Problem: default labels included keymap hints ("current — doo") which
is an anti-pattern for a vim plugin — discoverability belongs in docs
and opt-in config, not baked into the default UI.
Solution: default labels return to plain "(current)" / "(incoming)".
Keymap hints are only shown when users provide a format_virtual_text
function or enable show_actions.
Problem: conflict resolution virtual text only showed plain "current" /
"incoming" labels with no keymap hints, and users had no way to
discover available keymaps without reading docs.
Solution: add keymap hints to default labels ("current — doo"), expose
format_virtual_text config for custom label formatting, and add
show_actions option for codelens-style action lines above conflict
markers. Also add hunk hints in merge diff views.
## Problem
Pressing `du` on a `UU` (unmerged) file in the fugitive status buffer
had no
effect. There was no way to see a proper ours-vs-theirs diff with syntax
highlighting and intra-line changes, or to resolve conflicts from within
a
unified diff view.
Additionally, pressing `du` on a section header containing only unmerged
files
showed "no changes in section" because `git diff` produces combined
(`diff --cc`)
output for unmerged files, which was stripped entirely.
## Solution
Fetch `:2:` (ours) and `:3:` (theirs) from the git index and generate a
standard
unified diff. The existing highlight pipeline (treesitter + intra-line)
applies
automatically. Resolution keymaps (`doo`/`dot`/`dob`/`don`) on hunks in
the diff
view write changes back to the working file's conflict markers.
Navigation
(`]x`/`[x`) jumps between unresolved conflict hunks.
For section diffs, combined diff entries are now replaced with generated
ours-vs-theirs unified diffs instead of being stripped.
Works for merge, cherry-pick, and rebase conflicts — git populates
`:2:`/`:3:`
the same way for all three.
Closes#61
Problem: after resolving all conflicts, vim.diagnostic.enable(true)
restored diagnostics that were cached while markers were present,
showing errors like "unexpected token end" on clean code.
Solution: call vim.diagnostic.reset() before re-enabling to flush
stale results and let the LSP re-analyze the resolved buffer.
Problem: resolving the last conflict called M.detach(), which cleared
attached_buffers[bufnr]. The TextChanged callback then returned true,
permanently deleting the autocmd. Undo restored conflict markers but
nothing re-highlighted or re-suppressed diagnostics.
Solution: inline the cleanup in refresh() instead of calling detach().
Keep attached_buffers set so the autocmd survives. Re-suppress
diagnostics when conflicts reappear after undo.
Problem: virtual text showed generic "current"/"incoming" labels with
no indication of which branch each side came from.
Solution: extract the branch name from the marker line itself
(e.g. <<<<<<< HEAD, >>>>>>> feature) and display as
"HEAD (current)" / "feature (incoming)".
Problem: LuaLS reports missing-fields errors because the parser builds
ConflictRegion tables incrementally, but the variable is typed as
diffs.ConflictRegion? which expects all required fields at construction.
Solution: type the work-in-progress variable as table? and cast to
diffs.ConflictRegion on insertion into the results array.
Problem: lua-language-server reports duplicate @class definitions for
ConflictKeymaps and ConflictConfig (defined in both init.lua and
conflict.lua), and inject-field errors for the untyped parser table.
Solution: remove duplicate @class annotations from conflict.lua
(init.lua is the canonical source), and annotate the parser's current
variable as diffs.ConflictRegion? so LuaLS knows its shape.
Problem: when git hits a merge conflict, users stare at raw <<<<<<<
markers with broken treesitter and noisy LSP diagnostics. Existing
solutions (git-conflict.nvim) use their own highlighting rather than
integrating with diffs.nvim's color blending pipeline.
Solution: add conflict.lua module that detects <<<<<<</=======/>>>>>>>
markers (with diff3 ||||||| support), highlights ours/theirs/base
regions with blended DiffsConflict* highlight groups, provides
resolution keymaps (doo/dot/dob/don) and navigation (]x/[x),
suppresses diagnostics while markers are present, and auto-detaches
when all conflicts are resolved. Fires DiffsConflictResolved user
event on last resolution.