The enum is now made of flags that can be combined.
This introduces several new values for Inset::DisplayType:
BreakBefore, BreakAfter and Display=BreakBefore|BreakAfter. This
last value replaces AlignCenter.
Additionally the flags NoBoundary and CanBreakAfter are introduced for
future use.
Now a left aligned displayed inset will be defined as Display|LeftAlign.
A newline inset is characterized as BreakAfter.
This structure is used in breakRow to avoid explicit calls to
isNewline() or isEnvSeparator(). More improvements will be built on
top of this.
Additionally several redundant display() methods (which returned
Inline) have been removed.
The problem with the previous attempt was that, every time through
updateBuffer, we looked up the file location using kpsewhich, which
took too long on Windows. The new solution is to cache that info, and
to look it up only when we need it.
Previously, this info would have been re-read whenever we parsed the
bibfiles. So we re-read it now whenever the bibinfo cache is invalid,
which is less often, but should be good enough. We can add more such
re-reads if need be.
The problem with the previous attempt was that, every time through
updateBuffer, we looked up the file location using kpsewhich, which
took too long on Windows. The new solution is to cache that info, and
to look it up only when we need it.
Previously, this info would have been re-read whenever we parsed the
bibfiles. So we re-read it now whenever the bibinfo cache is invalid,
which is less often, but should be good enough. We can add more such
re-reads if need be.
This uses the InsetArgument interface to provide access to a document
part hitherto inaccessible by LyX: the part between \begin and the first
\item in a list (where lengths and counters can be redefined, for
instance).
Fixes: #11098
File format change, layout format change
This returns a localized version of a string (in the GUI language)
if available, removing trailing colons and accelerator marks.
This can be used to refer to dialog items in the docs in a portable way.
QKeySequence returns special characters for keys on the mac rather than
textual key names (as on other OSes).
Since these symbols are not included in many fonts, we re-translate them
to textual names
Fixes: #10641
When searching for and item in the menu, also try to consider those that
require a BufferView (such as View/Update formats).
Also, be explicit for the default format in order to find it.
Fixes: #9851
This is a low hanging fruit, since it's already available (although
quite hidden)
Generally, output "not set" i a pref is not set rather than an empty
string.
With this commit, info insets leave the dark backstage room of an opaque
and quite hidden dev-only feature and come frontstage.
In the UI, they present themselves as "Fields" since this is what people
know from word processors. Other user-related fields that could be
implemented next: time, user name (I plan to do that for 2.4).
Since this supersedes date-insert, I removed Insert > Date from
the menu and propose to ditch date-insert and the corresponding rc.
The lyx2lyx reversion routine has lots of room for improvement and
attractive tasks for pythons (file timestamp, switch of localization).
Please feel invited!
This is a file format change.
* use the context language of the info inset (rather than the buffer
language), and translate strings accordingly
* for menu and shortcuts, use the Gui language instead
* actually care that all translatable strings end in po
(this wasn't the case).
Fixes: #5348, rest of #10463
Width is now 3 for top/bottomrule, 2 for midrule and 1 for cmidrule.
These numbers are bogus of course, but the goal is to help the user
see what he is doing.
It is a general problem when doing graphics to know where a line
begins and where it ends pixel-wise. At the instigation of Scott, and
with the use of the kmag magnifier, this commit corrects 3 areas:
* foreign marks were larger than the row element they were supposed to
mark. This could lead to moving lines, depending on paint ordering.
* visible spaces were drawn outside of their box (select a single
space to see this).
* the `L' blinking caret would leave a cursor dropping because the
horizontal part was too wide.
Minted does not have a language option but it is possible to enter
this option in the LyX interface for compatibility with the listings
package, and also for letting to enter a language not present in the
gui. So, this option is only used for properly specifying a language
in a listing, unless it is entered in the document settings dialog.
This case was not foreseen and thus the option was being passed to
the package as is, causing havoc. With this commit the option is
still available but is used to set a default language for a new
listing in place of the default "tex" language used so far.
This is not perfect, since variable width columns will break at a certain
treshold, but it is better than what we have now (no tabular width
indication at all)
This effectively enables linebreaks, multipars and layout changes in
non-fixed width (i.e., standard) table columns.
Fixes: #6577
TODO: metrics are wrong (too wide) on screen with linebreaks.
When a raster image with an advertised pixel density different
from 72 dpi is included in a latex file, the output image dimensions
are scaled by the ratio 72/pixel_density. Hence, if a clipping
bounding box is specified, it has to be scaled by the same ratio,
otherwise the images will be clipped differently on screen and output.
Here we use the extractbb command (present in any TeX distribution)
to ask about the output dimensions of the image as dictated by the
pixel density and compute the scaling ratio by the knowledge of the
actual dimensions. If, for whatever reason, extractbb is not found,
everything goes as before, because the clipping bounding box will
simply not be corrected.
The reordering of the code was incorrect. The code calling Change::paintCue()
has to come last, since it depends on the change_drawn value.
Spotted by coverity.
It is now possible in the float settings (doc dialog) to specify a global
(inner) alignment for floats, and in the float settings, this can be
overridden (just as with float placement)
Fixes: #8665
File format change.
We \cprotect them in fragile context. This allows \input, \include as
well as \verbatiminput and \lstinputlisting in sections etc.
They still don't work in titling (#2528)
Following a request by Günter, we consider the document fonts (only rm
for now) when selecting an appropriate font encoding.
See #9741
The new default font encoding setting "auto" does
* consider the font encoding needed by the language(s), which can now
have fallback alternatives
* Consider which font encoding is provided by the document font
Thus, cm now will result in OT1 fontenc, if the language can deal with
that.
The font_enc pref is ditched: it is no longer needed.
The automatism is still very basic and is subject to extension.
File format and prefs format change.
This change also applies to Comment insets. For example, Greyedout
and comment insets can now be inserted in section titles.
The usage of these insets in commands relies on the newly
implemented cprotect feature. The usage of these insets in
description items already worked fine (without cprotect).
This commit also enables modification of these insets (e.g.,
converting a LyX note to a Greyedout note) in commands.
This commit is related to #6969.
The problem was that, if we killed export when some graphic was
being converted, or some external template was being handled, it
would only cancel that process, and then it would just continue.
To deal with that, we need to do a few things:
1. Modify the return values for some of the Converters routines,
and similarly the routines for external templates, so we can
tell when something has been canceled.
2. Throw an exception from InsetGraphics or InsetExternal when this
has happened during export, but ONLY when the Buffer is a clone.
We shouldn't be able to 'cancel' export when we're, say, generating
code for the preview pane, but this keeps us on the safe side..
The exception then has to be caught, obviously, back in the export
routines in Buffer.
Probably Coverity will be unhappy about something here, but I'll
deal with that problem as it arises.
This allows (some) verbatim contents in macros, such as \url's with
specific chars (#, % etc.) in section headings or footnotes (#449)
or comments in captions (#9313).
The mentioned two bugs are fixed by this commit.
Note that the implementation is still rather basic and might need
extension for other cases.