* Update tree-sitter grammar for nu
Change tree-sitter grammar for nushell to 'officially' maintained
by nushell project https://github.com/nushell/tree-sitter-nu. Update
to the latest version. Replace queries with supported
* Restore injection queries for nu
Restore injection.scm queries for nushell tree-sitter grammar
* build(tree-sitter): update javascript, typescript and tsx
* update revision of tree-sitter parsers for these languages.
* rename `?.` to `optional_chain`, introduced in tree-sitter/tree-sitter-javascript@186f2adbf7.
* fix(highlight): change jsx queries to match latest tree-sitter
Latest tree-sitter/tree-sitter-javascript@bb1f97b643 added some breaking changes that broke highlighting.
* Remove some queries with `nested_identifier`.
* Remove deprecated `jsx_fragment` from indent query.
* Count `</` and `/>` as a single token.
This implements function, (calling) argument and comment captures for use
in the textobject selections in bash.
This also updates the generated docs after adding the textobjects for bash.
Version 2.2.1 of the grammar adds extended support for HLL (C, C++,..)
expressions. Quite a few node types were added, renamed or removed in
the process.
This change brings the highlight queries in sync with the ones found in
the repository of the grammar. The highlighting tests "look" okay after
updating the queries.
Recently, Codeberg had some reliability issues. That is why the language
is now using the mirror repository on GitLab as source instead.
Co-authored-by: Christoph Sax <christoph.sax@mailbox.org>
* fix vlang grammar fetch and build fail
* update highlights.scm for v-analyzer
* Update languages.toml
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* Update runtime/queries/v/highlights.scm
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* update scm for new lsp
* gen doc lang-support.md
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
Since regex is almost always injected into other languages,
`pattern_character`s will inherit the highlight for the structure that
injects them (for example `/foo/` in JavaScript or `~r/foo/` in Elixir).
This removes the string highlight when used in the prompt.
We also add `ERROR` node highlighting so that errors in regex syntax
appear in the prompt. This resolves a TODO in the `regex_prompt`
function about highlighting errors in the regex.