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Also, make sure all commands that involve scopes link to the scopes documentation, and refer to the "scope" parameter as `*scope*` for consistency.
91 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
91 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
= Scopes
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== Description
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Scopes are groups in which a particular Kakoune object can have different
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values depending on the group the value was declared in.
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These scoped objects are:
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- aliases (See <<commands#,`:doc commands`>>)
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- faces (See <<faces#,`:doc faces`>>)
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- highlighters (See <<highlighters#,`:doc highlighters`>>)
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- hooks (See <<hooks#,`:doc hooks`>>)
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- keymaps (See <<mapping#,`:doc mapping`>>)
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- options (See <<options#,`:doc options`>>)
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== Names and hierarchy
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Scopes are named as follows:
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*window*::
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context linked to the window displaying a buffer.
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In Kakoune, the concept of a *window* must not be confused with
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the concept of a window at the OS level.
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In other terms, a window is *not* a client (like a terminal or GUI)
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but one of many 'views' into a buffer.
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There is a N:1 relationship between windows and buffers; once a
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window is linked to a buffer, the window's buffer never changes.
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Windows store a set of selections and the scroll position.
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*buffer*::
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context linked directly to the buffer
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*global*::
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global context linked to the instance of Kakoune
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The following order of priority applies to the above scopes:
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--------------------------
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window ]> buffer ]> global
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--------------------------
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The above priority line implies that objects can have individual values that
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will be resolved first in the *window* scope (highest priority), then in
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the *buffer* scope, and finally in the *global* scope (lowest priority).
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Normally, the *buffer* scope keyword means the scope associated with the
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currently active buffer, but it's possible to specify any existing buffer by
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adding an `=` and the value of `%val{buffile}` for that buffer
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(See <<expansions#value-expansions,`:doc expansions value-expansions`>>).
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For example, to set the `indentwidth` option for the `/etc/fstab` buffer::
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----
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set-option buffer=/etc/fstab indentwidth 8
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----
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The `set-option` and `unset-option` commands also accept *current* as
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a valid scope name. It refers to the narrowest scope the option is set in.
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== Uses
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The scope paradigm is very useful as it allows the user to customize the
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behavior of the editor without modifying the configuration globally, as
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is the case with other editors who only have a single *global* scope by
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default.
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Examples:
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*filetype*::
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A single buffer opened in two separate windows can have different
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filetypes declared in the *window* scope with 'set-option'.
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(See <<options#,`:doc options`>>)
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*status line*::
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All the buffers of the current session can have the same information
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displayed in the status line, except for a specific buffer (the
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'modelinefmt' option can be declared in the *global* scope, and
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customized in the *buffer* scope with 'set-option'.
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(See <<options#,`:doc options`>>)
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== Execution context
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Some commands work in a specific context that might exclude one or
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several scopes altogether, consequently ignoring some values of a given
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object.
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Example: the *window* scope is never considered when resolving the
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values of options when writing a buffer (e.g. 'BOM', 'eolformat').
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