Going to change how TRANSITIONS is generated. Add a test to ensure the
value is unlikely changed by the change. Note the string is 14K long
so we only hash its values to keep the code short.
This was broken by b441be3ac9
For whatever reason, the breakage was only visible with the Iosveka
font on Windows. I couldn't reproduce it on my other systems, even
though the code technically applies to any system.
The breakage was: the metrics resulted in a difference of about 0.4
pixels being used for the descender with that particular font, resulting
in weird vertical alignment problems.
The offset needs to be computed against the ceil of the cell height,
which removes the fractional offset.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/661
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/582
Replaces the last usage of ttf-parser with calling into freetype.
This removes a source of inconsistency, as ttf-parser doesn't support
all of the things that freetype does.
Notably, this prevents a weird error from blowing up codepoint coverage
calculations on a system where I have helvetica.bdf in my font dir for
long-forgotten reasons.
```
WEZTERM_LOG=wezterm_font=trace,info wezterm
```
will list fonts found in font_dirs and the builtin fonts.
It can't show all fonts found via the system locator, because
that only has an interface for finding fonts by matching name,
not listing all of them.
With this configuration:
```lua
local wezterm = require 'wezterm'
return {
font_dirs = {"/Users/wez/Downloads/Inconsolata"},
font = wezterm.font("Inconsolata"),
font_locator = "ConfigDirsOnly"
}
```
wezterm is now able to see the 74 variations that are available
in the single inconsolata ttf.
Running `WEZTERM_LOG=wezterm_font=trace wezterm` will log the
variations.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/655
The repro scenario for this case was:
* open GNU nano
* hit enter twice
* type hello
* move the text cursor to the top line
* double click on hello
* hit enter
Prior to this commit, the selection would remain on the now-blank line
that previously held `hello`.
refs: #644