This method is a proxy for LyXRC::preview that forces to forward
declare some wrapper around an enum...
Instead, two simple static methods previewMath() and previewText() are
introduced, that make the code much easier to follow.
* remove unused class TexStream.
* remove unused virtual method Inset::cellXOffset
* remove second argument of FileDialog constructor, which was actually
not used
* remove some dead local code
* remove some unused private members of classes
* in InsetMathNest::updateBuffer, fix the logic of a test
This was a regression of e86cdc40: A newly introduced member variable was
not initialized in the constructor, which made it quite random whether symbols
like \coloneqq where displayed correctly or as an empty edit box.
This extends the already existing math symbol fallback mechanism in two ways:
1) When considering the availability of the math font, also take broken
code points into account. These are currently 0x0009 and 0x00ad, depending
on the platform.
2) If the fallback symbol in the standard "Symbol" font is not given, or if
the "Symbol" font is not available, or the fallback symbol is one of the
broken ones, try to use a generic unicode symbol as second fallback instead.
If this is available, we rely on Qt to find a font which has it. Only if
this is not available, display the symbol as ERT.
This ensures that we do never get a symbol which is not displayed: Either
it can be displayed, with or without fallback, or it will be shown as ERT.
The math parser aborts with an error message on \begin{align} and
\begin{align*} if this is not the hull inset. This is now fixed, however
this is not complete support for these two environments (the GUI does not
respect the numbering). It is only the minimal fix that ensures that no data
loss occurs for documents imported by tex2lyx.
This comes from trying to run tex2lyx on the AMS math test document
testmath.tex. Both \(...\) and \begin{math}...\end{math} are defined as
inline math formulas in standard LaTeX. tex2lyx recognizes this, but the
math parser in LyX did not handle "\begin_inset Formula \(" and
"\begin_inset Formula \begin{math}" correctly.
The fix is simple and safe: If we are in undecided mode (this is only true
for the first token of a math inset), create a hull inset of the respective
kind. Otherwise, handle the commands as before.
This avoids a message "Deco was not found. Programming error?" on stderr.
The added decorations are defined by amsmath, and equivalent to \vert (single
vertical bar) and \Vert (double vertical bar), respectively. They are used to
distinguish the single and paired versions (for use with \left and \right).
These symbols should cause amsmath to be loaded, but this would be too
dangerous to implement now.
Now interactive insertion of \smash[t] and \smash[b] is possible again.
\smash with optional argument behaves now exactly as in LyX 2.0.x, and without
optional argument it is supported by InsetMathPhantom.
When adding native support for \smash in 18779013 I overlooked that amsmath
redefines \smash to take an optional argument t or b. These optional
arguments are not parsed correctly anymore (bug 8967). This change fixes
the regression, so that \smash with optional argument appears in red, as it
was before th introduction of the native smash inset.
In the future, we should have native support for \smash[t] and \smash[b]
as well, but this would be a file format change (automatic amsmath loading),
and it is too late for 2.1.0.
When we export the file to latex, we use the redefinition_ variable to check whether we should output newcommand or renewcommand. This variable was set by the MathMacroTemplate::metrics() function, and this caused problem when the export is running in a different thread as the GUI.
In general, the metrics() functions should not change the Buffer; we have updateBuffer/updateMacros for that purpose.
Not all accessors did update the data previously. Therefore it could happen
that document export from the command line would output \newcommand, and from
GUI it would output \renewcommand for the same macro, simply because in the
GUI case the data was updated as a side effect of the GUI thread reading some
other member.
I also removed the mutable flag for requires_, since this member is always
set on construction and does not need any lazy update.
This is mostly unused private class members.
There are also a few unused functions that got #if'ed out. I never know in this case whether the code should be nuked.
False positive rate of hints is quite high. Although the includes can be
technically removed (due to other includes) they logically belong to the
header.
each failure.
There are several places I was not sure what to do. These are marked
by comments beginning "LASSERT:" so they can be found easily. At the
moment, they are at:
Author.cpp:105: // LASSERT: What should we do here?
Author.cpp:121: // LASSERT: What should we do here?
Buffer.cpp:4525: // LASSERT: Is it safe to continue here, or should we just return?
Cursor.cpp:345: // LASSERT: Is it safe to continue here, or should we return?
Cursor.cpp:403: // LASSERT: Is it safe to continue here, or should we return?
Cursor.cpp:1143: // LASSERT: There have been several bugs around this code, that seem
CursorSlice.cpp:83: // LASSERT: This should only ever be called from an InsetMath.
CursorSlice.cpp:92: // LASSERT: This should only ever be called from an InsetMath.
LayoutFile.cpp:303: // LASSERT: Why would this fail?
Text.cpp:995: // LASSERT: Is it safe to continue here?
As discussed on the list. No automatic contents detection is done, the user
needs to use the special paste menu instead. I used the new TempFile class
for safe temporary file handling.
The documentation would go into section 2.2 of UserGuide.lyx, but I am not
allowed to edit that document.
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?
Somehow I overlooked that \sideset also supports nonscript arguments for
left and right. This is now fixed, although I do not like the toolbar names.
If somebody knows something better, please improve.
The toolbar image is the one Uwe attached to the bug report. Note that
\sideset works only for operators like \sum in the nucleus. LyX allows
any content, so you might get a LaTeX error. I don't know how to prevent
wrong content in the nucleus.
Some macros defined by wasysym.sty work only in text mode: They either
produce an error in math mode, or wrong output. These symbols are now marked
as text symbols, so that no \ensuremath is created for LaTeX export if they
appear inside \text{}, and the correct images are created.
Actually, the test case showed several problems:
- ERT insets did use layout "Standard", not "Plain Layout"
- The font scale was read correctly, but tex2lyx claimed that it did ignore
the option "scaled=0.95"
- If a third argument of the CJK environment was given, it caused the whole
environment to be put in ERT with a broken encoding. This is now fixed for
the bug test case by using the \font_cjk header variable, but the encoding
problem still exists for unsupported encodings. I'll file a separate bug
for that.
- The CJKutf8 package was not handled in the preamble parsing. Therefore the
chinese comment in the preamble was read with a wrong encoding, and guessing
the document language did not work.
The new file CJKutf8.tex was created by copying and modifying CJK.tex, but
unfortunately it is impossible to tell git to inherit the history of CJK.tex
for the new file (search the web for git svn copy if you want to know details).
The fix is basically mechanical, the additional code for fraction like insets
with three arguments was stolen from \unitfrac. As any math package,
stackrel.sty needs a buffer parameter to switch it off.
I also added the two stackrel flavours to the toolbar.
stmaryrd.sty sets these symbols up as variable size math delimiters (i.e.
they may be used with \left and \right). Now LyX knows about that and offers
them in the delimiter dialog as well as single symbols.
The stmaryrd package adds support for lots of math symbols, using a font
designed to accompany the computer modern fonts. The changes in detail:
- Fix generate_symbols_list.py to work with stmaryrd.sty. It loooks like it
was automatically translated from a perl version and never used.
- Generate the new symbols in lib/symbols using generate_symbols_list.py and
add some manual adjustments
- Generate stmary10.ttf by a simple ttf export from stmary10.sfd with fontforge
- Add license info for stmary10.ttf
- Create a test file with all symbols from stmaryrd.sty. Actually it would be
nice to have this for the other fonts as well.
- The mechanics: lyx2lyx, tex2lyx, font machinery etc.
This patch puts all projects into subfolders (at least for MSVS). In this
way, there is a better overview (especially if the number of test projects
will be increasing).
The mhchem package treats the caret both as a shorthand for \uparrow or
as a superscript operator according to whether it is surrounded by
spaces or not. The \ce and \cf insets allow inserting spaces but there
is no provision for inserting a space after the caret, which is always
considered by LyX as a superscript operator. The solution here is to
insert a space after the caret if the superscript is empty or an empty
brace inset.
Mathed does not allow empty superscripts, so an empty brace has to be
inserted when working in LyX. On the other hand, when importing latex
code, an empty superscript is retained.
This has no effect whatsoever for normal latex code, as a space after
the caret is ignored. In any case, the output is only changed if an
empty brace inset is used as superscript. Specifically, the output is
changed from "^{{}}" to "^ {}".
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.
This is not needed, since LyX supports comments in math. Data loss with math
comments containing a backslash in LyX has been fixed as well.
The test case was found in bug #8104.
When using, e.g., a 'mathcal' inset in math, the inline completion and
other special characters like '\#', '{..}' are are painted in the
'mathcal' font as well. This is overcome by setting the mathnormal font
before painted these characters.
If the stream is good (i.e. there are still tokens) and we expect an
argument, we call getArg(). However, if there are only spaces, the stream
suddenly isn't good anymore after 'skipSpaces' and we would get an error
when calling 'getChar'. Therefore we have to check whether the stream is
still good.
If the stream is not good, we don't need to 'putback', because we didn't
read anything yet. If we now do rewind the stream, we are asking for
problems as in bug #8089.
This was introduced in [3cafb856\lyxgit] to fix bug #4318.
* Avoid undo step when using backspace in macro mode
* Use recordUndoInset when entering macro mode (if one enters something like \hline, the outer inset itself will be modified)
* Use recordUndoInset when pasting in an INsetMathGrid (same reason as above)
Math commands need it as well as text commands. At the same time, this
further unifies the checking for termination and fixes cases of wrong
output (e.g. for 0x2005).
If \hline is entered, do not create an unknown inset, but increase the number
of hlines of the current row if that is allowed. The same idea is applied to
copy-paste (not part of the bug report).
This is also a test for committing via git.
changing limits status (fixes bug #8007)
* InsetMathScript::getStatus (new) : handle properly status for LFUN_MATH_LIMITS here, along with checkmark support for the menu)
git-svn-id: svn://svn.lyx.org/lyx/lyx-devel/trunk@40700 a592a061-630c-0410-9148-cb99ea01b6c8
The small ascii art in InsetMathCancel::draw has line continuation characters at
eol, this make consecutive lines be andled as one. The use of a block comment
instead of single line comments makes this less of a "problem." Also it removes
a warning with gcc 4.7.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.lyx.org/lyx/lyx-devel/trunk@40699 a592a061-630c-0410-9148-cb99ea01b6c8