This patch adds support for the OSC-133;A sequence, introduced by
FinalTerm and implemented by iTerm2, Kitty and more. See
https://iterm2.com/documentation-one-page.html#documentation-escape-codes.html.
The shell emits the OSC just before printing the prompt. This lets the
terminal know where, in the scrollback, there are prompts.
We implement this using a simple boolean in the row struct ("this row
has a prompt"). The prompt marker must be reflowed along with the text
on window resizes.
In an ideal world, erasing, or overwriting the cell where the OSC was
emitted, would remove the prompt mark. Since we don't store this
information in the cell struct, we can't do that. The best we can do
is reset it in erase_line(). This works well enough in the "normal"
screen, when used with a "normal" shell. It doesn't really work in
fullscreen apps, on the alt screen. But that doesn't matter since we
don't support jumping between prompts on the alt screen anyway.
To be able to jump between prompts, two new key bindings have been
added: prompt-prev and prompt-next, bound to ctrl+shift+z and
ctrl+shift+x respectively.
prompt-prev will jump to the previous, not currently visible, prompt,
by moving the viewport, ensuring the prompt is at the top of the
screen.
prompt-next jumps to the next prompt, visible or not. Again, by moving
the viewport to ensure the prompt is at the top of the screen. If
we're at the bottom of the scrollback, the viewport is instead moved
as far down as possible.
Closes#30
This patch adds support for DECRQSS (request Selection or Setting),
for the following sub-queries:
* DECSTBM Set Top and Bottom Margins
* SGR Set Graphic Rendition
* DECSCUSR Set Cursor Style
Closes#798
Using underlining for parameters allows the angle brackets to be
removed while still keeping a visual separation between literals
and parameters. The removes any uncertainty about whether the
angle brackets are part of the sequence or not. It also mirrors
the formatting used further down in the document.
There's no mention of SS0 or SS1 functions in ECMA-48 or ECMA-35.
0x0E/0x0F are SO/SI (Shift In/Out) in "7-bit environments" or LS0/LS1
(Locking Shift 0/1) in "8-bit environments". The former is the one
that applies to foot, since it generally follows "7-bit" conventions
due to its use of UTF-8.
See also: ECMA-35 §7.2 and §9.2.
In a recent Debian build from master, Lintian complained about a bad
whatis entry for this manual page. The tag description [1] says a NAME
section is required. It is added here.
[1] https://lintian.debian.org/tags/bad-whatis-entry.html