Documentation strings of most options used to contain a "\n" at the
end of each source line. When the option manager displayed these
strings, it treated each "\n" as a hard newline. On 80x24 terminals
however, the option description window has only 60 columes available
for the text (with the default setup.h), and the hard newlines were
further apart, so the option manager wrapped the text a second time,
resulting in rather ugly output where long lones are interleaved with
short ones. This could also cause the text to take up too much
vertical space and not fit in the window.
Replace most of those hard newlines with spaces so that the option
manager (or perhaps BFU) will take care of the wrapping. At the same
time, rewrap the strings in source code so that the source lines are
at most 79 columns wide.
In some options though, there is a list of possible values and their
meanings. In those lists, if the description of one value does not
fit in one line, then continuation lines should be indented. The
option manager and BFU are not currently able to do that. So, keep
the hard newlines in those lists, but rewrap them to 60 columns so
that they are less likely to require further wrapping at runtime.
Introduce static int interpreter_count in src/ecmascript/ecmascript.c.
Maintain interpreter_count in ecmascript_get_interpreter and
ecmascript_put_interpreter.
Introduce ecmascript_get_interpreter_count.
Display the number of ECMAScript interpreters that have been allocated
for documents in the Resources dialog box.
Anything that frees struct form_view must now call the new function
ecmascript_detach_form_view. This function should then clear out any
dangling pointers, but that has not yet been implemented.
Anything that frees or reallocates struct form_state must now call the
new functions ecmascript_detach_form_state or ecmascript_moved_form_state.
These functions should then clear out any dangling pointers, but that has
not yet been implemented.
Add ecmascript_interpreter.backend_nesting, increment it when
beginning to evaluate an expression, and decrement it when evaluation
finishes. Then assert that it is zero in ecmascript_put_interpreter.
This detects bug 957 and similar ones before they corrupt memory.
straconcat reads the args with va_arg(ap, const unsigned char *),
and the NULL macro may have the wrong type (e.g. int).
Many places pass string literals of type char * to straconcat. This
is in principle also a violation, but I'm ignoring it for now because
if it becomes a problem with some C implementation, then so will the
use of unsigned char * with printf "%s", which is so widespread in
ELinks that I'm not going to try fixing it now.
Otherwise if the page installs multiple timers the old one would live
on unreferenced and possibly (likely) trigger after the document's death
and everything would go to hell.
Replace the ECMAScript module initialisation and de-initialisation
routines that wrapped the SMJS and SEE module initialisation and
de-initialisation routines by having the module system call the SMJS
and SEE routines its own darned self.