument.completion now points to
a function that returnsthe desired completion model.
This vastly simplifies the addition of new completion types. Previously
it was necessary to define the new model as well as editing usertypes
and completion.models.instances. Now it is only necessary to define a
single function under completion.models.
This is the next step of Completion Model/View Revamping (#74).
First step of Completion Model/View revamping (#74). Rewrite the
completion models as functions that each return an instance of a
CompletionModel class.
Caching is removed from all models except the UrlModel. Models other
than the UrlModel can be generated very quickly so caching just adds
needless complexity and can lead to incorrect results if one forgets to
wire up a signal.
CommandRunner.parse had some logic for handling commands of form
:<count>:cmd. However, this complicated the parsing logic for something
that appears to only be used in tests. One could use it in a
userscript, but this is unlikely as it is undocumented. Removing
support for this simplifies the logic of parse.
The commnd `run-with-count` is added to provide this functionality.
It works like `repeat` but passes the count along to the command
instead of running the command multiple times.
This resolves#1997: Qutebrowser crashes when pasting commands.
This bug was caused by excess stripping of ':' from the command string
by _parse_count.
Simplify the CompletionWidget/Completer interface by changing
on_selection_changed to pass the newly selected text rather than the
index of the newly selected item.
This moves the logic from Completer to CompletionWidget but simplifies
the interaction between the two and makes testing easier.
The CommandRunner's fallback parsing behavior treated whitespace
differently than the normal flow. When a user entered an unknown
command, trailing whitespace would be stripped and the cmdline length
would be less than the cursor position.
This is fixed by making the fallback use the ShellLexer just as the
'normal' parsing does.
When the commandline reads ':open |', quick-completing the only offered
completion will set the commandline to ':open some_url |'. Since `open`
has `maxsplit=0`, everything after ':open' is (correctly) treated as
one argument. This means completion is opened again with 'some url '
as the pattern (note trailing whitespace), which makes the comletion
menu 'flicker' and stay open even though it was 'supposed' to quick
compelte.
This is fixed by ignoring the next completion request if we just
completed something after maxsplit (because we don't expect any more
completions after the last split).
Resolves#1519.
Remove the class variables _cursor_part and _empty_item_index. Instead,
split up the commandline around the cursor whenever that information is
needed. Using locals instead of class variables makes the logic easier
to follow and ends up requiring much less code.
Remove the dependency on the class variables _empty_item_index
and _cursor_part to make the code easier to follow. If
_update_completion is refactored in a similar way these variables can
be removed.
Completion.empty existed to fill a slot in the old Command.completions
interface if the first positional arg had no completions but the second
did, as is the case for the `bind` command. Now that
`Command.completions` is replaced by `Command.get_pos_arg_info`, this
is no longer needed.
Command completion types are now identified by ArgInfo, so just use
that directly and cut out the middle-man. This shouldn't change any
completion behavior.
Adds a test for get_pos_arg_info to test_cmdutils.
Modifies test_completer to test the use of get_pos_arg_info. Instead of
using FakeCommand, real Command objects are used, to validate that the
Completer works with the real Command interface. This also cleans out
some test cases that were testing things already covered by other cases.
These commands are more closely tied to the CompletionView than
Completer. This removes the need for an extra signal tying the
CompletionView to the Completer.
The call to _open_completion_if_needed was moved to
on_selection_changed, as this will already be called when a new item is
selected.
Rather than having a CompletionView instantiate and register a
Completer, instantiate both in MainWindow. The CompletionView is the
parent of the Completer, and communicates by emitting
selection_changed, meaning it no longer needs to contain a reference to
the Completer.
The CompletionView looks in objreg for 'status-cmd', so move it from a
private fixture in test_completer to a public fixture that handles
objreg registration/deletion.
update_completion is only used internally, so instead test the real
public entry point which is schedule_completion_update.
This required mocking out QTimer to fire immediately so the test didn't
have to do flaky artificial delays.
For the Completer unit tests:
Although `change_completed_part` looks like a public method, it was
only used internally. Test the externally-used method
`selection_changed` instead.
Based on code review:
- Use qtbot.waitSignal to test a signal firing
- Use pytest.mark.xfail for an expected test failure
- Ensure there are 2 newlines between module-level functions