Still not working with $ (try a file named a$PATH.txt).
:edit a$PATH.txt will expand the variable
:edit a\$PATH.txt will treat it as a path separator, so a/$PATH.txt
We were passing in `style = "minimal"` to `nvim_open_win`, which sets a
lot of default window options. If we remove that, the style of the
floating window will match the other oil windows. Users can use
`float.override` to set `style = "minimal"` if they want the previous
behavior.
This was only necessary to begin with because I was using `vim.wo` to
set window options. I mistakenly thought that would set the option as
window-local, but it did not. This was fixed in
6f8bf067c0. Now all the window options
should function as expected without the extra logic.
If you use oil and you want to still use netrw, set
`default_file_explorer = false`.
It is nonsensical to both use netrw _and_ have oil hijack directory
buffers (which was the case for the default config). It also causes
undefined behavior and bugs. When `default_file_explorer = true` (the
default) oil will now disable netrw for you.
* (feat) Added override function for floatwin
* (feat) Added in-place floatwin option modification
Added in-place modification of floatwin options, and removed example
from config.lua.
In an oil buffer you can select multiple entries by highlighting them in
visual mode and then calling `oil.select()` (or using a keymap that does
so, like `<CR>` or `<C-s>`. Previously we would automatically assume
that you wanted to open multiple entries as splits. Now, we treat a
default call to `select()` (which is what `<CR>` does) as if you simply
wanted to open the buffers and keep the same window. This plays nicer
with bufferlines. If you want the old behavior, you can explicitly pass
in `oil.select({vertical = true})` or use the `<C-s>` keymap when you
have multiple entries selected.