Single quotes are special to our parser and must be either escaped or
quoted if they are part of a filename, otherwise they are stripped out.
See #10342.
Since we process layouts sequentially, we export LaTeX code for the
title once we arrive to a layout that has InTitle false. If the
document then later has a layout with InTitle true, we do not
(currently) go back to add it to the title and just output it
in-place. We previously warned with LYXERR0, but since this can
cause missing or unexpected output we now warn in the GUI.
For more information, see the following lyx-devel thread:
https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=a65ae226-d3bd-8fc5-a93b-7bb23f1cda82%40lyx.org
Now by default all insets paint their own background when needed. This
means that 63cf3297 and part of 9940acc5 can be reverted.
To avoid extra painting, background drawing is disabled for
InsetCommand and InsetCollapsable. These insets draw background as
part of their normal drawing activity.
This will avoid drawing artifacts with InsetNewpage, InsetVSpace and
probably some others.
Fix assertion with gcc 6: The comparison function must be a strict weak
orderings and not give x < x.
Fix assertion when a custom exportable document format is given a non-ASCII
name. Use qt_ to be consistent with the rest of the code.
Use Qt's locale-aware comparison for appropriate sorting.
There was an oddity in the manual that exposed a problem with the
test for the "special case" of an inset all by itself in a pargraph.
If a font change is applied to that inset, we still need to open the
paragraph.
File format change. On format reversion, we need to put some extra code
in the local layout that emulates the 2.3 behavior.
Simply Input'ing the respective layouts is unfortunately not enough,
due to the insertion order.
See #9977
"lyxclient -g" now calls the just implemented lyx-activate (see
previous commit) after server-goto-file-row. This allows the PDF
viewer to switch to LyX after executing a reverse search.
On Linux and Mac OS, this action brings the LyX window into focus.
Such behavior is not allowed by Windows OS so instead the color of
the taskbar entry is changed to indicate that the window has changed
in some way.
The action is hidden in the shortcuts menu because it would make
sense to assign a shortcut to it. The only way to execute shortcut
would be if the LyX window is already activated.
lyx-activate will be used (see next commit) to allow the PDF viewer
to switch to LyX after executing a reverse search.
* New constant LYXFILE_LAYOUT_FORMAT in src/TextClass.cpp. This determines the
layout format corresponding to the current lyx file format.
* The Local Layout pane is changed so that the "Convert" button does not convert
to the internal layout format but to the current lyx file format, to make sure
that the file does not become unreadable with a specified earlier version of
LyX.
* If LYXFILE_LAYOUT_FORMAT == LAYOUT_FORMAT then LyX behaves as before. This is
the value defined in master.
It is currently called on hundreds of files: settings, layouts, icons, cached
graphics files (incl. graphics from files that are not opened on startup).
According to callgrind, fixing the FIXME comments could speed up startup by more
than 30%.
A static local variable is guaranteed to be initialized only once, and in time.
Lambda expressions can be used to perform complex initialization of those static
variables on the spot.
(starting from: gcc >= 4.8, msvc >= 2015)
Prevent setRange() from causing a recursive call to scrollTo(). Reduces three
calls of scrollTo() to one call for all scrolling functions of the scroll bar
(e.g. clicking on the arrow, dragging, or clicking somewhere on the scrollbar).
The function is no longer used in LyX's sources (as of the previous
comit, 9b64d7bd) and is thus removed with this commit. Perhaps the
advantage this function had over other path functions we have has
disappeared over time (see e.g. 1a7b7f65).
Before this commit, in the paths preferences tab if you put a
relative path, LyX would convert it behind the scenes to an absolute
path by evaluating the relative path with respect to the working
directory of the LyX instance where the preference change is taking
place. This seems confusing because (1) it is done behind the scenes
(after the preferences dialog is closed) and (2) if the user chooses
to enter a relative path, the safest thing to do is to preserve it
as a relative path, instead of making the assumption that the user
intended for it to be expanded to an absolute path.
An explanation of how relative paths are handled is given at the
bottom of the paths tab. Note that the height/width of the
preferences window is not changed as a result of adding this
explanatory comment because the height of the preferences dialog is
already stretched by other tabs.
This commit improves consistency in the sense that the behavior of
LyX is now the same when a relative path is specified in the
preferences dialog as when it is manually specified in the
preferences file. Before, if the preferences file were manually
edited and a relative path were inserted, the next time the user
made a change to preferences with the GUI (even if the preference
change was a different preference, e.g. instant preview), the
relative path would be silently converted to an absolute path,
evaluated with respect to the working directory of that instance.
Beyond improving clarity and consistency (IMO), this commit allows
for a new feature to be implemented of using relative paths in the
paths preferences. For example, the user may now enter '.' as the
"Working directory" path and now whenever they start LyX from a
directory and create a new file, the default location of the file
will be the directory from which they started LyX, instead of the
user's home directory which is LyX's default and is less intuitive.
No prefs2prefs work is needed because if a relative path were
entered in the preferences dialog before this commit, it was
converted to an absolute path before being stored in preferences. If
a relative path were specified by manually editing the preferences
file, then (unless the path were already automatically converted to
an absolute path by a GUI preferences change, as described above)
the behavior will be the same (the path will be treated as a
relative path).
For related discussion, see the lyx-devel thread here:
https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=20160616003010.bnymtcouar7g55ti%40cotopaxi
This commit removes the last use of lyx::support::expandPath() in
LyX's sources.
The Qt documentation states that tabAt() returns -1 if the position
is not over a tab. This behavior has been consistent since Qt 4.3
[1]. This commit's improvement likely makes the code faster in two
ways:
(1) we do not need to loop through potentially all tabs
(2) we only need to look up the tab index corresponding with one
position
posIsTab() is not currently used intensively so no practical gain in
speed is achieved, but it protects against future use.
[1] https://doc.qt.io/archives/4.3/qtabbar.html#tabAt
This is the default behavior of Chromium and Firefox. The main
appeal is that instead of having to precisely click on the 'x' to
close a tab, one can more easily middle-click anywhere in the tab.
The tab is closed if the middle button is pressed on a tab and is
relased on the same tab. After pressing, the user may move the mouse
over other tabs but as long as they move it back to the tab where
they initiated the press before they release, the close will
execute. This is how the feature works in Chromium and Firefox.
Nothing is done if the user middle-clicks on the blank part of the
tab bar. This is consistent with Chromium. Firefox, on the other
hand, opens a new tab. In LyX one can already double-click the blank
part to open a new tab, and in feedback from lyx-users [1] most
expected and desired that nothing be done in this case.
[1] https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=20160720063306.6fyarf3kywexbxvd%40steph
A chunk of code in an event handler seems to be unnecessary to me
because the event that the situation handles never makes it this far
in the event handling hierarchy. I'm not sure why this is, and thus
I'm not sure if this is true in all cases (e.g. Qt version) and if
it will be true in the future so I leave this code for now.
In redoParagraph, this should be done before coping with the insets,
other wise some graphic gliches may occur. This is a better fix for
Fixes bug #10163.
With the commit cb0c881 we reference XSendEvent in X11-lib
if qt uses X11.
For QT5, this library is pulled by Qt5X11Extras, but
for QT4 we have to add it too.
Spotted by Scott Kostyshak.
For reference, the bug was that quote insets grew bolder because, when
painted over themselves, anti-aliasing made them darker.
It turned out that the fix there created others than were
painstakingly fixed: #7164, #7165, #7174, #7193... More recently, it
created other problems:
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.editors.lyx.devel/163471
We use the right fix here:
* draw background of quote inset when not doing full repaint
* draw background of math macro template when not doing full repaint
* remove hack that grew from #4889 fix.
The default for ZOOM_OUT is -20 from a user perspective. That is,
the following are equivalent:
buffer-zoom-out -20
buffer-zoom-out
The reason for this is that the argument to ZOOM_OUT is treated the
exact same way as ZOOM_IN. The only way they differ is how the
default case is handled.
This commit also clarifies that (1) the argument may be positive or
negative and that (2) the argument is interpreted as percentage
points, not percent.
The code that specializes for double elements in the display string
does not trigger anymore: displayString() returns a single unicode
value, plus some space for french guillemets.
Use a thin space for these french quotes instead of a plain space and
remove special case in metrics().
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.
* Fix bug #10261 : KDE smartly adds conflicting accelerators.
* Prevent bugs like #9495 in the future.
Issues (non-regression):
* It does not appear possible to prevent Ubuntu's Unity from grabbing the
accelerators for the menus. For instance Alt+A still opens _Affichage in the
French localization.
Add a new checkbox "Save transient properties" to the "Output" panel in the
document properties dialog (now renamed as "Format").
This provides the front-end for the change at 5c2d04999.
is output when a branch is NOT activated. Fixes bug #7698.
At the moment, inversion is controlled through the branch settings
dialog. There is no provision for inserting inverted insets directly,
or for changing them from the context menu. Both of these could be
done, of course. The latter would need LFUN_BRANCH_TOGGLE_INVERTED.
The differentiation of "xetex" and "platex" is not needed here,
is ambiguous and confusing (see #10013). The code that relies on
it can/should get its information otherwise.
Furthermore, polyglossia-exclusive languages now also work with
LuaTeX, since we support LuaTeX + polyglossia.
With both Qt4 and Qt5, when using a click-to-focus policy, the first
attempt to paste a selection by middle mouse in an external application
which has no focus may fail. It is not clear why this succeeds for some
applications and fails for others, but refreshing the timestamp of the
selection request cures the issue. The cmake part is by Kornel.
See also this thread:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.editors.lyx.devel/162491
dealing properly with the paragraph separator tag.
We really need to use that tag as a kind of general marker for which
tags we're responsible for in a given paragraph and which tags we are
not. So the changes to InsetText.cpp use the tag as that kind of marker.
Note that, as of this commit, the User Guide again exports without any
kind of error. I haven't yet checked the other manuals.
This fixes bug #8022.
A window manager could be configured such that to maintain a certain
stack order for the windows. It would be annoying that opening a new
file through menu brings up the window, so do this only if we are
loading a file through the lyx-server.
The line felt too thin.
Note: I am still sceptical with the principle of an increase at the rate of
1/200% instead of 1/100%.
Also, I am sceptical with changing painting dimensions to int when Qt supports
doubles for everything (see e.g. 463bd17d). If the goal is to force
integer-width solid lines then one could try to disable antialiasing on Qt's
side.
I think the painter should move in the other direction, towards more doubles and
fewer ints. For instance, for Hi-DPI, Qt could probably take advantage of the
increased precision even without AA. (Then one would have to fix the problem
regarding uneven lines, mentioned in the above commit, in another fashion.)
* Underline or strike through the label as if it was text (it is).
* Strike through deleted InsetText, but let RowPainter handle the case of
non-MultiPar text insets.
* Change the colour of the frame as a cue, unless its colour is customised (not
Color_foreground). (Essentially do the border of CharStyles like Tabular does
it already.)
* The change info needs to be reset when entering InsetText. Otherwise labels
are painted with the change of their n+1-th parent.
It is not possible to use opacity effects (such as drawing an antialiased line
to strike diagonally through an inset), until the painter is fixed so that it
does not redraw repeatedly over the same spot (otherwise, the usual aritfacs
appear).
For now, pixellated lines are OK.
* Justification and nicer line breaks.
* Much nicer tooltip for lists of bibliographical references.
* Removed unnecessary iterated copies of the string buffer in
InsetText::ToolTipText() which looked bad. This function used to be costly
(cf64064), maybe it is quicker now.
After the previous commit, tooltip in the outliner are formatted automatically,
along with the other tooltips. A previous commit had already removed the
expensive call to tooltipText() that, although it gave a better rendering, was
very expensive (cf64064). This patch finishes to remove the custom tooltip
from the model data in the outliner.
(It would be nice to reintroduce a tooltip based on tooltipText(), but there
seemed to be a consensus that in that case one would prefer a less expensive
approach that computes the tooltip on the fly.)
* The tooltips in the list of modules now include the names of the modules.
* The tooltips of modules more consistent across the widgets.
* Sort the list of modules according to the locale (i.e. "É" comes before "F").
* Replace a hand-made sentence boundary finder by Qt's.
* New function formatToolTip(QString):
Format text for display as a ToolTip, breaking at lines of a certain
width. Note: this function is expensive. Better call it in a delayed manner,
i.e. not to fill in a model (see for instance the function
ToolTipFormatter::eventFilter).
* Install a global event filter that formats tooltips on-the-fly
Inspired from
3793fa09ff
but much improved.
When is formatToolTip called automatically? Whenever the tooltip is not already
rich text beginning with <html>, and is defined by the following functions:
* QWidget::setToolTip(),
* QAbstractItemModel::setData(..., Qt::ToolTipRole),
* Inset::toolTip() (added in one of the subsequent patches)
In other words, tooltips can use Qt html and the tooltip will still be correctly
broken. Moreover, it is possible to specify an entirely custom tooltip (not
subject to automatic formatting) by giving it in its entirety, i.e. starting
with <html>.
This is the well known file locking problem: The TempFile class keeps the
created file locked for the own process, and this prevents the CAS to read it.
We need to invalidate the BibTeX cache when undoing or redoing. I do
not like having to do it for every undo or redo. We should only have
to do it if we restored or deleted an InsetBibTeX. But there is no
way, so far as I can see, to do it that way. I tried.
The main thing it does is integrate mouse-modifiers into the
FuncRequest machinery. Previously, these had to be passed
separately, which led to some ugly function signatures.
There was also an unnecessary form of the constructor, which
can now be removed.
No change of behavior is intended.
The only exceptions are:
- The purpose of the header is to drag in the used symbol, e.g. unique_ptr.h
- The used symbol is inside a class or a namespace other than lyx
The reason for this is that global 'using' statements effectively forbid to
use the used symbols in any other namespace in the whole program, since simply
adding or removing an #include of the corresponding header subtly changes the
name lookup. The namespace lyx is sort of global, so it should not have these
statements either.
Maxima uses \it as a markup for multiletter variables. However,
it has been reported that since texlive 2016 using \it in math
mode produces an error, even though I was not able to reproduce.
Anyway, this can be avoided by replacing the old-style construct
"{\it ...}" with the new-style one "\mathit{...}".
The problem has also been reported upstream:
https://sourceforge.net/p/maxima/bugs/3181/
but this workaround will hold whatever the resolution.
output of tags until we know they're needed. In the case of HTML
tables, empty cells should of course be output, so we need to force
the tags to be output.
The external date inset was implemented as a demonstrator for external insets
in general. It was never intended for production code. Now that we have several
external insets defined we do not need the demonstrator anymore. This fixes
bugs #4398 and #9948.
This was dead code that did never work, and most of it was boilerplate that
you can steel in 15 minutes from any existing math inset. Apart from that it
did contain a pointer to InsetXYMatrix which would create the same problems
we saw with the macros.
This requires to change many docstrings into std::strings. The logic behind that
is that they represent a fixed set of math fonts, and therefore “string” means
here “poor man's enum” rather than text (this is consistent with MetricsBase).
Profiling of scrolling inside a document over macro-instensive areas:
Before the patch:
44,1% BufferView::updateMetrics()
-> 34,8% InsetMathHull::metrics()
-> 9,8% FontSetChanger::FontSetChanger()
28,4% BufferView::draw()
After the patch:
35,3% BufferView::updateMetrics()
-> 27,2% InsetMathHull::metrics
-> 0,4% FontSetChanger::FontSetChanger()
47,5% BufferView::draw()
FontSetChanger::FontSetChanger() is made 41x less expensive (with reference
BV::draw()) just by removing this conversion. The remaining 0,4% could be
squished by replacing the strings with a proper enum, but this is premature. Of
course, this only treats the symptoms: there is no good reason that this
function is called 45500 times over the time of 40 repaints.
Replace the manual manipulation of a stack of RowEntries with a Changer
function. When I introduced the stack of RowEntries, I did not know about the
Changer mechanism.
* Inset::canTrackChange() had two meanings: can it deal with change tracking?
Will it paint its own CT status? The latter information is now given by
Inset::canPaintChange().
* Line thickness computation is moved from RowPainter to MetricsBase.
* Painting function for Changes moved to lyx::Change. (One new, that strikes
diagonally.)
RefChanger temporarily assigns a value to a non-const reference of any
kind. RefChanger provides a flexible and uniform generalisation of the various
scope guards previously derived from the old Changer class in MetricsInfo.h.
As before, a temporary assignment lasts as long as the Changer object lives. But
the new Changer is movable. In particular, contorsions are no longer needed to
change a private field. Special code can be moved into the appropriate classes,
and it is no longer necessary to create a new class for each specific use.
Syntax change:
FontSetChanger dummy(mi.base, value);
-> Changer dummy = mi.base.changeFontSet(value);
New function for generating arbitrary Changers:
Changer dummy = make_change(ref, val, condition);
Bugfix:
* Fix the display of \displaystyle{\substack{\frac{xyz}{}}} (missing style
change).
The command 'lualatex' can produce a DVI with the option
--output-format=dvi
It is best to keep things as is because it is better to guess a PDF
than to guess a DVI (we do not use that feature of the 'lualatex'
command internally; we use 'dvilualatex' instead). However, we
should ideally get this information in a more robust way.
Thanks to Günter for pointing this out.
XeTeX with TeX fonts is only safe with ASCII input encoding (see #9740)
and we therefore force "ascii" when exporting with XeTeX and 8-bit TeX-fonts.
However, "utf8-plain" is a "power-user" option, which allows to switch off LyX's
encoding of the LaTeX file:
keep this also for "XeTeX with TeX fonts".
The user is responsible to ensure all characters can be processed and are
correctly shown in the output. The provided test sample shows the problems
with this encoding without special measures (like loading fontspec in the
user-preamble or a document class).
Boost.Signals is deprecated. This fixes bug #9943.
The only thing left to do is to rewrite (or get rid of) the boost -mt test
in config/lyxinclude.m4 not to use signals anymore.
It is no longer needed to create fake copy constructors and assignment and to
deal with deletion by hand, thanks to unique_ptr, the inference of move
constructor and assignment operator, and the compatibility of standard
containers with movable objects.
Two better ways of making a class non-copyable in C++11:
* Store the p. impl. in a unique_ptr (for the cases of classes with p. impl.),
or:
* Define publicly the copy constructor and assignment as deleted
Lots of other classes could be cleaned up in this way.