the original hamburger menu icon is confusing. It is not a menu
and clicking it doesn't do anything. There is no reason why
we can't draw lite-xl's icon in place of that.
Previously the relative position was calculated using the window
position and the global mouse coordinates. In some systems like wayland,
this operation returns incorrect values.
* Added in conditional, as detaching will fail with "Operation not permitted" on linux; setsid sets a new process group anyway.
* Added in variable to check detached state on cleanup, so we don't send TERM.
defining anything that isn't a specific set of architectures x86 is just wrong.
It should at least be called something non identifying like "native"
Lite-XL already builds for FreeBSD so add it to the platform detection
Lua provides no offical pkg-config configuration but some systems still have it.
Instead of assuming the System has none, try using the C compiler to find it.
This may give us an incorrect lua version, but its better than nothing at all.
* ci linux: make builds properly static
* test workflow_dispatch
* install wayland-protocols
* append missing portable
* make debug builds by default
* auto enable some video subsystems for proper wayland support
* added release workflow
* make line shorter in innosetup bash script
* disable some video subsystems on darwin and windows
* fix default build dir on msys
* print output of ntldd
* properly set msys arch
* disable opengl on windows
* copy mingw dependencies on package
* innosetup script copy from generated package dir
* changed license to reflect team work
* adjusted the ci windows install name
* add all language plugins to addons
* disabled generation of source tarballs
* removed language_cpp from plugins repo
* enabled lua utf8 patch for windows build
* added open_ext to addons
* moved away from deprecated virtual environments
* make minimal build and with addons
* simplified CI build.yml
* Added in native modules with suffixes, giving priority to those with matching architectures and platforms.
* PowerPC isn't x86, and it's x86_64.
* Changed things over to allow compiler to set a tuple, makes more sense from a build perspective.
* Spelling mistake.
* Added in arm target tuples.
Commonly `ctrl+shift+r` is used in most editors for find and
replace operations, also the regexreplacepreview.lua plugin makes
a more appropriate use of this binding.
This avoids performing the `treeview:new-folder` command on ctrl +
double click.
This happens because `ctrl+lclick` (which is the keybinding for
`treeview:new-folder`) is triggered also by ctrl + double click, which
isn't captured by anything else.
* Added a smoothing option to font loading.
* Added a font strikethrough option to font loading.
* Fixed underline applying incorrectly in cases of non-underlined fallback fonts being used.
Co-authored-by: Guldoman <giulio.lettieri@gmail.com>
This allows to use the Unix separator without resulting in ugly
suggestions that added the Windows separator too.
For example:
Before: `data/` -> `data/\core\`
After: `data/` -> `data/core\`
This caused issues when saving the user module with commands defined
inside it, as it resulted in the user-defined commands trying to
overwrite themselves and failing.
When a command is performed with parameters, those are now passed to the
predicate.
The predicate can then return, after the validity boolean, any other
value that will then be passed to the actual command.
If the predicate only returns the validity boolean, the original
parameters are passed through to the actual command.
This allows predicates to manipulate the received parameters, and allows
them to pass the result of an expensive computation to the actual
command, which won't have to recalculate it.
String and table predicates will now also return `core.active_view`.