Now imports follow the following structure:
1. __future__ line: exactly one line allowed:
from __future__ import (unicode_literals, division, absolute_import, print_function)
(powerline.shell is the only exception due to problems with argparse).
2. Standard python library imports in a form `import X`.
3. Standard python library imports in a form `from X import Y`.
4. and 5. 2. and 3. for third-party (non-python and non-powerline imports).
6. 3. for powerline non-test imports.
7. and 8. 2. and 3. for powerline testing module imports.
Each list entry is separated by exactly one newline from another import. If
there is module docstring it goes between `# vim:` comment and `__future__`
import. So the structure containing all items is the following:
#!/usr/bin/env python
# vim:fileencoding=utf-8:noet
'''Powerline super module'''
import sys
from argparse import ArgumentParser
import psutil
from colormath.color_diff import delta_e_cie2000
from powerline.lib.unicode import u
import tests.vim as vim_module
from tests import TestCase
.
- This segment displays the number of attached tmux clients to the
currently running session.
- The minimum argument is used to specify a threshold for when the
segment should be visible.
Fixes#661Closes#662
Conflicts:
docs/source/index.rst
powerline/config_files/colorschemes/shell/default.json
powerline/config_files/colorschemes/shell/solarized.json
powerline/config_files/colorschemes/tmux/default.json
powerline/config_files/colorschemes/vim/default.json
powerline/config_files/colorschemes/vim/solarized.json
powerline/config_files/colorschemes/wm/default.json
tests/test_segments.py
Specifically I searched for all lines that are more then one tab off compared to
the previous line with
BufGrep /\(^\t\+\)\S.*\n\1\t\t\+/
and replaced them with something more appropriate. Most of time this resulted in
a few more newlines, but there are cases when I used mixed tabs/spaces
indentation+alignment.
Note: by default this segment is disabled. Until #923 it may only be enabled by
copying the whole file and changing "enabled" to "true". After #923 it may be
enabled by having `~/.config/powerline/themes/vim/default.json` with the
following contents:
{
"segment_data": {
"trailing_whitespace": {
"display": true
}
}
}
Fixes#388
Red hearts for battery full are still more optimal in case white hearts are for
empty (though I do not understand why they have to be red). Cannot agree about
per cents though: red is better for empty then white is if there are no related
parts to compare.
Replaces #596. Differences:
- Tests and metavar.
- Uses “jobnum” name in place of “jobs”.
- Does not use subshell for zsh. Also counts jobs correctly in zsh.
- Adds an option to force showing jobnum segment even if there are no jobs.
Default colors range from red (full battery) to white (no battery) but can be changed via the
`battery' and `battery_gradient' settings.
Default presentation is a formatted percentage string (with keyword `batt'). The `gamify' setting
changes this to a sequence of video game hearts.
Number of steps from 100% to 0% / number of video game heart icons is controlled by the `steps'
setting (default 5).
- Added segment function to powerline.segments.common.
- Added test to check return values.
- Added default colorschemes for everything but iPython.
Ref #477