Character offset on a line in a document (zero-based).
The meaning of this offset is determined by the negotiated
PositionEncodingKind
.
If the character value is greater than the line length it defaults back to the line length.
Line position in a document (zero-based).
If a line number is greater than the number of lines in a document, it defaults back to the number of lines in the document. If a line number is negative, it defaults to 0.
Position in a text document expressed as zero-based line and character offset. Prior to 3.17 the offsets were always based on a UTF-16 string representation. So a string of the form
a𐐀b
the character offset of the charactera
is 0, the character offset of𐐀
is 1 and the character offset of b is 3 since𐐀
is represented using two code units in UTF-16. Since 3.17 clients and servers can agree on a different string encoding representation (e.g. UTF-8). The client announces it's supported encoding via the client capabilitygeneral.positionEncodings
. The value is an array of position encodings the client supports, with decreasing preference (e.g. the encoding at index0
is the most preferred one). To stay backwards compatible the only mandatory encoding is UTF-16 represented via the stringutf-16
. The server can pick one of the encodings offered by the client and signals that encoding back to the client via the initialize result's propertycapabilities.positionEncoding
. If the string valueutf-16
is missing from the client's capabilitygeneral.positionEncodings
servers can safely assume that the client supports UTF-16. If the server omits the position encoding in its initialize result the encoding defaults to the string valueutf-16
. Implementation considerations: since the conversion from one encoding into another requires the content of the file / line the conversion is best done where the file is read which is usually on the server side.Positions are line end character agnostic. So you can not specify a position that denotes
\r|\n
or\n|
where|
represents the character offset.Since
3.17.0 - support for negotiated position encoding.