There a some exceptions related to the fact that BOOST_ASSERT throws
an unhandled exception, which is fait enough. This is handled by
uploading a modeling file to coverity.
The second batch of issues are related to the use of lexical_cast in
convert.cpp. We use now a wrapper around boost::lexical_cast that does
not throw but return empty strings instead. I am not sure actually of
when lexical_cast could fail.
The special mode used by macros where the macro name is displayed as
grey text in a box is now one of the possible marker types for any
inset. The new code puts the macro name below the text, which means
that only the text below the current line will be moved. This makes
edition much more comfortable. The grey border around the contents has
been removed too.
The marker_type enum has been moved from Inset to InsetMath. A
markerMargin() function returns the horizontal margin required on each
side for the marker. Only the corner-type markers MARKER and MARKER2
need some.
A new BOX_MARKER enum value has been added and is taken care of in
afterMetricsMarkers (renamed from metricsMarkerVertical) and
drawMarkers.
The InsetMath::marker() macro now takes a BufferView pointer as
argument, so that the marker type can depend on editing state.
MathRow::metrics now makes changes to the MathRow object when needed.
The specific metrics/draw code in MathMacro has been removed and
replaced by assertions. Code in addToMathRow and marker is adapted to
reflect the cases where linearization is possible.
Rephrase positively the check box for the output of en- and em-dashes
and disable it when using non-TeX fonts. The state of the check box
is remembered, so that toggling the non-TeX fonts check box does not
cause information loss.
This commit fixes the regression introduced in 2.2 about the
output of en- and em-dashes. In 2.2 en- and em-dashes are output as
the \textendash and \textemdash macros when using TeX fonts, causing
changed output in old documents and also bugs (for example, #10490).
Now documents produced with older versions work again as intended,
while documents produced with 2.2 can be made to produce the exact
same output by simply checking "Don't use ligatures for en-and
em-dashes" in Document->Settings->Fonts.
When exporting documents using TeX fonts to earlier versions, in order
to avoid changed output, a zero-width space character is inserted after
each en/em-dash if dash ligatures are allowed. These characters are
removed when reloading documents with 2.3, so that they don't accumulate.
Handle name prefix (aka "von" part) as a separate entity, just like
BibTeX and Biblatex do. This allows to omit or reposition it in
accordance to the current style ("Goethe, Johann Wolfgang" or
"von Goethe, Johann Wolfgang" or "Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von" are all
valid and used).
LyX's name parser should now be on par with BibTeX's.
This patch removes explicit calls to stat() in the DepTable code. The
original motivation was to get read of a stat() invokation where the
error condition was not checked (spotted by coverity).
It is not clear that the optimization is a gain, but it is clear that
it has a cost: some elements of formulas will not be present in the
position cache.
Fixes bug #10520.
Using this global variable in the class is clearly a bug. If we wanted
to avoid doing it by mistake, the variable should be moved to the LyX
singleton.
Also add an underscore to the private variable formatlist_.
When we have a name with more than two parts, but no "von",
it was coming out as, e.g.:
Obama, Barack Hussain Obama
i.e., with the last name appearing twice.
Also adds a check for names without spaces, which would have given:
Pele, Pele
This was not the original issue at #10582, so that bug is still
open (though I cannot reproduce it).
The error is reported in the GUI, but for the terminal we must write
explicitly to STDERR.
For a specific example of this type of exception, see the previous
commit, 72c3dbd.
If an included file is not found, it seems impossible that the final
output would be correct. Before this commit, when exporting on the
command line, LyX would create the PDF and exit with a zero error
code so unless the user was monitoring the terminal output, they
would not know there is a problem.
This change is consistent with 1a374a93.
Introduce a distinction between being read-only and having the read-only flag. A
buffer is read-only if either it has been externally modified or if it has the
read-only flag.
Coverity complains that we might read strings that are arbitrary
large, and that this can be a security issue. This is a problem in
particular, when we feed these strings to from_utf8(), which coverity
flags as dangerous for some reason.
The best solution would be IMO to model from_utf8() properly, but I do
not know how to do that. Here I try a different solution, where I
cannot read a string larger than 64k from the file.
Let's see whether this removes part of coverity warnings.
Coverity does not find it obvious that p is never negative. Normally
it is the case (because the items have been filtered), but it is
better to play safe.
The added cmake-parameter is:
-DLYX_EXTERNAL_MYTHES=<value>
where <value> is one of
AUTO (Default) Search first on system for mythes (lib and include)
ON Use installed only (errors if not installed)
OFF Compile the provided source in 3rdparty
Instead of using a coverity annotation (that does not work) it is
better to really iinitialize the members of the object, just in case
somebody decides to actually use the DisplayPath() constructor.
Coverity correctly spotted that the existing code creates a temporary
map and returns a value from it. It is not possible to make the map
const& directly because operator[] may change the map.
Therefore, we use map::find instead.