Using a boxed slice means that we hold exactly the memory required
for the file data, rather than the next-power-of-two, which can
be wasteful when a large number of images are being sent to
the terminal.
This is a API breaking change for termwiz, so bump its version.
refs: #534
I'm gradually improving snapshot testing macro devx in k9 and preparing
to ship v1. Before i do this i'm changing the inline snapshot macro to be
just `snapshot!()` that takes `Debug` trait an an arg and figures out
serialization of it.
This commit adjusts the default color palette to use the same color
cube calculation as xterm; it isn't the ideal color cube calculation
and results in slightly brighter colors.
This commit also memoizes the default palette calculation so that
it isn't recomputed each time a palette is created.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/348
This is one of those massive time sinks that I almost regret...
As part of recent changes to dust-off the allsorts shaper, I noticed
that the harfbuzz shaper wasn't shaping as well as the allsorts one.
This commit:
* Adds emoji-test.txt, a text file you can `cat` to see how well
the emoji are shaped and rendered.
* Fixes (or at least, improves) the column width calculation for
combining sequences such as "deaf man" which was previously calculated
at 3 cells in width when it should have just been 2 cells wide, which
resulted in a weird "prismatic" effect during rendering where the
glyph would be rendered with an extra RHS portion of the glyph across
3 cells.
* Improved/simplified the clustering logic used to compute fallbacks.
Previously we could end up with some wonky/disjoint sequence of
undefined glyphs which wouldn't be successfully resolved from a
fallback font. We now make a better effort to consolidate runs of
undefined glyphs for fallback.
* For sequences such as "woman with veil: dark skin tone" that occupy a
single cell, the shaper may return 3 clusters with 3 glyphs in the
case that the font doesn't fully support this grapheme. At render
time we'd just take the last glyph from that sequence and render it,
resulting in eg: a female symbol in this particular case. It is
generally a bit more useful to show the first glyph in the sequence
(eg: person with veil) rather than the gender or skin tone, so the
renderer now checks for this kind of overlapping sequence and renders
only the first glyph from the sequence.
Adds some supporting methods for computing the `SemanticZone`s
in the display and a key assignment that allows scrolling the
viewport to jump to the next/prev Prompt zone.
This commit introduces a small, bounded, LRU cache for recently
decoded images.
This allows the same image ID to be used in the cache that the
same image bits are repeatedly sent to the terminal.
This is advantageous because it reduces the amount of texture
space required by the gui layer.
This commit adds support for left/right margins and has been
tested against esctest, with a final status of:
```
309 tests passed, 239 known bugs
```
"known bugs" also includes unimplemented features; we have a
similar degree as iTerm2.
As of this commit, we now report as a vt520ish machine to DA1.
I confess to not having read enough of the relevant docs
to know whether this is totally righteous.
The predictive echo feels pretty reasonable, but if the connection
is having problems and we're showing the tardiness indicator, the
echo can give the impression that your input is going to get processed.
That may not be (usually is not!) the case.
This commit makes it a bit more visually distinctive that something
isn't right by greying out the color palette in that case.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/127
This one has been bugging me for a while; we now know when we've
wrapped a line and can join it without a line break when double-clicking
to select a word.
This commit introduces a wrapped attribute to help record this
information, which could potentially help with when it comes
to looking at nicer resize behavior in refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/14
We don't yet have any code to render them, and the vte parser seems
to truncate incoming image sequences ~1kb in size, so more work is
needed to make this useful.
This enables selecting an italic font when the cell is italic,
but has more power beyond just that simple property.
This runs a little hot on the CPU so there's probably some caching and
tweaking that can be done to make the evaluation a bit cheaper.
This eliminates the zsh reversed % artifact issue.
Added a feature flag to turn on diagnostics even in release mode;
`cargo run --release --features debug-escape-sequences`