Right now we just guess that the x-height is glyph_height/2, which is
obviously not accurate. We currently don't store the x-height in fonts,
so that's something we'll need to fix.
It backward-deletes a word like Ctrl-W, but it has a slightly
different definition of what a word is. For example, with the
caret behind `gcc -fsanitize=address`, Ctrl-W would delete
'-fsanitize=address' but Alt-backspace would only delete 'address'.
All these shortcuts treat consecutive alnums as a word, not consecutive
non-spaces.
For example, `alias KILL='kill -9'` can now be written by typing it
out lowercase, then hitting ctrl-a alt-f alt-u.
Ctrl-W still treats a word as a sequence of non-spaces. Alt-backspace
in a future patch will add the ability to backward-delete a word
that's a sequence of alnums.
m_holder.compare_exchange_strong(expected, desired, ...)
will either successfully update the value to desired if == expected
or put the current value in expected otherwise.
This adds Alt-f to go forward by a word, and Alt-b to go backward
by a word (like ctrl-arrow-left / ctrl-arrow-right already do).
Behind the scenes, alt-key is implemented by sending <esc> followed
by that key, and typing <esc> f/b for moving by a word hence works
too (in all other shells too, not just in Serenity's).
While here, rename some InputState enum values to make the slightly
expanded use of <esc> clearer, and expand a few comments.
This function did a const_cast internally which made the call side look
"safe". This method is removed completely and call sites are replaced
with ByteBuffer::wrap(const_cast<void*>(data), size) which makes the
behaviour obvious.
Instead of setting m_cursor directly to reset the cursor position,
TextEditor::set_document() now uses set_cursor() which will call cursor
change callback functions, if any.
This fixes a bug in HackStudio where the cursor information text would
not update immediately after changing the active TextDocument, even
though the cursor is always visibly being reset to 0, 0.
The text cursor follows slightly different "intuitive" rules than the
regular hit testing. Clicking past the right edge of a text box should
still "hit" the text box, and place the cursor at its end, for example.
We solve this by adding a HitTestType enum that is passed to hit_test()
and determines whether past-the-edge candidates are considered.
- Remove goofy _r suffix from syscall names.
- Don't take a signed buffer size.
- Use Userspace<T>.
- Make TTY::tty_name() return a String instead of a StringView.
This syscall allows a parent process to disown a child process, setting
its parent PID to 0.
Unparented processes are automatically reaped by the kernel upon exit,
and no sys$waitid() is required. This will make it much nicer to do
spawn-and-forget which is common in the GUI environment.
After running a build command, make by default stat()s the command's
output, and if it wasn't touched, then it cancels all build steps
that were scheduled only because this command was expected to change
the output.
Ninja has the same feature, but it's opt-in behind the per-command
"restat = 1" setting. However, CMake enables it by default for all
custom commands.
Use Meta/write-only-on-difference.sh to write the output to a temporary
file, and then copy the temporary file only to the final location if the
contents of the output have changed since last time.
write-only-on-difference.sh automatically creates the output's parent
directory, so stop doing that in CMake.
Reduces the number of build steps that run after touching a file
in LibCore from 522 to 312.
Since we now no longer trigger the CMake special case "If COMMAND
specifies an executable target name (created by the add_executable()
command), it will automatically be replaced by the location of the
executable created at build time", we now need to use qualified paths to
the generators.
Somewhat related to #2877.
Now that document element returns a generic DOM element, we need to
make sure head and body get a html element.
The spec just says to check if the document element is a html element,
so let's do that.