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fish-shell/tests/pexpects/scrollback.py

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#!/usr/bin/env python3
from pexpect_helper import SpawnedProc, control
import os
env = os.environ.copy()
env["TERM"] = "not-dumb"
Use globals for color variables, react to light/dark mode Implicitly-universal variables have some downsides: - It's surprising that "set fish_color_normal ..." and "set fish_key_bindings fish_vi_key_bindings" propagate to other shells and persist, especially since all other variables (and other shells) would use the global scope. - they don't play well with tracking configuration in Git. - we don't know how to roll out updates to the default theme (which is problematic since can look bad depending on terminal background color scheme). It's sort of possible to use only globals and unset universal variables (because fish only sets them at first startup), but that requires knowledge of fish internals; I don't think many people do that. So: - Set all color variables that are not already set as globals. - To enable this do the following, once, after upgrading: copy any existing universal color variables to globals, and: - if existing universal color variables exactly match the previous default theme, and pretend they didn't exist. - else migrate the universals to ~/.config/fish/conf.d/fish_frozen_theme.fish, which is a less surprising way of persisting this. - either way, delete all universals to do the right thing for most users. - Make sure that webconfig's "Set Theme" continues to: - instantly update all running shells - This is achieved by a new universal variable (but only for notifying shells, so this doesn't actually need to be persisted). In future, we could use any other IPC mechanism such as "kill -SIGUSR1" or if we go for a new feature, "varsave" or "set --broadcast", see https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/7317#issuecomment-701165897 https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/8455#discussion_r757837137. - persist the theme updates, completely overriding any previous theme. Use the same "fish_frozen_theme.fish" snippet as for migration (see above). It's not meant to be edited directly. If people want flexibility the should delete it. It could be a universal variable instead of a conf snippet file; but I figured that the separate file looks nicer (we can have better comments etc.) - Ask the terminal whether it's using dark or light mode, and use an optimized default. Add dark/light variants to themes, and the "unknown" variant for the default theme. Other themes don't need the "unknown" variant; webconfig already has a background color in context, and CLI can require the user to specify variant explicitly if terminal doesn't advertise colors. - Every variable that is set as part of fish's default behavior gets a "--label=default" tacked onto it. This is to allow our fish_terminal_color_theme event handler to know which variables it is allowed to update. It's also necessary until we revert 7e3fac561d6 (Query terminal only just before reading from it, 2025-09-25) because since commit, we need to wait until the first reader_push() to get query results. By this time, the user's config.fish may already have set variables. If the user sets variables via either webconfig, "fish_config theme {choose,save}", or directly via "set fish_color_...", they'd almost always remove this label. - For consistency, make default fish_key_bindings global (note that, for better or worse, fish_add_path still remains as one place that implicitly sets universal variables, but it's not something we inject by default) - Have "fish_config theme choose" and webconfig equivalents reset all color variables. This makes much more sense than keeping a hardcoded subset of "known colors"; and now that we don't really expect to be deleting universals this way, it's actually possible to make this change without much fear. Should have split this into two commits (the changelog entries are intertwined though). Closes #11580 Closes #11435 Closes #7317 Ref: https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/12096#issuecomment-3632065704
2025-11-25 12:52:39 +01:00
env["FISH_TEST_NO_RECURRENT_QUERIES"] = ""
sp = SpawnedProc(env=env, scroll_content_up_supported=True)
sendline, expect_prompt = sp.sendline, sp.expect_prompt
expect_prompt()
sendline("bind ctrl-g scrollback-push")
sp.send_primary_device_attribute()
expect_prompt()
sp.send(control("g"))
sp.send_cursor_position_report(y=10, x=5)
sp.send_primary_device_attribute()
sp.expect_str("\x1b[9S\x1b[9A")
Multi-line autosuggestions Unlike other shells, fish tries to make it easy to work with multiline commands. Arguably, it's often better to use a full text editor but the shell can feel more convenient. Spreading long commands into multiple lines can improve readability, especially when there is some semantic grouping (loops, pipelines, command substitutions, quoted parts). Note that in Unix shell, every quoted string can span multiple lines, like Python's triple quotes, so the barrier to writing a multiline command is quite low. However these commands are not autosuggested. From https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/commit/1c4e5cadf23d38350fd281bac85a6908c2414ce2#commitcomment-150853293 > the reason we don't offer multi-line autosuggestion is that they > can cause the command line to "jump" to make room for the second > and third lines, if you're at the bottom of your terminal. This jumping (as done by nushell for example) might be surprising, especially since there is no limit on the height of a command. Let's maybe avoid this jumping by rendering only however many lines from the autosuggestion can fit on the screen without scrolling. The truncation is hinted at by a single ellipsis ("…") after the last suggested character, just like when a single-line autosuggestion is truncated. (We might want to use something else in future.) To implement this, query for the cursor position after every command, so we know the y-position of the shell prompt within the terminal window (whose height we already know). Also, after we register a terminal window resize, query for the cursor position before doing anything else (until we od #12004, only height changes are relevant), to prevent this scenario: 1. move prompt to bottom of terminal 2. reduce terminal height 3. increase terminal height 4. type a command that triggers a multi-line autosuggestion 5. observe that it would fail to truncate properly As a refresher: when we fail to receive a query response, we always wait for 2 seconds, except if the initial query had also failed, see b907bc775ab (Use a low TTY query timeout only if first query failed, 2025-09-25). If the terminal does not support cursor position report (which is unlikely), show at most 1 line worth of autosuggestion. Note that either way, we don't skip multiline commands anymore. This might make the behavior worse on such terminals, which are probably not important enough. Alternatively, we could use no limit for such terminals, that's probably the better fallback behavior. The only reason I didn't do that yet is to stay a little bit closer to historical behavior. Storing the prompt's position simplifies scrollback-push and the mouse click handler, which no longer need to query. Move some associated code to the screen module. Technically we don't need to query for cursor position if the previous command was empty. But for now we do, trading a potential optimization for andother simplification. Disable this feature in pexpect tests for now, since those are still missing some terminal emulation features.
2025-05-18 06:57:44 +02:00
sp.send("\r")
sp.send_cursor_position_report(y=15, x=5)
sp.send_primary_device_attribute()
Multi-line autosuggestions Unlike other shells, fish tries to make it easy to work with multiline commands. Arguably, it's often better to use a full text editor but the shell can feel more convenient. Spreading long commands into multiple lines can improve readability, especially when there is some semantic grouping (loops, pipelines, command substitutions, quoted parts). Note that in Unix shell, every quoted string can span multiple lines, like Python's triple quotes, so the barrier to writing a multiline command is quite low. However these commands are not autosuggested. From https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/commit/1c4e5cadf23d38350fd281bac85a6908c2414ce2#commitcomment-150853293 > the reason we don't offer multi-line autosuggestion is that they > can cause the command line to "jump" to make room for the second > and third lines, if you're at the bottom of your terminal. This jumping (as done by nushell for example) might be surprising, especially since there is no limit on the height of a command. Let's maybe avoid this jumping by rendering only however many lines from the autosuggestion can fit on the screen without scrolling. The truncation is hinted at by a single ellipsis ("…") after the last suggested character, just like when a single-line autosuggestion is truncated. (We might want to use something else in future.) To implement this, query for the cursor position after every command, so we know the y-position of the shell prompt within the terminal window (whose height we already know). Also, after we register a terminal window resize, query for the cursor position before doing anything else (until we od #12004, only height changes are relevant), to prevent this scenario: 1. move prompt to bottom of terminal 2. reduce terminal height 3. increase terminal height 4. type a command that triggers a multi-line autosuggestion 5. observe that it would fail to truncate properly As a refresher: when we fail to receive a query response, we always wait for 2 seconds, except if the initial query had also failed, see b907bc775ab (Use a low TTY query timeout only if first query failed, 2025-09-25). If the terminal does not support cursor position report (which is unlikely), show at most 1 line worth of autosuggestion. Note that either way, we don't skip multiline commands anymore. This might make the behavior worse on such terminals, which are probably not important enough. Alternatively, we could use no limit for such terminals, that's probably the better fallback behavior. The only reason I didn't do that yet is to stay a little bit closer to historical behavior. Storing the prompt's position simplifies scrollback-push and the mouse click handler, which no longer need to query. Move some associated code to the screen module. Technically we don't need to query for cursor position if the previous command was empty. But for now we do, trading a potential optimization for andother simplification. Disable this feature in pexpect tests for now, since those are still missing some terminal emulation features.
2025-05-18 06:57:44 +02:00
sp.send(control("l"))
sp.expect_str("\x1b[14S\x1b[14A")