Implement invisible mode by setting the foreground color to be the same
as the background color. Not rendering anything would also be an
alternative, but this seems less likely to cause surprises in
conjunction with any hacks.
Signed-off-by: Roberto E. Vargas Caballero <k0ga@shike2.com>
Faint, invisible, struck and fast blink are added as glyph attributes.
Since there's an edit here, let's take the opportunity to reorder them
so that they correspond to the two's power of the corresponding escape
code. (just for neatness, let's hope that property never gets used for
anything.)
Signed-off-by: Roberto E. Vargas Caballero <k0ga@shike2.com>
This macro was not correct in some cases, and it was used only in
one place, where we did'nt get any benefit in performance of in size,
so the macro is removed and ceilf is used instead of it. The only
function needed from math.h is ceilf, so this patch defines the
prototype of it instead of including math.h.
Commit 5edeec1 introduced a wrong factor for nanosecond computation, the correct
value is 1E6. Time and timeout values are 10 times less than they should be and
this cause high CPU usage.
Reported by pyroh on IRC. Thanks!
Signed-off-by: Roberto E. Vargas Caballero <k0ga@shike2.com>
This patch replaces the gettimeofday()/timeval-system with
uses of clock_gettime() with a monolithic clock and timespec-structs.
gettimeofday() is not accurate and prone to jumps and POSIX.1-2008
marks it as obsolete. Read more here [0].
The patch should speak for itself and decreases the binary
size for me by almost 200K(!).
[0]: http://blog.habets.pp.se/2010/09/gettimeofday-should-never-be-used-to-measure-time
Signed-off-by: Roberto E. Vargas Caballero <k0ga@shike2.com>
Refactor the SNAP_WORD part in selsnap, and fix a bug that caused the word
delimiters to be ignored if it was at the very beginning or end of a wrapped
line.
Signed-off-by: Roberto E. Vargas Caballero <k0ga@shike2.com>
selsort computes the wrong normalized coordinates when rectangular
selection is enabled, causing rectangular selection to only work
when going toward either the top left corner, or the bottom right
one.
Signed-off-by: Roberto E. Vargas Caballero <k0ga@shike2.com>
Currently, selection is expanded to the end of the line over line breaks only in
regular selection mode, when the line in not empty and when going down and/or
right. This covers all the cases including word selection mode, with the
exception of rectangular selection because it would make this mode too rigid.
This adjustment is made in selsort so I renamed it to selnormalize to better
reflect what it does now.
Signed-off-by: Roberto E. Vargas Caballero <k0ga@shike2.com>
By the recommendation of FRIGN I refactored xsetcolorname to remove the
unnecessary r, g, b variables when allocating a new color. Colors are
now freed and set to the new color. A die() should not happen here. Oth‐
erwise it is easy for applications to kill st. St should be resilent to
malicious input.
Second this patch standardises the naming of »color«. There is no
»colour« here. Maybe in some parts of the world.
I mainly improved the slightly off algorithm used to load colours in the 256-colour-space and
removed unnecessary local values (r,g,b,colour).
"colour" is not necessary as a punchbag for XftColorAlloc[Value,Name], as they don't mess with
the result-adress until they are absolutely sure everything worked out[0].
Being at it, I changed the error-returns for AllocValue to dies (just like in xloadcols()), as
a failure is most likely an OOM-situation you better catch early.
In case of an invalid name everything stays the same.
[0]: http://www.opensource.apple.com/source/X11libs/X11libs-40/libXft/libXft-2.1.13/src/xftcolor.c
Signed-off-by: Christoph Lohmann <20h@r-36.net>
Similar to xterm or urxvt holding shift before selecting text with the mouse
allows to override copying text. For example in tmux with "mode-mouse on" or
vim (compiled with --with-x), mc, htop, etc.
forceselmod in config.h sets the modifier to use this mode, by default
ShiftMask.
Signed-off-by: Hiltjo Posthuma <hiltjo@codemadness.org>
ATTR_GFX was used long time ago to detect when terminal was in
graphic mode. Today graphic mode is implemented using a charset
pointer, so ATTR_GFX is not needed anymore because graphic
condition can be detected directly checking if current charset
is GRAPHICS C0.
This patch fixes the bug introduced in
8f11e1cd03
To reproduce the bug:
1. Save cursor: printf '\e[s'
2. Load cursor: printf '\e[u'
3. Resize st window.
4. Load cursor again: printf '\e[u'
The patch 53105cf modified how control codes were detected, because
it tried to handle also C1 control codes (0x80-0x9f), that have
upper bit to 1, so they are multi byte character in utf8.
Code was checking the value of width in order to known that after
decoding the unicode point had a width of 1 byte, but it as incorrect
because this width is the columnb width.
Once a sequence is completed term.esc must return to 0, so
instead of repeating this expression in all the cases is
better put it at the end of the block.
From http://www.vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/chapter4:
*The VT510 ignores all following characters until it receives a
SUB, ST, or any other C1 control character.
So OSC, PM and APC sequence ends with a SUB (it cancels the sequence
and show a question mark as error), ST or any another C1 (8 bits)
code, or their C0 (7 bits) equivalent sequences (at this moment we
do not handle C1 codes, but we should). But it is also said that:
Cancel CAN
1/8 Immediately cancels an escape sequence, control sequence,
or device control string in progress. In this case, the
VT510 does not display any error character.
Escape ESC
1/11 Introduces an escape sequence. ESC also cancels any escape
sequence, control sequence, or device control string in
progress.
Currently tputc handles the case of too long control string waiting for
the end of control string.
Another case is when there is ESC character is encountered but is not
followed by '\\'. In this case st stops processing control string,
but ESC character is ignored.
After this patch st processes ESC characters in control strings properly.
Test case:
printf '\e]0;abc\e[1mBOLD\e[0m'
Also ^[\ is actually processed in the code that handles ST.
According to ECMA-048 ST stands for STRING TERMINATOR and is used to
close control strings.