At least with gcc 6.4, if the first parameter passed to
regex_match() is afterward changed, the second one gets
corrupted. This is avoided by using a temporary string.
This commit does a bulk fix of incorrect annotations (comments) at the
end of namespaces.
The commit was generated by initially running clang-format, and then
from the diff of the result extracting the hunks corresponding to
fixes of namespace comments. The changes being applied and all the
results have been manually reviewed. The source code successfully
builds on macOS.
Further details on the steps below, in case they're of interest to
someone else in the future.
1. Checkout a fresh and up to date version of src/
git pull && git checkout -- src && git status src
2. Ensure there's a suitable .clang-format in place, i.e. with options
to fix the comment at the end of namespaces, including:
FixNamespaceComments: true
SpacesBeforeTrailingComments: 1
and that clang-format is >= 5.0.0, by doing e.g.:
clang-format -dump-config | grep Comments:
clang-format --version
3. Apply clang-format to the source:
clang-format -i $(find src -name "*.cpp" -or -name "*.h")
4. Create and filter out hunks related to fixing the namespace
git diff -U0 src > tmp.patch
grepdiff '^} // namespace' --output-matching=hunk tmp.patch > fix_namespace.patch
5. Filter out hunks corresponding to simple fixes into to a separate patch:
pcregrep -M -e '^diff[^\n]+\nindex[^\n]+\n--- [^\n]+\n\+\+\+ [^\n]+\n' \
-e '^@@ -[0-9]+ \+[0-9]+ @@[^\n]*\n-\}[^\n]*\n\+\}[^\n]*\n' \
fix_namespace.patch > fix_namespace_simple.patch
6. Manually review the simple patch and then apply it, after first
restoring the source.
git checkout -- src
patch -p1 < fix_namespace_simple.path
7. Manually review the (simple) changes and then stage the changes
git diff src
git add src
8. Again apply clang-format and filter out hunks related to any
remaining fixes to the namespace, this time filter with more
context. There will be fewer hunks as all the simple cases have
already been handled:
clang-format -i $(find src -name "*.cpp" -or -name "*.h")
git diff src > tmp.patch
grepdiff '^} // namespace' --output-matching=hunk tmp.patch > fix_namespace2.patch
9. Manually review/edit the resulting patch file to remove hunks for files
which need to be dealt with manually, noting the file names and
line numbers. Then restore files to as before applying clang-format
and apply the patch:
git checkout src
patch -p1 < fix_namespace2.patch
10. Manually fix the files noted in the previous step. Stage files,
review changes and commit.
We stored the combo position index, but this changes on engine switch.
This also fixes a crash due to out-of-bound index at engine switch.
Fixes: #10692
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.
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).
These are biblatex-specific multicite commands that allow for multiple
pre- and postnotes, as in:
\cites(pre)(post)[pre1][post1]{key1}[pre2][post2]{key2}...
with an optional general pre- and postnote, which applies to the whole
list (like [][] in normal cite commands) and an optional pre- and
postnotes for each item, so that pagination can actually be specified in
multi-cite references, as in:
(cf. Miller 2015, 2; furthermore Smith 2013, 23-23; Jenkins 2012, 103,
also refer to chapter 6 in this book)
See the biblatex manual, sec. 3.8.3., for details.
File format change.
This _must_ be increased for xhtml output of fullcite, else we get
fragmentary html code.
I am aware of the reason for this size limit (#8944) and have carefully
checked that this is not affected.
* ifentrytype:<type> whether we are a specific entry type (e.g. "book")
* export: export context (as opposed to dialog or workarea)
* second: whether we are in the second item of a list (useful when you
need to separate by " and " or ", and "
This entails a change of getAbbrAuthor to getAuthorList (the default is
still abbreviated with respect to MaxCiteItems, but the list can be, at
explicit request, shortened or full notwithstanding MaxCiteItems.
Next to the cmd name, introduce optional latex names (that might differ
from the cmd name) and aliases (that are "obsoleted by" the cmd).
This enhances portability between the engines.
When resolving biblatex's xdata references, consider that xdata fields
can contain a comma-separated list of keys, not just a single key like
crossref.
In addition to the classic crossref, biblatex introduces xdata
references in order to source-out common data of entries. Entries
that have "xdata = {somekey}" just inherit all fields from the
respective @xdata entry, if the field is not already defined in
the entry itself (just like crossref, with the exception that @xdata
entries themselves are _never_ output on their own). @xdata entries can
themselves inherit to other @xdata entries (ad infinitum). So you can,
for instance, setup an xdata entry for a book series with series name
that inherits an xdata entry with information of the publisher
(publisher, address). Any book of that series would just need to refer
to the series xdata and add the number.
BiblioInfo now checks, in addition to crossrefs, for such xdata
references and inherits missing fields.
Nte that biblatex also introduces an "xref" field as an alternative to
crossref. We must not care about that, since the point of xref is that
it does not inherit fields from the target (just cites that one if a
given number of refs to it exist)
was not English: We return the the abbreviated author "One and Two",
but translated to the GUI language; then we search that for " and "
in order to pull the authors apart again.
I've just replaced the distinct routines with a single one that handles
both cases, depending upon whether a Buffer is provided as one argument.
Use the function support:truncateWithEllipsis() to shorten a docstring with
... at the end. Actually we use U+2026 HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS instead of "..." when
automatically shortening strings. This is to be consistent with Qt's own
truncation and is much nicer on the screen.
This includes the bugs #9575 and #9572 regarding broken text elision in the
outliner.
Known issues (non-regressions):
* TocBackend::updateItem() should be rewritten to update all TOCs. (#8386)
* "..." should be replaced with … everywhere else on the interface (including
translation strings).
* We should prefer to rely on QFontMetrics::elidedText() to truncate strings
with an ellipsis whenever possible, or an equivalent for the buffer view
dependent on the font metrics. See the warning in src/support/lstrings.h.
We introduce TocBuilder for building TOCs that take into account both float
insets and their captions.
* Floats without caption are shown with their content.
* Floats with a caption are shown with their caption, but clicking the entry now
correctly moves to the float and not to the caption.
* Subsequent captions produce additional entries in the TOC.
* Figures and subfigures are correctly ordered in the outliner.
* New TOC "senseless" for captions appearing alone (a bit like broken references
are still displayed in the menu and outliner).
* Disable LFUN_CAPTION_INSERT if there is already a caption in a listing
Known issues:
* Inconsistent output for includes located inside floats
* We should record the end of the float in addition of the beginning for a more
accurate cursor -> outliner entry conversion
The firs tinvolves a thinko in BibTeXInfo::expandFormat. We were previously
counting passes through this routine, which means: one for every character,
more or less. So long strings would hit the "recursion limit". But what
we are worried about is an infinite loop caused by misues of macros, so that
is what we need to count.
This prevents the error we were previously getting, but it reveals a huge
slowdown when one tries to open a citation inset with a large nubmer of keys.
So we also limit the number of keys we try to process, and the length of the
string we try to display, when we are generating citation information.
I'm convinced that there is a deeper problem in how citation information is
generated (see the bug tracker for more info), but that will require major
surgery and a file format change
for possible thread conflicts, of the sort Georg resolved at
6a30211f. I have made static variables const where possible,
and marked cases that looked potentially problematic with the
comment:
// FIXME THREAD
Many of these definitely are vulnerable to concurrent access, such
as the static variables declared at the start of output_latex.cpp.
Suppose, e.g., we were outputting latex and also displaying the
source of a different document.
I'd appreciate it if others could grep for "FIXME THREAD" and see
if some of these are harmless, or what.
The problem is caused by the fact that Encodings::fromLaTeXCommand
is very slow. It's not clear to me if that can be fixed, or if that
is just how things are. Georg suggested another time that we might
use tex2lyx in or instead of convertLatexCommands() in BiblioInfo.cpp,
but I don't know if that would much faster. The author string in the
example file is 32K characters long. As long as some files tex2lyx
would convert.