PDF outline improves with unicode/utf8 (although some chars still wrong).
Math: ERT for umlauts no longer required (now force-converted with unicodesymbols)
As evidenced in #11552, at loading time there is no way to tell
whether braces were added by LyX with certainty. However, after
[503f7db2/lyxgit], LyX does not automatically removes brace insets.
So, in case one faces the problems mentioned in [e8f480e7/lyxgit],
the workaround of adding a brace inset now will not be frustrated.
In essence, after [503f7db2/lyxgit], the real fix for #11552 would
have been reverting the part in [e8f480e7/lyxgit] that was adding
the braces on output.
When a macro with optionals appeared inside the optional argument of
another one, the onscreen display and latex output were wrong. This
issue was addressed at [e8f480e7/lyxgit] by enclosing in braces macros
with optional arguments. However, this was done even when the macro
with optionals was in a non-optional argument of another macro.
This commit limits the bracing to the cases where it is really needed
and allows to address some particular issues evidenced in #11552.
If none of the optional arguments of a macro is used, there is no
following '[' after the macro name. Unfortunately, at loading time
the macro machinery is still not initialized, so the optionals()
member of InsetMathMacro is unusable. Hence, we have to track the
creation of macros with optionals as already we do for all macros.
The collected information is only used at loading time, because
the macros are dynamic and they may loose or acquire optional args.
Fixes the particular case reported at #11552.
The basic problem here is that rather than using an abstract syntax,
backend-specific param strings are produced in the listings dialog,
depending on whether listings or minted is used.
Of course this breaks if a user switches backends inbetween (s/he would
have to open and re-apply each and every listings inset!)
Do at least the most basic translations in InsetListings::latex().
A sane solution would imply the use of only one param syntax with
respective interpretation for each backend. But this would be a file
format change.
We use a C++11 construct that puts initial values of members along
with their definition. It is a good construct and now the out of line
constructor and the setDefaults() method can go.
This removes the need to define a dummy constructor in tex2lyx and
client.
The only needed change to the rest of code is a change of signature
for the user_(name|email) to return std::string. They are now called
explicitely from the constructor. We now have to include userinfo.h in
LyXRC.h, but this should not be too expensive.