When adding units to the external inset bounding box I overlooked that
InsetGraphics supports only bb, cm, mm and in. Therefore I added too many
units for the external insets. We are not as strict as the graphics inset
and allow all absolute units, but no relative ones.
This made text in smallcaps+emph display as upright instead of plain
emph. There is no latex font for smallcaps + emph, but it is not a
reason for displaying it wrong.
This path configuration variable is used for user defined location.
There are other possible places for the thesauri like mythes installers or bundled with LyX.
This brings the external inset on par with the graphics insets as far as the
clipping option is concerned. The graphicxs package supports both: A bounding
box without units (which means that bp ia assumed), and a bounding box with
units, so we can simply output the values including the units.
Being able to compile document with zipped .eps files was a useful feature of
the graphicxs package 20 years ago, but the LyX support is no longer relevant:
- The flag is ignored if preview is on
- If pdflatex is used then uncompressing happens during the compilation anyway
- If set, the flag prevents LyX from issuing proper error messages if
something with the image is wrong
- For hard disk capacities from 20 years ago not uncompressing is a useful
feature, but for current hard disk capacities it does not matter
- The external inset does not have it, and if we want to merge both insets
one day we would need to implement it there, which is even more difficult
than in InsetGraphics
The functions reverseDirectionNeeded() and reverseDirectionNeeded() do
not rely on the Bidi class. The first one is changed into a Cursor
method, and the second one is replaced with explicit code.
Since commit 7ac70092, lyx::dispatch returns a DispatchResult const &,
which is ignored in the cases below. Nevertheless, the windows
compiler complains that it does not know this type. Gcc and clang can
deal with it without problem.
The bug workaround added an extra repaint, which can be very bad when
editing large tables.
It turns out that the bug this is trying to fix is due to the handling
of LFUN_LINE_END in InsetMathGrid. Adding the same code as in
InsetMathNest fixes the problem.
The workaround can therefore be removed.
Now the minibuffer toolbar is "auto" by default. It is opened by
command-execute (M-x) and closed when the command is executed without error.
* make lyx::dispatch return a DispatchResult struct
* there is a new MINIBUFFER type of toolbar, that can be used for this use.
* remove special handling of M-x in minnibuffer; Escape can be used instead. Fix focus in this case.
* when minibuffer toolbar is "auto", make the toolbar close itself after
- a command has been executed without error
- an empty command has been executed
- the Escape key has been used
[this is actually commit fdcff02a, which was later reverted at dd61d8cf]
There is a mismatch between the way text is tokenized in Row objects
and the way it is shown on screen. When metrics are computed,
continuous spell checking has not been done yet. Yet, the row painter
explicitly breaks words at spell status boundaries. This creates
problem with a text like "PMP," (see bug #9649), where there is a
negative kerning before the comma.
This is solved by not taking in account spell status when drawing
text, and drawing spell underlines separately.
* replace Paragraph::isSameSpellRange with new method getSpellRange.
* merge RowPainter::paintChars into RowPainter::paintFromPos
* move the actual text painting code into the new paintTextAndSel.
* merge some code from paintFromPos to paintMisspelledMark
* in paintMisspelledMark, scan the string which needs to be annotated
and add dashed line below text marked as misspelled.
Fixes bug #9649.
This avoids warnings with windows compiler. It is a pity that even
clang does not give those. Maybe I missed them with the large amount
of boost warnings that it spits.
There is a second solution in the code which uses some undocumented Qt
stuff, but it does not work in some cases. The best is to rely on the
documented way.
There is no need for real-valued line width in painters. Actually, this even leads to uneven dashes for continuous spell checker.
The new code is supposed to be equivalent to the old one, just more readable. From this, we can try to see whether some lines need to be made thicker on HiDPI screens.
Length::inBP() returned the wrong values for most units. I guess that this was
caused by the default case in the switch statement: It did probably exist
before the other units were added.
inBP() is now correct for all units except the font dependent ones em, ex and
mu and the percent units: For these only approximate values are returned,
since not all needed information is available.
LaTeXFeatures defines \textcommabelow and \textcommaabove based on a
generic \LyXTextAccent and declares TextCompositeCommands for the Baltic
letters in the T1 font encoding, using \textcommaabove for the small letter g
and \textcommabelow else.
This allows overwriting of the composite definition for other font encodings.
Especially, it does not interfere with the polish/baltic font encoding L7x
(supported by LatinModern and TeXGyre fonts) that provides pre-composed
glyphs.
Greek characters with perispomeni (tilde) accent were not properly shown
in the output document, because the "textgreek" feature re-defined \~ in
a way incompatible with lgrenc.def since version 0.8 (2013-05-13)
(package greek-fontenc).
The compatibility-definition is required for older versions of the font setup
(before the move of "lgrenc.def" from "babel" to "greek-fontenc").
It is now done with "ProvideTextCommand" to not overwrite the more complete
implementation in lgrenc.def.
With the compatibility definition, combined diacritics with tilde
must be input with the tilde first (e.g. \~>, not \>~).
"unicodesymbols" is changed accordingly.
Also, some LICRs for combining Greek diacritical characters were added to
Unicodesymbols.
When the cursor had idx > 0 (since math-display does merging anyways),
reset cursor to the start of the inset. This looks less strange than
setting it at the end.
Now at least the basic case of a displayed equation with cursor
somewhere at top-level is handled correctly.
The math-display lfun operates at top level in the math inset.
Therefore, when the cursor is in an inner inset, it will after the
lfun be moved at top level. Unfortunately, there is no way that I know
f to detect this in Inset::doDispatch.
Even if we could, as things stand, it is difficult to keep the cursor in the
inner inset, especially if the inner inset moves : this happens for
example when moving from eqnarray to inline maths.
Therefore this fix is the best I can think of now.
Fixes part of bug #9664.
Both marvosym and bbding define the "Cross" macro.
To prevent a compilation error due to conflicting definitions,
we undefine the "Cross" macro if both packages are required.
It turns out that it is always better using the copy of the MacroData
for updating the macro_ pointer to avoid problems related to the cursor
position.
This effectively makes the horizontal size policy "minimum", which
makes it clear that there is no advantage for this widget of
increasing the horizontal size past the minimum, allowing other
GUI elements to use the horizontal space if useful.
This change for caseCB is consistent with wordsCB and searchbackCB.
This can happen when a macro is copied and then the document where
it is defined is closed. In this case, the macro survives in the
cut stack but the the buffer pointer is dangling.
Now the minibuffer toolbar is "auto" by default. It is opened by
command-execute (M-x) and closed when the command is executed without error.
* make lyx::dispatch return a DispatchResult struct
* there is a new MINIBUFFER type of toolbar, that can be used for this use.
* remove special handling of M-x in minnibuffer; Escape can be used instead. Fix focus in this case.
* when minibuffer toolbar is "auto", make the toolbar close itself after
- a command has been executed without error
- an empty command has been executed
- the Escape key has been used
The 'using namespace std' at the top of the file makes it quite difficult to
understand which abs is used: double std::abs<double>(double) or
int ::abs(int)? Now it is explicit, and the code does not change in subtle
ways if somebody removes the using statement.
The horizontal size policy is now set to "MinimumExpanding", which
means that sizeHint() is enforced as a minimum, but that the widget
can make use of extra available space.
Before, the size policy was ignored, and often resulted in a
scrunched pane that had to have its size manually increased.