I noticed that the opensuse rpms didn't show up in the latest release,
and traced it to the spec file not setting anything in the filename
to distinguish the rpm files.
This commit replaces the redhat-ish short suffix with one of our
own derived from the os info.
subst-release-info.py will need to be updated to reflect this
change, but I want to see what names are produced for the various
platforms first.
Previously, trying to do something like `foo = "bar"` in the debug
overlay wouldn't succeed, because we were always trying to wrap
the line inside `return {line}`, which allowed for only expressions
to be used.
Now we also allow a fully formed statement to be used, which means
that that kind of assignment can be performed in the repl, making
it a bit more convenient to try stuff out.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1238
This avoids a confusing situation where we'd not bother to resolve
a font for a given codepoint for say bold text if we had previously
resolved it for normal text.
This hashset would be more useful if we maintained a mapping of
codepoint to font at that layer, but we don't.
The simplest thing to do for this is to allow the search to continue
and succeed.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/2158
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1913
Update copymode.md: description of `O` key assignment
"only in Rectangular mode" is not correct anymore as at the
end of PR #2150, handling of `O` was changed to also work in
non-Rectangular modes.
This commit adds more trace logging around selection
related events.
That tracing uncovered a situation, when multiple wezterm windows within
the same process were involved, where one window didn't receive a
selection-clear event notification.
Since Window::get_clipboard trusted our local understand of the
clipboard contents, it would return those until the selection was
changed in that window.
This commit changes that code to always ask the X server for the
selection. It makes pasting slightly slower, but should always produce
consistent results.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/2110
- Add regex that captures URLs with IP addresses as hosts.
- Removed redundant non-capturing parentheses from the first regex.
Mirrored the change to default_hyperlink_rules().
- Switched all but the first example to use literal strings for
regex (more readable).
wezterm makes two passes over fonts when resolving emoji, based on
the presentation of the text. If the text has a defined presentation
via a variation selector, then the first pass will only consider
fonts that match that presentation.
If no fonts match, a second pass is made to locate any font with
the appropriate glyphs.
Previously, the font was assumed to have emoji presentation if it
had color glyphs. That meant that if you chose a monochrome emoji
font then it would be skipped for regular emoji presentation and
we'd end up matching against the default fallback for the Noto Color
Emoji font.
This commit changes the behavior to consider any explicitly listed
font with "Emoji" in the name as having emoji presentation.
This is also an imperfect heuristic, but perhaps it is good enough?
refs: #1959
This enables tentative support for https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/keyboard-protocol
It's only been lightly tested with the notcurses-input program and
eyeballed against a few random keypresses in kitty running
`printf "\x1b[=11u" ; od -c`
I tried with neovim, but it doesn't seem like the version available
in Fedora 36 supports this yet.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1141
deadkeys that are triggered through shift (eg: backtick on a German
layout) weren't working because we were trying to lookup in our maps
using `SHIFT | LEFT_SHIFT` when the map data was keyed only by `SHIFT`.
This commit removes the positional modifier flags from the modifier
keys and restores the correct behavior.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/2102