The message appears when the user has selected e.g. "Main mapping"
rather than an action inside it. Because the main mapping is a keymap,
ELinks must not tell the user to select a keymap.
According to Jonas Fonseca, if init_string(&canonical) fails, then it
anyway sets canonical.source = NULL and makes done_string(&canonical)
safe, even if canonical was previously uninitialized.
Actions can now be bound to e.g. Ctrl-Alt-A. The keybinding code also
supports other combinations of modifiers, like Shift-Ctrl-Up, but the
escape sequence decoder doesn't yet.
Don't let Ctrl-Alt-letter combinations open menus.
This fixes a bug: in the previous version, l_bind_key() modified the
buffer whose address lua_tostring() returned, even though that is not
allowed according to Lua documentation <http://www.lua.org/pil/24.2.2.html>.
The change affects the user interface: previously, if the user typed
"ctrl+cokebottle" in the "Add keybinding" dialog box, ELinks would
change the text in the widget to "Ctrl-cokebottle" before complaining
that the keystroke is invalid. Now, it leaves the widget unchanged.
This commit does not yet add const to parameters of parse_keystroke()
and related functions.
Before really_add_keybinding() is called, check_keystroke() calls
parse_keystroke(), which converts the modifier prefix to canonical
form: for example, "alt+f9" becomes "Alt-f9". This commit makes
really_add_keybinding() normally ignore that string and generate a
brand new one, e.g. "Alt-F9" (note the upper-case F), for its
"Keystroke already used" warning. Likewise, " " turns to "Space".
After this commit, it should be possible to change parse_keystroke()
to never write back into its input string.
If really_add_keybinding() cannot generate the string for some reason
(out of memory?), then it will use whatever parse_keystroke() has left
in the buffer. The alternatives would be to omit the keystroke name
from the warning or to reject the keybinding entirely; it isn't clear
what the best solution is here, but the one I implemented is closest
to the previous behaviour.
Don't call clear_dialog, which sets the focus to the listbox. Neither the
button widget nor the listbox widget has a clear callback, and the only
other thing that clear_dialog does is focus the first widget and redraw, so
call redraw_dialog instead.
Thanks to Kalle Olavi Niemitalo for noticing the issue.
then dump_to_file_256 is defined in dump.c but not used.
If configure --enable-debug was used, then gcc warns about
the unused function, and the warning stops the build.
2. The description of document.dump.color_mode ends with a
newline, provoking a runtime warning from check_description
in src/config/options.c.
3. options.inc has preprocessor directives inside macro arguments.
That is not portable C. xgettext (GNU gettext-tools) 0.14.3 is
not smart enough to figure out the possible combinations, and
copies an incorrect string to elinks.pot.
This changes the init target to be idempotent: most importantly it will now
never overwrite a Makefile if it exists. Additionally 'make init' will
generate the .vimrc files. Yay, no more stupid 'added fairies' commits! ;)