A static local variable is guaranteed to be initialized only once, and in time.
Lambda expressions can be used to perform complex initialization of those static
variables on the spot.
(starting from: gcc >= 4.8, msvc >= 2015)
The function is no longer used in LyX's sources (as of the previous
comit, 9b64d7bd) and is thus removed with this commit. Perhaps the
advantage this function had over other path functions we have has
disappeared over time (see e.g. 1a7b7f65).
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.
RefChanger temporarily assigns a value to a non-const reference of any
kind. RefChanger provides a flexible and uniform generalisation of the various
scope guards previously derived from the old Changer class in MetricsInfo.h.
As before, a temporary assignment lasts as long as the Changer object lives. But
the new Changer is movable. In particular, contorsions are no longer needed to
change a private field. Special code can be moved into the appropriate classes,
and it is no longer necessary to create a new class for each specific use.
Syntax change:
FontSetChanger dummy(mi.base, value);
-> Changer dummy = mi.base.changeFontSet(value);
New function for generating arbitrary Changers:
Changer dummy = make_change(ref, val, condition);
Bugfix:
* Fix the display of \displaystyle{\substack{\frac{xyz}{}}} (missing style
change).
Boost.Signals is deprecated. This fixes bug #9943.
The only thing left to do is to rewrite (or get rid of) the boost -mt test
in config/lyxinclude.m4 not to use signals anymore.
It is no longer needed to create fake copy constructors and assignment and to
deal with deletion by hand, thanks to unique_ptr, the inference of move
constructor and assignment operator, and the compatibility of standard
containers with movable objects.
Two better ways of making a class non-copyable in C++11:
* Store the p. impl. in a unique_ptr (for the cases of classes with p. impl.),
or:
* Define publicly the copy constructor and assignment as deleted
Lots of other classes could be cleaned up in this way.
As discussed on the list. If no C++11 compiler is found configuration stops
with an error. There are now unneeded parts of boost, the will be removed in
a second commit.
It turns out that it did not take off since introduced in 2011. It is better to remove it and the associated boost headers (extract.sh was run against boost 1.60 to do the update).
Since we will move away from several boost classes when transitioning to C++11, it is good to start by removing lesser used ones.
It is easier to use instead getVectorFromString for the use we have of this tokenizer. The two places are environment.cpp (path stuff) and qt_helpers (file fileters). The new code is much shorter.
This allow to remove boost/tokenizer.hpp and friends from our boost tree.
Compiling different parts of the sources with different WINVER may lead to
subtle and hard to detect problems. Better use the same value everywhere.
The existing error message suggests that this was wanted anyway, and it
fixes a compiler warning when cross-compiling for mingw on linux. Our code
does not require a specific value, only a minimum value of 0x5000, which
means the resulting executable will require at least Windows 2000.
The included iconv should not be used on Linux or OS X, but (depending on
local configuration) it might be needed for crosscompiling a mingw target
from Linux. Now the user can choose whether to use the included iconv or not.
cmake does already support that.
eilseq.m4 was taken from the original libiconv 1.14 package.
On mingw-w64, long long (64bit wide) is larger than long (32bit wide).
Therefore we need some more specializations for string, docstring,
otextstream and << overloaded ostream functions. The configuration code
is by me, the source code changes by Shankar Giri Venkita Giri (bug 10053).
This is needed for warning-free compilation with mingw-w64, and does not hurt
for other build configurations. Patch by Shankar Giri Venkita Giri (bug 10053).
This fixes a failing unit test with 32bit gcc 4.9.3 and -O2 optimization:
It computed 9953 instead of 9954 for Length::inPixels() of value 2342.
The reason for this is probably different rounding behaviour caused by storing
the unrounded value in a processor register (uses 80bit accuracy) vs. writing
it back to memory (uses 64bit accuracy). The unrounded value is very close to
9953.5 (which is not representable as an exact IEEE floating point value).
Apart from that, having a proper function for rounding makes the code more
readable, and has the nice side effect to make Length::inPB() work for
negative lengths as well.
We open the input file now twice: The first time in latin1 encoding to read
the document encoding from the preamble. This does always work, since
traditional TeX does not allow non-ASCII contents without an encoding changing
command (except for comments, but we do not need them, and using latin1 rather
than utf8 ensures that they do not produce an iconv exception, but are simply
recored with wrong characters), and we do detect the utf8 based TeX engines
XeTeX and LuaTeX as well. The second time we open the file directly with the
document encoding.
This fixes a few tex2lyx tests on OS X, since changing the encoding of an
open file steam does not work with clang on OS X. Files using more than one
encoding are still broken, but all single-encoding files are fixed now.
Changing the codecvt_facet of a file stream after the file has been opened
does not work with clang on OS X. Therefore we avoid it if possible (i. e. the
new encoding is the same as the old one).
External processes cannot access files which are open in LyX. Therefore the
temp files created by the external inset need to be closed right after
creation. The symptom was that the date inset did not produce any outout on
windows (bug 9925). This change reverts a small part of f09a9fe2.
Although the date inset is unimportant and will probably be removed, this
change is important for all external insets that make use of temp files.