If a user knows the keychain and can type it quickly, we shouldn't
annoy them with a popup. Only show the keyhint if the user doesn't
complete their keychain in 500ms.
The isVisible() check in the tests is somewhat invalid now because it
is never immediately visible and I don't want to add a delay to unit
tests. I added a check that text() is not set for one test that was
only checking isVisible().
Addresses part of #1515.
When we are in rapid mode with only one link, after following the hint, fire()
called filter_hints(None) to display all hints again. Then filter_hints tried
to follow that link, fire() tried to show all again, etc., leading to a
RecursionError.
Fixes#1513.
A test will be added via #1510.
The check `key.startswith('<') and key.endswith('>') is repeated many
times in code to check for a special key. Replace all these with a call
to the same function.
Currently, the keyhint window is shown even if the keystring matches no
possible bindings. This causes an empty keyhint window to hang around
after entering hinting mode.
Instead, the window is now hidden if no bindings match the current
keystring.
Resolves#1507.
When showing the currently bound key in the misc column for command
completion, if the command has multiple bindings, show special bindings
(e.g. <ctrl-a>) after non-special bindings.
- Add a space after the comman for multiple binding suggestions.
- Use defaultdict(list) instead of defaultdict(lambda: [])
- Move the pylint comment back to the top of the class
Since we're not using those functions as argparse callbacks anymore, we
can write a normal function instead of factories, which simplifies
things a lot.
This means:
- An annotation like (int, str) is now typing.Union[int, str].
- utils.typing got expanded so it acts like the real typing.py, with
issubclass() working properly with typing.Union and __union_params__
being set.
- A literal string doesn't exist anymore as annotation, instead
@cmdutils.argument now has a 'choices' argument which can be used like
@cmdutils.argument('arg', choices=['val1', 'val2']).
- Argument validating/converting is now entirely handled by
argparser.type_conv instead of relying on python's argparse, i.e.
type/choices is now not passed to argparse anymore.