This moves away from using special block glyphs for the lines and
just draws lines directly.
In addition, since these lines are no longer constrained to available
glyphs or glyph boundaries, we can now render lines that cross when
there are a mix of horizontal and vertical splits, which looks a
bit nicer.
refs: #1256
Assuming that the window config reloaded hook doesn't actually change
anything, this will avoid a cycle where we keep triggering the hook
over and over.
This is a fairly far-reaching commit. The idea is:
* Introduce a unicode_version config that specifies the default level
of unicode conformance for each newly created Terminal (each Pane)
* The unicode_version is passed down to the `grapheme_column_width`
function which interprets the width based on the version
* `Cell` records the width so that later calculations don't need to
know the unicode version
In a subsequent diff, I will introduce an escape sequence that allows
setting/pushing/popping the unicode version so that it can be overridden
via eg: a shell alias prior to launching an application that uses a
different version of unicode from the default.
This approach allows output from multiple applications with differing
understanding of unicode to coexist on the same screen a little more
sanely.
Note that the default `unicode_version` is set to 9, which means that
emoji presentation selectors are now by-default ignored. This was
selected to better match the level of support in widely deployed
applications.
I expect to raise that default version in the future.
Also worth noting: there are a number of callers of
`unicode_column_width` in things like overlays and lua helper functions
that pass `None` for the unicode version: these will assume the latest
known-to-wezterm/termwiz version of unicode to be desired. If those
overlays do things with emoji presentation selectors, then there may be
some alignment artifacts. That can be tackled in a follow up commit.
refs: #1231
refs: #997
It appears as though Menlo is the only font on macos to contain the
heavy ballot cross symbol, which is commonly used on macos (eg: in
`brew` output).
Our fallback list, despite starting with Menlo, didn't include menlo
itself in the candidates.
Furthermore, `ls-fonts` wouldn never see the result of the system
fallback resolution because it didn't know to try again, and was
using the list of handles from before the fallback.
This commit resolves all of these concerns.
refs: #849
Since we may have two different sizes/namespaces of fonts between
the title font and the main terminal font, we need to be a bit more
careful to pass down distinguishing font information when caching
glyphs.
In addition, I noticed that the advance for custom block glyphs
(eg: powerline!) weren't right in the tab bar. To resolve this,
when shaping, we skip using the glyph from the font and synthesize
a placeholder with the appropriate advance.
We were truncating the right-status text because we were passing
the padded number of cols for the tab bar, but since the tab bar
now exists outside the padding, that value was too small.
This commit introduces the `Dimension` type which allows specifying
a value in a variety of units; pixels, points, cells, percent.
`Dimension` needs contextual information to be evaluated as pixel
values, which makes resolving the value from the config slightly
more of a chore.
However, this type allows more flexible configurations that scale
with the font size and display dpi.
refs: #1124, #291, #195
The previous commit was partially OK, but the main cause of
emoji being wonky was this bit of macos specific code that I
added ages ago.
Remove that hack and the portion of the code from the previous
commit that was working to undo it.
This should make the baselines consistent across all platforms.
refs: #1203
Avoid accidentally scaling the tab bar when using IncreaseFontSize.
Use a "better" default title font based on the platform.
Avoid a gap between bottom of tab button and dividing line at
certain font sizes.
When split horizontally, selecting multiple lines at the top of the left
pane could paint a horizontal selection line all the way across the rest
of the terminal to the right hand edge.
Removes the dependency on knowing where the pane top/left position
is so that the line render routine could be used in more places.
Adjusts the tab bar and scroll bar positioning so that the tab bar
ignores window padding and is always flush with the top/bottom window
edge (full width as well), and that the scroll bar top/bottom respects
the tab bar position and height.
More of a "fix"; we use some heuristics based on the bearing
and glyph width to figure out if a sequence looks like a funky
ligature that moves left to render the glyph.
This may be prone to false positives, but the consequences are low:
when we think a glyph is part of a ligature, then rather than using
the cursor_fg color (which is typically black, or close to invisible),
we retain the normal text fg color.
This way the portion of the glyph outside of the cursor retains its
foreground color, and just the cell containing the cursor may have
a slightly funky fg color in the case where the heuristic was bad.
closes: #478
`use_fancy_tab_bar` switches to an alternate rendering of the tab
bar that uses the window_frame config to get a proportional
title font to use to render tabs, as well as rendering a few
additional elements to space out and make the tabs feel more
like tabs.
Computing the number of tabs doesn't respect the alternate font
at this time.
Formatted tab item foreground and background colors are also
not respected at this time.
refs: #1180
We now compute the cap-height from the rasterized glyph data.
Moved the scaling action of use_cap_height_to_scale_fallback_fonts from
glyphcache into the font resolver: when enabled, and we have data
about the baseline font and the font being resolved, then the resolving
font will be scaled such that the cap-height of both fonts has the same
pixel size.
The effect of this is that `I` glyphs from both fonts should appear to
have the same height.
Added a row of `I`'s in differing styles at the bottom of styles.txt
to make this easier to visualize.
refs: #1189
This is to handle situations such as some versions of the Terminus
bitmap font, where the individual bitmap strike sizes are broken
out across multiple individual files.
Font matching now passes down the nominal pixel height based on
the current DPI and font scale factor, and will use that to select
the font file that has the closest pixel size.
Previously, it would be potentially undefined which of the Terminus
font files would be selected.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1189