As of enchant 2.x, it is required to create a Broker instance instead
of relying on a static one provided by the library.
Add autoconf and cmake (courtesy of Kornel) tests that check whether
one can indeed instantiate a Broker object, and act on the result in a
new broker() helper function.
Fixes bug #10986.
Actually, the possible exception path is from replaceEnvironmentPath.
It would be better if coverity was able to asses that our hardcoded
regexp:s are correct.
Now people know for sure that I sometimes forget to test that code
actually works before committing. It was so straightforward, what
could possibly go wrong?
This is currently only relevant fo InsetListings, which falls back to
a fixed-width encoding under specific conditions. It is now possible
to query the inset about that and report the correct encoding in
DocIterator::getEncoding.
Addresses the second part of #10995
The function does not use for now any information from the BufferView
(only lyxrc), but this should eventually change if we want to honor
multi monitor setups properly.
On platforms where char_type is typedef'd to an integral type
rather than to wchar_t, when using the insertion operator <<
a single char_type is output as the number corresponding to the
code point of the character rather than as the character itself.
In this case, one has to use put().
Fix cases where lyx2lyx adds changes with every round cycle
uncovered by recent ctest change.
Add optional `delete` argument to parser_tools.get*value():
If True, delete the matching line.
More efficient "allowbreak" con/reversion.
New lyx2lyx parser tools find_complete_lines() (replaces find_slice),
del_complete_lines(), and find_across_lines(). Default value 0
for start argument in utility functions.
Rework the implementation of dash-conversion.
If, after the 10th iteration, the exported lyx16x file still
differs from the one in the previous iteration, the test
is marked as failing, even if still loadable.
Fix failure of revert_dashes() found by lyx2lyx ctests
using an efficient function to find a given sequence of lines
in a list of lines.
Some optimizations using Python idioms instead of C-like code.