Restring the spaghetti in dump_to_file to fix a bug that was introduced
in commit 2a6125e3d0 whereby when
document.dump.codepage != "utf-8", the document itself was not output,
only the references list.
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.
The cast is not necessary since we already check the bounds, but by using a
cast here, it hopefully makes it more obvious what the long comment above
is pointing out: namely that we put the value of a signed integer into an
unsigned char.
This requires compiling cp2u() in even without CONFIG_UTF_8.
I also added an is_kbd_character macro to make try_document_key
more resilient to changes in the definition of term_event_key_T.
The previous version used only the low 8 bits of the key code.
This one arranges for the whole key to be rejected if it's not ASCII.
Perhaps the modifiers should be checked too, but I'm not changing that now.
Form fields and BFU text-input widgets then convert from UCS-4 to UTF-8.
If not all UTF-8 bytes fit, they don't insert anything. Thus it is no
longer possible to get invalid UTF-8 by hitting the length limit.
It is unclear to me which charset is supposed to be used for strings
in internal buffers. I made BFU insert UTF-8 whenever CONFIG_UTF_8,
but form fields use the charset of the terminal; that may have to be
changed.
As a side effect, this change should solve bug 782, because
term_send_ucs no longer encodes in UTF-8 if CONFIG_UTF_8 is defined.
I think the UTF-8 and codepage encoding calls I added are safe, too.
A similar bug may still surface somewhere else, but 782 could be
closed for now.
This change also lays the foundation for binding actions to non-ASCII
keys, but the keystroke name parser doesn't yet support that.
The CONFIG_UTF_8 mode does not currently support non-ASCII characters
in hot keys, either.
To reproduce the bug before this patch:
Enable CONFIG_UTF_8, UTF-8 I/O, and UTF-8 charset.
Go to www.google.com and type "abc" in the text input field.
Then press Left. The cursor jumps to "a" when it should go to "c".
When the user presses enter during a text type-ahead search, simply cancel
the search without additionally following the current link. Link type-ahead
searching still will follow the active link on enter.
Make move_up and move_down return no value. Instead, save the old y value
and compare it to the new after calling move_up or move_down in
move_page_up or move_page_down, respectively.
This fixes a bug where if given a prefix, if that prefix specified a number
of pages greater than move-page-up actually scrolled, there would be no
screen update, because the last call to move_up would return FRAME_EVENT_OK
which would be returned from move_page_up, even tho move_page_up would have
previously returned FRAME_EVENT_REFRESH.
Don't try the key as an accesskey if a menu was opened, whether it was just
the main menu or whether it was a submenu of the menu menu (we would try
the key as an accesskey in the latter case).
In send_kbd_event, replace the KBD_MOD_ALT modifier when trying the key as
an accesskey rather than when we don't.
Instead of saving the old link colours when selecting a link and using that
to restore them when unselecting it, just copy the data from the document.
- Eliminate struct link_bg and the .link_bg and .link_bg_n members
of struct document_view.
- Eliminate the free_link routine and don't call it from draw_doc,
clear_link, or detach_formatted.
- Add a .old_current_link member to struct view_state and initialise it in
init_vs.
- Don't save link_bg in draw_current_link.
- Rewrite clear_link to use the document data instead of link_bg.
- Modify init_link_drawing not to allocate ling_bg and to return a pointer
to a static variable for the template character.
Including double-width glyph support.
Note: textarea is now drawn with blank collumn at end of lines. It seems
that this is more intuitive for users. It behaves similar as textareas in
graphical interfaces. I hope it will hold your interest.
+----+ +----+ +----+
|aaA | [right] |aaa_| [right] |aaa |
|aaa | |aaa | |Aaa |
|bb | |bb | |bb |
+----+ +----+ +----+
+----+ +----+ +----+
|Aaa | [end] |aaa_| [c] |aaa |
|aaa | |aaa | |Caa |
|bb | |bb | |abb |
+----+ +----+ +----+
A, _, C - cursor positions.
[right] - right arrow
[end] - ACT_END (End button)
[c] - Letter c.
Now this code:
<textarea rows="3" cols="3">aaaaaabb</textarea>
represents textarea with 3x3 positions for chars.
Before this texteare behaved some kind of weirdly. That code above was
rendered like this:
+----+
|aaaa|
|aabb|
|_ |
+----+
Thus, each caller must now choose the accelerator key and declare the
accelerator contexts (i.e. menus) to which it may add the command.
Also, use only one context for tab_menu.
These changes fix the following bugs in accelerator conflict detection:
* "~Pass frame URI to external command" may be displayed together
with "Pass tab URI to e~xternal command", but that was not
declared.
* "Pass link URI to e~xternal command" was declared as being in
the tab menu, but it is actually displayed in the link menu.
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.
Don't replace UTF-8 bytes with '*'. Probably there is need to do better
check what will be displayed.
Also get_current_link_title is no longer pretty and trivial. (o:
With commit 637f1e82e6 ('NET: Merge
change_connection into cancel_download'), cancel_download returns
immediately if the connection is not in a result state, so save some
code by not checking is_in_progress_state before calling cancel_download.
Commit 9cc9db4e24 broke submit buttons
on HTML forms, so that the server no longer knows which button was
actually pressed.
<kahmalo> The bug with forms seems to be that try_submit_given_form (in
src/viewer/text/link.c) is the only function that runs "onsubmit"
scripts, and it does not care which of the submit buttons was
pressed; it calls submit_given_form which submits based on the first
item of the form. [20:57]
<kahmalo> or last, I don't know how the list works.
<kahmalo> try_submit_given_form could get the control via
get_current_link(doc_view) but I suppose it'd be cleaner to provide
that as a parameter. [20:58]
Originally posted as:
<mid:87ek2heebh.fsf@Astalo.kon.iki.fi>
<nntp://news.gmane.org/87ek2heebh.fsf@Astalo.kon.iki.fi>
<http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.web.links/2745>
This simplifies unqueuing of downloads and makes it more obvious that
the 'change' being performed is to migrate or replace an old download
handle with a new one.
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! ;)
Revision 1.82 of src/scripting/lua/core.c and revision 1.42
of src/viewer/dump/dump.c (2 years, 2 months ago), which moved
add_document_to_string from the former to the latter, introduced
a logic error: the local variable pos was set in the outer loop,
which iterates thru the lines in the document, whereas it should be
(and had been) set in the inner loop, which iterates thru the columns.
This brings us all the way back to a working current_document_formatted
for Lua scripts.
Revision 1.147 (14 months, 2 weeks ago) broke the logic so that only
frame characters were added. This fixes that change, getting us halfway
back to a working current_document_formatted function for Lua.
the same accelerator key to multiple buttons in a dialog box or
to multiple items in a menu. ELinks already has some support for
this but it requires the translator to run ELinks and manually
scan through all menus and dialogs. The attached changes make it
possible to quickly detect and list any conflicts, including ones
that can only occur on operating systems or configurations that
the translator is not currently using.
The changes have no immediate effect on the elinks executable or
the MO files. PO files become larger, however.
The scheme works like this:
- Like before, accelerator keys in translatable strings are
tagged with the tilde (~) character.
- Whenever a C source file defines an accelerator key, it must
assign one or more named "contexts" to it. The translations in
the PO files inherit these contexts. If multiple strings use
the same accelerator (case insensitive) in the same context,
that's a conflict and can be detected automatically.
- The contexts are defined with "gettext_accelerator_context"
comments in source files. These comments delimit regions where
all translatable strings containing tildes are given the same
contexts. There must be one special comment at the top of the
region; it lists the contexts assigned to that region. The
region automatically ends at the end of the function (found
with regexp /^\}/), but it can also be closed explicitly with
another special comment. The comments are formatted like this:
/* [gettext_accelerator_context(foo, bar, baz)]
begins a region that uses the contexts "foo", "bar", and "baz".
The comma is the delimiter; whitespace is optional.
[gettext_accelerator_context()]
ends the region. */
The scripts don't currently check whether this syntax occurs
inside or outside comments.
- The names of contexts consist of C identifiers delimited with
periods. I typically used the name of a function that sets
up a dialog, or the name of an array where the items of a
menu are listed. There is a special feature for static
functions: if the name begins with a period, then the period
will be replaced with the name of the source file and a colon.
- If a menu is programmatically generated from multiple parts,
of which some are never used together, so that it is safe to
use the same accelerators in them, then it is necessary to
define multiple contexts for the same menu. link_menu() in
src/viewer/text/link.c is the most complex example of this.
- During make update-po:
- A Perl script (po/gather-accelerator-contexts.pl) reads
po/elinks.pot, scans the source files listed in it for
"gettext_accelerator_context" comments, and rewrites
po/elinks.pot with "accelerator_context" comments that
indicate the contexts of each msgid: the union of all
contexts of all of its uses in the source files. It also
removes any "gettext_accelerator_context" comments that
xgettext --add-comments has copied to elinks.pot.
- If po/gather-accelerator-contexts.pl does not find any
contexts for some use of an msgid that seems to contain an
accelerator (because it contains a tilde), it warns. If the
tilde refers to e.g. "~/.elinks" and does not actually mark
an accelerator, the warning can be silenced by specifying the
special context "IGNORE", which the script otherwise ignores.
- msgmerge copies the "accelerator_context" comments from
po/elinks.pot to po/*.po. Translators do not edit those
comments.
- During make check-po:
- Another Perl script (po/check-accelerator-contexts.pl) reads
po/*.po and keeps track of which accelerators have been bound
in each context. It warns about any conflicts it finds.
This script does not access the C source files; thus it does
not matter if the line numbers in "#:" lines are out of date.
This implementation is not perfect and I am not proposing to
add it to the main source tree at this time. Specifically:
- It introduces compile-time dependencies on Perl and Locale::PO.
There should be a configure-time or compile-time check so that
the new features are skipped if the prerequisites are missing.
- When the scripts include msgstr strings in warnings, they
should transcode them from the charset of the PO file to the
one specified by the user's locale.
- It is not adequately documented (well, except perhaps here).
- po/check-accelerator-contexts.pl reports the same conflict
multiple times if it occurs in multiple contexts.
- The warning messages should include line numbers, so that users
of Emacs could conveniently edit the conflicting part of the PO
file. This is not feasible with the current version of
Locale::PO.
- Locale::PO does not understand #~ lines and spews warnings
about them. There is an ugly hack to hide these warnings.
- Jonas Fonseca suggested the script could propose accelerators
that are still available. This has not been implemented.
There are three files attached:
- po/gather-accelerator-contexts.pl: Augments elinks.pot with
context information.
- po/check-accelerator-contexts.pl: Checks conflicts.
- accelerator-contexts.diff: Makes po/Makefile run the scripts,
and adds special comments to source files.
The menu shows a list of all fields of a form, with the possibility to jump
right to that form field when selecting an entry. The menu text is the
basic form field label "Radio button", "Text field", etc. with the form
field name or alt text as the right menu text.
It introduces a new main action called link-form-menu with no default
binding.
Requested by Klaus Knopper, as a mean to improve accessibility for complex,
overloaded pages like ebay.com.
maximum length, do not simply drop the changes, but instead truncate them,
warn the user, and provide the user with the path to the temporary file
from which the full changes can be recovered.
onClick on checkbox would get triggered before actually ticking the
checkbox, which is not the expected behaviour (apparently). This change
makes sure that we call the onClick event handler only after actually
doing our work with the checkbox/select widget (for the other widgets,
things should stay the same).
Convert remaining conditional file building to use
OBJS-$(CONFIG_FOO) += foo.o
one problem with reverse meaining (in util/) fixed with local 'hack'.
Cleanup and remove stuff which is now default targets.
It is a little ugly since I couldn't get $(wildcard) to expand *.o files
so it just checks if there are any *.c files and then link in the lib.o
based on that.
Ditch the building of an archive (.a) in favour of linking all objects in a
directory into a lib.o file. This makes it easy to link in subdirectories
and more importantly keeps the build logic in the local subdirectories.
Note: after updating you will have to rm **/*.a if you do not make clean
before updating.