* 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.
MSVC does not need a special flag to specify the standard. Using --std=c++14
produces a warning, but compilation succeeds, so the old code did mistakenly
choose --std=c++14 for MSVC.
Older gcc versions (e.g. the first one which has usable std::regex: gcc 4.9)
require the --std=c++11 flag to be set. Otherwise std::regex is not made
available. Therefore we need to keep the flag in the loop.
If the included thirdparty libs are requested, use them, even on unix. This is
consistent with autotools (but the recommended way is of course to use the
system libs). If the included thirdparty libs are not requested then try to find
libiconv and zlib also on windows. This will lead to an error unless the libs are
found via manually added include and link paths, but this is wanted since
libiconv and zlib are not optional.
These are all in lib/symbols, but we did not yet know the corresponding unicode
numbers. unicodesymbols does still not contain all symbols from lib/symbols.
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 parser that reads unicodesymbols uses backslashes to escape quotes, so
every backslash that is part of a LaTeX command needs to be escaped as well.
There are more candidates in the greek and cyrillic sections, but I don't
know those commands, so I did not touch them.
These files were aded with windows line ends before we did set the text=auto
attribute for all files in .gitattributes, and this caused phantom changes on
linux workspaces after .gitattributes was introduced.
Now these files appear with linux line ends on linux workspaces and with
windows line ends on windows workspaces, like all source files.
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.