An interactive application to modify the current display settings, such as
the current wallpaper as well as the screen resolution. Currently we're
adding the resolutions ourselves, because there's currently no way to
detect was resolutions the current display adapter supports (or at least
I can't see one... Maybe VBE does and I'm stupid). It even comes with
a very nice template'd `ItemList` that can support a vector of any type,
which makes life much simpler.
This was a workaround to be able to build on case-insensitive file
systems where it might get confused about <string.h> vs <String.h>.
Let's just not support building that way, so String.h can have an
objectively nicer name. :^)
This is not as perfect as it is elsewhere in the system, as we cannot
really change how terminal "thinks about" characters and bytes. What
we can do though, and what this commit does, is to *render* emojis, but
make it seem as if they take up all the space, and all the columns their
bytes would take if they were all regular characters.
This can play anything that AWavLoader can load (so obviously only WAV
files at the moment.)
It works by having a timer that wakes up every 100ms and tries to send
a sample buffer to the AudioServer. If our server-side queue is full
then we wait until the next timer iteration and try again.
We display the most recently enqueued sample buffer in a nice little
widget that just plots the samples in green-on-black. :^)
CTCP requests are client-to-client messages that are sent as either
PRIVMSG (for requests) or NOTICE (for responses) and wrapped in ASCII
character 0x01 on both sides.
This patch implements responding to the very common VERSION and PING
requests. We always get a VERSION request from freenode when connecting
there, for instance. :^)
It's a little unfortunate that we have two separate code paths that can
lead to asking the user about this. Longer-term we should find a way to
unify these things.
Fixes#491.
This library is meant to provide C++-style wrappers over lower
level APIs such as syscalls and pthread_* functions, as well as
utilities for easily running pieces of logic on different
threads.
We were checking the columns of the whole selection instead of the
the specfic line were modifying. Because of this, the selection
remained if the selection's column on another line was less than
the cursor.