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* this means that QRegSpecMachine::input() no longer has to return
a dummy QRegister in parse-only mode.
This saves an unnecessary QRegister table lookup and speeds up
parsing.
* QRegSpecMachine can now be easily extended to behave differently
when returning a Q-Register, e.g. simply returning NULL if a register
does not exist, or returning a register by prefix.
This is important for some planned commands.
* StateExpectQReg::got_register() now gets a QRegister *.
It can theoretically be NULL - still we don't have to check
for NULL in most cases since NULL is only passed in parse-only mode.
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* the registers beginning with "$" are exported into sub-process
environments. Therefore macros can now modify the environment
(variables) of commands executed via EC/EG.
A variable can be modified temporarily, e.g.:
[[$FOO] ^U[$FOO]bar$ EC...$ ][$FOO]
* SciTECO accesses the global environment registers instead of
using g_getenv(). Therefore now, tilde-expansion will always
use the current value of the "$HOME" register.
Previously, both register and environment variable could diverge.
* This effectively fully maps the process environment to a subset of
Q-Registers beginning with "$".
* This hasn't been implemented by mapping those registers to
special implementations that updates the process environment
directly, since g_setenv() is non-thread-safe on UNIX
and we're expected to have threads soon - at least in the GTK+ UI.
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working directory
* FG stands for "Folder Go"
* FG behaves similar to a Unix shell `cd`.
Without arguments, it changes to the $HOME directory.
* The $HOME directory was previously only used by $SCITECOCONFIG on Unix.
Now it is documented on its own, since the HOME directory should also
be configurable on Windows - e.g. to adapt SciTECO to a MinGW or Cygwin
installation.
HOME is initialized just like the other environment variables.
This also means that now, the $HOME Q-Register is always defined
and can be used by platform-agnostic macros.
* FG uses a new kind of tab-completion: for directories only.
It would be annoying to complete the FG command after every
directory, so this tab-completion does not close the command
automatically. Theoretically, it would be possible to close
the command after completing a directory with no subdirectories,
but this is not supported currently.
* Filename arguments are no longer completed with " " if {} escaping
is in place as this brings no benefit. Instead no completion character
is inserted for this escape mode.
* "$" was mapped to the current directory to support an elegant way to
insert/get the current directory.
Also this allows the idiom "[$ FG...new_dir...$ ]$" for changing
the current directory temporarily.
* The Q-Register stack was extended to support restoring the string
part of special Q-Registers (that overwrite the default functionality)
when using the "[$" and "]$" commands.
* fixed minor typos (american spelling)
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* activated via bit 4 of the ED flag (enabled by default)
* automatic EOL guessing on file loading and translation to LFs.
* works with files that have inconsistent EOL sequences.
* automatic translation to original EOL sequences on file saving
* works with inconsistent EOL sequences in the buffer.
This should usually not happen if the file was read in with
automatic EOL translation enabled.
* also works with the EC and EG commands
* performance is OK, depending on the file being translated.
When reading files with UNIX EOLs, the overhead is minimal
typically-sized files. For DOS EOLs the overhead is larger
but still acceptable.
* Return (line feed) is now an immediate editing command.
This centralizes EOL sequence insertion.
Later, other features like auto-indent could be added to
the editing command.
* get_eol() has been moved to main.cpp (now called
get_eol_seq()
* Warn if file ownership could not be preserved when
saving files.
* IOView has been almost completely rewritten based
on GIOChannels. The EOL translation code is also in IOView.
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* also did some whitespace cleanup in SciTECO now that tabs are
displayed properly
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this is because ownership of the GError may be passed to GlibError()
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* when throwing GlibError(), this is taken care of automatically.
* fixes a memleak since there may be resources associated with the
GError.
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earlier
* Debian 7 is still at libglib v2.33 and since it should be
supported, I reimplemented the missing function (UNIX-only).
* This workaround can be removed once libglib v2.34 becomes common place.
Closes #2
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The user interface provides a Scintilla view abstraction and
every buffer is based on a view. All Q-Register strings use
a single dedicated view to save memory and initialization time
when using many string registers.
* this means we can finally implement a working lexer configuration
and it only has to be done once when the buffer is first added
to the ring. It is unnecessary to magically restore the lexer
styles upon rubout of EB (very hard to implement anyway). It
is also not necessary to rerun the lexer configuration macro
upon rubout which would be hard to reconcile with SciTECO's
basic design since every side-effect should be attached to a
character.
* this means that opening buffers is slightly slower now
because of the view initialization
* on the other hand, macros with many string q-reg operations
are faster now, since the document must no longer be changed
on the buffer's view and restored later on.
* also now we can make a difference between editing a document
in a view and changing the current view, which reduces UI calls
* the Document class has been retained as an abstraction about
Scintilla documents, used by QRegister Strings.
It had to be made virtual, so the view on which the document
is created can be specified by a virtual function.
There is no additional space overhead for Documents.
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* the GError expection has been renamed to GlibError, to avoid
nameclashes when working from the SciTECO namespace
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normally, since SciTECO is not a library, this is not strictly
necessary since every library should use proper name prefixes
or namespaces for all global declarations to avoid name clashes.
However
* you cannot always rely on that
* Scintilla does violate the practice of using prefixes or namespaces.
The public APIs are OK, but it does define global functions/methods,
e.g. for "Document" that clashed with SciTECO's "TECODocument" class at
link-time.
Scintilla can put its definitions in a namespace, but this feature
cannot be easily enabled without patching Scintilla.
* a "SciTECO" namespace will be necessary if "SciTECO" is ever to be
turned into a library. Even if this library will have only a C-linkage
API, it must ensure it doesn't clutter the global namespace.
So the old "TECODocument" class was renamed back to "Document"
(SciTECO::Document).
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else the next EC command will not work as expected or even crash
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powerful command for filtering a SciTECO buffer through an external
program. It will be described in the sciteco(7) man pages.
The implementation uses an asynchronous background process with
pipes but is platform independant thanks to glib's g_spawn functions,
GIOChannels and event loops.
There are however platform differences in how the operating system
command is interpreted/parsed.
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