When considering "F" we'd try to parse it as "F<NUMBER>" and fail,
so fall back to producing `Physical(F)` instead.
Since this was in the context of CMD-F in the default keymap code,
we'd then generate ctrl-F as an equivalent when considering the
ctrl-shift case.
cc: @CIAvash
The recent switch to DeferredKeyCode introduced a bit of ambiguity
when parsing certain keys.
One issue was with the map that was used for some parsing didn't have
consistent/distinct entries for physical vs. mapped.
Another issue is that the key resolution for the simple case where
a key had the same physical and mapped representations would always
return the mapped one even when physical mode was set as a preference.
This commit kills the ambiguous map in favor of an string conversion
method on KeyCode.
It's possible that this will help with https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1826
a little, but I started looking at this because there were a couple of
comments about Alt-Enter and some numpad keys no longer working in the
Element channel.
A bit of a PITA, this commit:
* Introduces a DeferredKeyCode type that defers resolving a concrete
keycode
* Adds key_map_preference config which can be Mapped or Physical
* Key map building resolves the keycode using key_map_preference
* Default key assignments have been re-phrased in order to produce
DeferredKeyCodes
* User-specified keys without `mapped:` or `phys:` prefixes will
resolve according to key_map_preference
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1788
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1784
We need 100% of the info for it to work correctly, so this commit:
* Exposes the keyboard encoding mode via the Pane trait
* Adds the scan code to the RawKeyEvent
* Has the GUI perform the encoding if the keyboard is set that way
* Removes the basic encoder from termwiz in favor of the gui level one
The net result is that we bypass the Pane::key_up/Pane::key_down methods
in almost all cases when the encoding mode is set to win32-input-mode.
There is now a config option: allow_win32_input_mode that can be
used to prevent using this mode.
refs: #1509
Since we now have RawKeyEvent and a sane way to indicate handling,
we don't need these any more, and it simplifies key dispatch to
remove them.
refs: #1483
on macos only (for now), we generate a RawKeyEvent prior to
dead key or IME composition and route it to the window to give it
a chance to handle the event.
RawKeyEvent handling is scoped only to key assignments, not generating
input for the terminal.
A raw key event can be marked as handled to prevent moving on to
performing composition and generating cooked key input.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/877
Previously, we'd take a couple of guesses at how to map the key
to a utf8 value, but! the keyboard state has a method that can tell
us what to use.
This is important in non-latin keymaps where, for example, the `c`
key generates cyrillic small letter es and we'd end up sending
CTRL + that through to the terminal when CTRL is held down.
If we get the utf8 string from the keyboard layer then we get
CTRL+c instead, and that is what we want.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/678
This commit adds a CSS box model inspired element / layout
facility, and replaces the hand implemented fancy tab bar
element render.
This makes the code for fancy tab bar much easier to read
and update.
The right status area now expands to the full height of the
tab bar area, and uses a line height of 2.0, which makes
it line up nicely in the tab bar.
This adds string serialization for the keycode and modifiers as
used in the config.
We can't simply tell the base types to serialize in this form because
we may serialize and pass those via the mux protocol and the default
derived serializers are more efficient for that purpose.
This allows:
```lua
local wezterm = require 'wezterm'
return {
keys = {
{key="a", mods="ALT", action=wezterm.action{SendKey={key="b"}}}
},
}
```
to parse: previously, wrapping `SendKey` in `wezterm.action` would fail
to round-trip the the `SendKey` and lead to an error loading the
config.
We were previously only remembering the most recently pressed
button, but that's a lossy thing to do.
This commit remembers the button presses so that we can correctly
report all press/release events.
refs: #973