Back references in the format string of regex_replace use the syntax $n both
in std::regex and in boost::regex for the default format. Boost seems to
support the syntax \n in addition, but it is not documented at
http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/master/libs/regex/doc/html/boost_regex/format.html.
Therefore it is a good idea to use $n also for boost.
To test all export use 'ctest -L export'. This is unchanged.
The following lists directories and assigned sub-label
lib/doc: manuals
lib/templates: templates
lib/examples: examples
development/mathmacro: mathmacros
autotests: autotests
The changed code is not used, but I tried to use a similar approach for
boost::regex, and found some problems:
- regex_replace and regex_search are implemented in the replacement, so they
must not be used directly
- an smatch object must be given by reference (as in the called methods),
otherwise an exception would be thrown at runtime
- the commented out regex_replace version is actually needed
This code is supposed to be deleted, but nevertheless I wanted to record here
how it had to be modified if it was actually needed.
Some templates had the inputenc setting "default" (meaning
use the language default encoding, (not TeX's default which is 7-bit ASCII) but
don't load inputenc, leave handling of non-ASCII characters to the author).
This is no apparent problem as long as no non-ASCII character is used in the
document. It is very unsave, however, as any non-ASCII character used in the
document has the potential to either make compilation fail or be
misrepresented in the output.
It was possible for errors that occured in the first run to be shown
in the error list after the second run. Now, the errors are cleared
before the second run.
Although I do not have a reproducible example at hand, I imagine
this situation would occur if a rerun is required and there is still
an error after the rerun.
Related to #9765.
Before, the exit code for the first LaTeX run was used to set the
flag, which caused an error to be reported when in fact there was no
error on the second run.
This fix ammends 1dbf0e5a.
When importing TeX code like
%comment
TEXT
the LyX document currently becomes
[ERT %comment] TEXT
so that TEXT is now part of the comment.
Now output_comment adds a trailing newline if the token after the
comment is not a newline. Note that the newline that marks the end of
the comment has already been parsed at this point.
tex2lyx tests have been checked manually and updated.
Fixes ticket #9551.
Now
'ctest -L export' should be without errors
If there _are_ errors, the appropriate test should go to nonstandardTests
'ctest -L reverted' should be without errors
If there _are_ errors, the appropriate test should go to nonstandardTests
'ctest -L nonstandard'
Tests here may, or may not fail. Depends of installed tex extensions
A plausible scenario is that change tracking is used together with a versioning
system. In this case, parallel modifications might remove an \author line on one
side, and add another change of this author on the other side. This scenario
causes a bad merge after which the added change has no associated author. In
this case, LyX used to display a list of errors on opening and deliberately
removed the corresponding change tracking information.
* If ever a tracked change refers to an author that does not exist, then add a
dummy author. This dummy author is not saved to the file afterwards.
* Have a very clear error message on opening such a corrupt file.
All comments in revertedTests comes from Günter Milde
Non standard test is new. It should collect all tests
which may not work because of some missing non-standard
tex package or some exotic system font.
This is better because it implements a LRU cache. Indeed, while editing in particular, width of many different strings has to be computed. This is different from the previous situation where only width of single characters was computed and cached.
This popped up in cmake monolithic build once. It looks like BufferView is
included indirectly by some of the other headers (otherwise we would have seen
compile errors for other build configurations as well), bu I'll keep the
forward declaration since we don't want to depend on this indirect header
inclusion.
N_() is a preprocessor macro to mark translatable static strings. It is not a
good idea to also name a class member variable N_: It did only work in the
other build configurations because gettext.h was not included.