This isn't ideal, as we're discarding information, but in #1422
where the problem codepoint is a unicode bidi control, we can't and
don't use that information anyway.
We'll need to figure out how to incorporate that when we get to it.
For now, this makes the presentation work correctly.
refs: #1422
permits iTerm2 images to be drawn anywhere on screen without
scrolling the cursor, including the bottom row.
Also included is a check in fcwrap.rs to_range_set(), without which
was causing a panic at runtime due to subtraction from unsigned
leading to overflow.
This helps us correctly set the size of the image cell
for the case where we have a partial cell at the right/bottom
edge of an image being mapped across cells.
refs: #1270
Adds some plumbing to allow the GUI to implement a download handler
and connect that up for iterm2 image/file transfers that have their
inline property set to false.
Previously we'd just log an error.
Now we will by default download the file to the user's download
directory.
This behavior can be turned off via the new `allow_download_protocols`
configuration setting.
File transfers can be initiated on a remote host via the
https://iterm2.com/utilities/it2dl script.
When the download completes, a toast notification is shown that will
open the file when clicked.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/discussions/1450
The texture coordinates into the source image weren't quite right;
previously we'd do this math:
num_cells = (image_size / cell_size).ceil()
delta = num_cells / image_size
that would result in the image being stretched to fit across the rounded
up number of cells, leading to a distored image.
This commit changes the delta calculation to be based on the remaining
number of pixels in a given dimension relative to the cell size.
refs: #1300
refs: #1270
While the description at DEC STD-070 04-31 does not mention Left Right
Margin Mode (it does mention the left and right margins), the code at
04-34 sets it to FIXED (the reset state, the set state is SETABLE).
From esctest:
DECSETTests.test_DECSET_DECLRMM_ModeResetByDECSTR
As promised in the previous commit, this one implements an escape
sequence to control the unicode version.
Unknown to me in the previous commit, iTerm2 already defines such
an escape sequence, so we simply implement it here with the same
semantics.
refs: #1231
refs: #997
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
This was a bit of a PITA to run down; the essence of the problem
was that the shaper was returning an x_advance of 0 for U+3000,
which caused wezterm's shaping layer to elide that glyph.
I eventually tracked down the x_advance to be the result of
scaling by an x_scale of 0, which in turn is the result of
harfbuzz not knowing the font size.
The critical portion of this diff is the line that advises
harfbuzz that the font has changed after we've applied the
font size.
The rest is just stuff to make it easier to debug and verify.
This:
```
printf "x\u3000x."
```
Now correctly renders on screen as "x x".
fixes: #1161
Fast-clicking users generally expect to be able to rapidly do regular selections
or otherwise cancel double/triple/quad clicks, so significant mouse movement should end the streak.
Allowing tiny pixel movements to account for touchpads is necessary.
Fortunately, the position here is already in character grid cells, which provides enough margin for this.
Other code editors like gedit also seem to do this based on the character grid.
This will enable eg: a lua helper function to serialize keycodes to
assist in some key rebinding scenarios (see:
https://github.com/wez/wezterm/pull/1091#issuecomment-910940833 for the
gist of it) but also makes it a bit easier to write unit tests for key
encoding so that situations like those in #892 are potentially less
likely to occur in the future.
A while back I made the line lengths lazily grown; the reduction
in memory was nice, and it helped with render performance for
really wide screens.
Unfortunately, it puts a bunch of reallocation into the hot path
of the parser and updating the terminal model when people run
the inevitable `cat giant-file.txt` benchmark.
This commit reinstates pre-allocating lines to match the physical
terminal width, and tweaks the code a bit to take advantage of
const Cell allocation and to avoid some clones (a really micro
optimization).
For simple graphemes, we can avoid subsequently calling
grapheme_column_width and cache that information in TeenyString.
Make blank TeenyString and Cell initializations const.
Tag CursorPosition with the seqno of the cursor move instead.
This should avoid over-invalidating lines and the selection
if it was just the cursor that moved.
Terminal now maintains a sequence number that increments
for each Action that is applied to it.
Changes to lines are tagged with the current sequence number.
This makes it a bit easier to reason about when an individual
line has changed relative to some point in "time"; the consumer
of the terminal can sample the current sequence number and then
can later determine which lines have changed since that point
in time.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/867
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
An implementation detail in wezterm is that it doesn't model
image placements as a separate entity; they are all bound to
the image cells in the terminal model.
The semantics of the kitty image protocol are that placements
are "permanent" wrt. overwriting a cell with text, except for
the explicit EraseInLine/EraseInDisplay sequences that are
used for clearing.
This commit takes a pass at implementing that semantic in
the wezterm data model.
refs: #986
We were actually moving it during placement, and then restoring
the original placement. That could potentially lead to the
screen being scrolled, so we want to avoid that.
refs: #986
As of this commit, `kitty +kitten icat ~/Downloads/fast-parallax.gif`
(wherein the icat kitten decodes the gif into frames and sends them
to the terminal to animate) behaves equivalently in wezterm and kitty.
(There appears to be an issue with the background color/deltas in
the icat kitten in kitty-0.21.1-1.fc33.x86_64 which I have installed,
so both wezterm and kitty have a funky black background for this
particular gif).
refs: #986
Since we can now mutate individual frames, we need to avoid
falsely caching across a change; switch from using (image_id, frame_idx)
to frame_hash.
refs: #986
Adds a use_image feature to termwiz that enables an optional
dep on the image crate. This in turn allows decoding of animation
formats (gif, apng) from file data, but more crucially, allows
modeling animation frames at the termwiz layer, which is a pre-req
for enabling kitty img protocol animation support.
refs: #986
This adds a simple garbage collection scheme; when adding an image,
check to see if we're over budget on the total amount of RAM used
by the image data.
If we are, remove unreferenced images (images that are not placed)
until we're below the budget.
refs: #986