The current heuristics only considered modules with styles that defined
a searched command in their preamble, and only for commands/environments
that were defined in the document's preamble. This limited the module
support drastically.
The new heuristics also checks for commands coming from packages. If the
command is not (re-)defined in the document preamble, it checks modules
that provide a style with a matching LaTeXName, checks for their
requirements and matches those with the packages loaded by the document.
If no module provides a searched style, but we found modules that load
packages that are loaded in the imported tex file, and if those packages
are not auto-loaded by LyX anyway, we also load this module.
fixes: #11259, part of #8229
As opposed to modules (from which the framework was initially borrowed),
we only allow one cite engine per document. Thus, we don't need to fiddle
with lists.
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.
Seemingly, when removing an argument from argv, and thus inserting
a null pointer to shorten the array, causes an assertion because
the null pointer is not a valid heap pointer (sic!)
Fixes bug #10440
We open the input file now twice: The first time in latin1 encoding to read
the document encoding from the preamble. This does always work, since
traditional TeX does not allow non-ASCII contents without an encoding changing
command (except for comments, but we do not need them, and using latin1 rather
than utf8 ensures that they do not produce an iconv exception, but are simply
recored with wrong characters), and we do detect the utf8 based TeX engines
XeTeX and LuaTeX as well. The second time we open the file directly with the
document encoding.
This fixes a few tex2lyx tests on OS X, since changing the encoding of an
open file steam does not work with clang on OS X. Files using more than one
encoding are still broken, but all single-encoding files are fixed now.
This is needed since src/support calls lots of qt code, and some parts of it
(e.g. QFileInfo) require a running event loop. This fixes bug #4917 which is
a symptom of the problem.
The fix is to create a QCoreApplication for tex2lyx, lyxclient and LyX running
without GUI. In the future this could be extended, i.e. to split up the
frontend Application class in a GUI and a console class, and having the
console class use LyXConsoleApp in the same way as Application now uses
GuiApplication. If that is done, one could also think of moving
support/ConsoleApplication to frontend/console/ConsoleApplication.
If the user gave the -fixednec argument to tex2lyx then set that encoding as
LaTeX input encoding in the generated LyX file. Otherwise, included .bib files
could be interpreted using a wrong encoding.
These are now in version.cpp. The build machinery should therefore make sure
that version.cpp is recompiled at every compilation.
These variables are now referred to by the other places that made use of __DATE__ and __TIME__.
If we call tex2lyx on a temporary file created from the clipboard, the
file is always in utf8 encoding, without any temporary changes, even if it
contains encoding changing LaTeX commands. Therefore, we must tell tex2lyx
to use a fixed utf8 encoding for the whole file, and this is done using the
new latexclipboard format. Previously, tex2lyx thought the encoding was
latin1.
As a side effect, the -e option is now also documented in the man page.
In roundtrip mode, tex2lyx produces documents with extension lyx.lyx, so that
the original files are not overwritten on re-export. This was not done for
included documents which were converted, and this broke 'make dist'.
- Use the LyX name of encodings instead of the LaTeX names.
The LyX name must be unique, while the name used by LaTeX
not necessarily, e.g. different packages might implement
support for the same encoding.
- Rename koi8 to koi8-r, so that the LyX and LaTeX names match.
- Rename euc-jp-plain to euc-jp-platex, jis-plain to jis-platex
and shift-jis-plain to shift-jis-platex.
- Add utf8-platex encoding (fixes#8408).
LyX file format incremented to 463.
Provide functions for translating to the LyX name
of an encoding from either a LaTeX name or an Iconv
name, with the possibility to specify the package.
This is in anticipation of changing to use the LyX
name of the encoding in the .lyx file format and
allowing multiple lib/encodings entries to have
the same LaTeX name (but different packages!).
The tex2lyx parser needs to worry about the iconv
name of the input encoding, so store that instead
of the latex name.
Both problems where caused by the fact that tex2lyx did not handle
natbib/jurabib citations correctly if natbib/jurabib was loaded by the
document class. Therefore it tried to parse the standard \cite syntax, and
did not recognize \citet and \citep.
Now that we have module support for literate programming, it is possible to do a noweb cleanup. This is basically a patch from Kayvan Sylvan:
- get rid of literate-xxx classes
- rename Scrap to Chunk, since this is the name noweb doc uses (Scrap is from nuweb)
- update lyx file format and add lyx2lyx support for gettting rid of literate-xxx classes
- update documentation
On the top of it, update tex2lyx to
- avoid creating files with literate-xxx class
- fix conflict between parsing << as a quote and parsing it as a Chunk
- create Chunk layouts instead of Scrap ones.
Actually tex2lyx can handle modules since some time (#5702), but not
theorems (#5776). Now the following issues are fixed:
- Modules that depend on other modules can be loaded, since the dependencies
are loaded first
- Default moduls of the text class are loaded correctly
- \newtheorem is recognized as a command that defines new environments and
treated similar to \newenvironment
With this new command line switch a list of modules can be loaded
unconditionally. This seems to be needed for the literate programming formats,
and it is useful to work around bug #5702 as well.
Instead of annoying the user with an automatically created note in the output
document which she needs to delete manually, determine the document language
automatically for documents that use CJK. This is done using a heuristic which
roughly counts the number of characters in each language and sets the one that
is used most often. This is not perfect, but it works for the two major use
cases: A document with only some CJK parts (in this case the babel language is
used), and a document which is mainly written in one CJK language. It is only
a minor problem if the heuristic is wrong, since the TeX export is still
correct, and there is no spell checking support for CJK anyway.
Now all regression tests do pass except for some relative path issues
depending on the location of the build directory.
If this option is given, included files will be copied to the output directory.
Also -roundtrip is now allowed with given output file.
-copyfiles is useful if you want to ensure that no file (not even an included
one) is overwritten by a subsequent export from LyX. Both changes are needed
for unit tests that do not write to the source directory.
objects. The problem that led to the leak is that these objects can be held in
memory long after the Buffer that created them is gone, mostly due to their
use in the CutStack. So they were previously held in a storage facility, the
DocumentClassBundle. Unfortunately, they were now being created too often,
especially by cloning. It's not really a leak, because they're accessible, but
we weren't ever destroying them.
This new approach uses a shared_ptr instead.
Thanks to Vincent for pointing out const_pointer_cast.
While cppcheck did not turn out any suspicious error messages, using
the "performance" flag highlighted several nitpicks in three categories
* do not use it++ for iterators, ++it is better
* do not use size() to test for emptyness, empty() is here
* do not use "const T" as a function parameter, "const & T" is better
I doubt that any of these is a real performance problem, but the code is cleaner anyway.