The Annotations panel is the most obvious place to perform actions
related to annotations, so let's make that possible. :^)
The toolbar gets open/save/save-as actions for annotations, and one for
adding an annotation. The table itself gets a context menu for editing
or deleting the selected annotation.
This lets the user swap them around and pop them out as separate windows
as desired. We do lose the ability to individually resize them though,
until DynamicWidgetContainer supports that.
This gets rid of the last use of the offset_margin_width() magic number.
I initially tried using `character_width() * 10` and found it was not
accurate enough with between-character spacing, so instead this measures
a specific string. All offset strings should be the same width in a
fixed-width font.
Compare the x position with the start of the hex characters, which is
m_padding pixels to the right of hex_start_x. (And the same for the
text characters.) If the position is within the padding area, clamp it
so it's on the nearest character.
This was previously covered-up somewhat by using the buggy
m_address_bar_width value to calculate the start and end x positions of
these areas. Fixing that in the previous commit made this more obvious.
We repeat the same calculations a lot, and it's easy to make mistakes.
m_address_bar_width and offset_margin_width() have basically the same
purpose, but both are a little wrong. This removes the former, but
we'll get to the latter soon.
Subtracting 1 from both axes causes a kink in the line, because the
start point isn't also translated. The clip rect prevents us from
painting too far down, so we can just remove the translated() call.
This is a fairly simple JSON format: A single array, containing objects,
with the Annotation fields as key:value pairs.
When reading a file, we let invalid or missing keys fall back to the
default values. This is mostly intended to set a pattern so that if we
add new fields in the future, we won't fail to load old annotations
files. If loading the file fails though, we keep the previously loaded
set of annotations.
The comment appears as a tooltip when hovering over the annotation.
A couple of properties of the TextEditor would ideally be set in GML,
but either don't have a setter exposed, or the GML compiler doesn't
recognise the enum. I'll fix those up after the current big GML
compiler PR gets merged.
Where it was straightforward to do so, I've updated the users to also
use ByteStrings for their file paths, but most of them have a temporary
String::from_byte_string() call instead.
Allow the user to highlight sections of the edited document, giving them
arbitrary background colors. These annotations can be created from a
selection, or by manually specifying the start and end offsets.
Annotations can be edited or deleted by right-clicking them.
Any color can be used for the background. Dark colors automatically make
the text white for easier readability. When creating a new annotation,
we use whatever color the user last picked as this is slightly more
likely to be the one they want.
Icons contributed by Cubic Love.
Co-authored-by: Cubic Love <7754483+cubiclove@users.noreply.github.com>
Instead of assigning, then sometimes reassigning these colors, set them
once. This makes it easier to see how we prioritize the different
factors that affect the styling.
`highlight_flag` is now `selected` since it represents if the byte is
within the current selection.
This is a cleanup patch, moves a chunk of repeated code to one place
instead of assigning variables with the same values twice in two
different places of code.
Currently if users select last bytes in HexEditor with mouse in either
Hex or Text mode, they will be able to move cursor on the byte outside
bounds. If then they try to write something in either of those modes,
app will crash.
This patch moves the recently added "replace" cursor to always be on the
last byte of the selection instead of being on the byte after the last
selected byte.
This patch changes cursor type from caret to black box for both Hex and
Text modes, because right now the way how blinking caret looks like is
more closer to "insert" mode in similar editors, whereas the real
behavior of this cursor is more of a "replace" mode seen in similar
editors like GHex.
This commit un-deprecates DeprecatedString, and repurposes it as a byte
string.
As the null state has already been removed, there are no other
particularly hairy blockers in repurposing this type as a byte string
(what it _really_ is).
This commit is auto-generated:
$ xs=$(ack -l \bDeprecatedString\b\|deprecated_string AK Userland \
Meta Ports Ladybird Tests Kernel)
$ perl -pie 's/\bDeprecatedString\b/ByteString/g;
s/deprecated_string/byte_string/g' $xs
$ clang-format --style=file -i \
$(git diff --name-only | grep \.cpp\|\.h)
$ gn format $(git ls-files '*.gn' '*.gni')
The following commit will port MIME types to String. Traits<String>
- used in Vector::contains_slow - can't compare String type with char*,
so we need to use StringView instead.