When using 'find' and a string is not found, this is not an error or a
surprising event. It is often expected (e.g. after searching through
the whole document for a certain string eventually you will get this
message). The exclamation mark should be reserved for messages that
are unexpected or that need extra attention, such as errors.
Since a complete solution requires some refactoring, I fixed the bug for the
most important case: The main document language is only supported by
polyglossia. If any other language than the main one is only supported by
polyglossia the bug is still there.
This will be needed for layout forward compatibility, and could also be used
for a layout editor. Writing was only implemented for styles, not for complete
layout files (text class). I rarely made use of default values for missing
variables which exist in read(), so the output it a bit verbose (but more safe
against future changes). Also, some things like CopyStyle are never written for
obvious reasons.
This is a second attempt to fix the problem described in
6df4a7bb (2c2c1767 reverted the first attempt).
The solution here is more general: if we get to a certain point
in the code and there is no filename, an error is given.
The following command now gives an error:
lyx -e pdf2
And the following command continues to not give an error:
lyx myfile.lyx -e pdf
Before, the following commands correctly exited with code 1, but now
a reason for exiting is also given:
lyx -e pdf2 doesNotExist
lyx doesNotExist -e pdf2
This reverts commit 6df4a7bb40.
As Vincent points out, this commit is not correct. For one reason,
it would incorrectly exit with error for the following syntax:
lyx myfile.lyx -e pdf
I will look for a correct solution to the problem specified in the
message of the reverted commit.
Before, 'lyx -e pdf2' would give no error and would exit with 0. A use
case is if a user has in a bash script the following command:
lyx -e pdf2 "${mylxyfile}" || exit 1
where 'lyx' is mispelled as 'lxy' and thus yields an empty
string. If LyX does not exit with an error, the script continues where
the user probably intends for it to stop.
output, due to failure to clean the ids in the new citation stuff.
I've solved this by allowing the citation format information to contain
keys of the form "clean:key". This signals that we are to apply the
html::cleanAttr() function to the key before returning it. I.e., we
strip non-alphanumeric stuff, basically.
We only need to sort the formats when it is really necessary, i.e. for GUI
purposes.
This also prevents 11000 requests for translation everytime the toolbars
are updated.
The use of this profiler is trivial:
* #include <support/pmprof.h>
* in the block one wants to profile, add
PROFILE_THIS_BLOCK(some_identifier)
* At the end of the execution, statistics will be sent to standard error.
- fileformat change
- it was a pity that LyX did not yet support a simple rectangular frame without a defined width but LyX did this for e.g. oval frames
- \fbox and \mbox often occur in TeX files and can now be imported
Previously, the format used for included pdf files was the same as for
document export via ps2pdf. This caused unwanted conversion routes, e.g.
export via odt->pdf instead of dvi->ps->pdf.
I renamed the format for included graphics and not for exported documents,
since otherwise the command line syntax for export would change. This would
require more adaptions for the users, since with the chosen solution the
custom converters are almost always changed correctly in prefs2prefs(),
so that only custom external templates need manual adjustement.
Before, it was done on editingFinished(). The new behavior is more
intuitive because it is easier for the user to see how editing the box
is connected with enabling/disabling the other widgets. Before, the user
would not get instant feedback and would have to click away before the
connection is revealed. This new behavior is less efficient, however,
because checkEnabled() is called after every keystroke.
need the master buffer here, too: in looking up fonts during XHTML
output.
I'm half tempted to pass the master buffer to these routines, though
there are times, I think, when we want the actual buffer: e.g., when
looking up branches.
* Powerdot now also uses the native overlay item arguments
* a list option argument is finally available
* \pause natively supported (like in beamer)
* support for \onslide (via InsetFlex)
* support for \twocolumn
File format change.
With this commit, old beamer frames are converted to new ones. The old styles are removed (including the infamous \lyxframe).
This should be tested with as much beamer documents as possible (I have already done so), also, tex2lyx now probably produces invalid LyX files.
work we do when calling plaintext() for the purpose of generating
material for the advanced search function.
Here again, not only were we parsing BibTeX files, since Julien's
(sensible) introduction of plaintext output for that inset, but we
were in fact writing (to disk) complete plaintext output for
included files every time we did such a search.
worth doing, as we were creating too much output for tooltips anyway.
But we need to ignore BibTeX insets altogether, as the collection of
the references, etc, is too slow.
so we can write a limited amount when using this for TOC and
tooltip output.
This should solve the problem with slowness that Kornel noticed,
which was caused by our trying to write an entire plaintext
bibliography every time we updated the TOC. We did that because
he had a bibliography inside a branch, and we use plaintext for
creating the tooltip that goes with the branch list.
Other related bugs were fixed along the way. E.g., it turns out
that, if someone had an InsetInclude inside a branch, then we would
have been writing a *plaintext file* for that inset every time we
updated the TOC. I wonder if some of the other reports of slowness
we have received might be due to this kind of issue?
I added it because of a misunderstanding. If the encoding is really set too
late, to_utf8() in the Token constructor would probably fail, but a non-empty
putback buffer is no problem, since it was always created via to_utf8() ->
from_utf8().