By how much to increase the luminance when brightening bold
fonts. This was previously hard-coded to a factor of 1.3, which is now
the default value of the new config option.
Closes#1434
When enabled, double-clicking the CSD titlebar will (un)maximize the
window.
Defaults to ‘yes’ (since this is the old hard-coded behavior).
Closes#1293
Having a keybinding to invoke arbitrary unicode characters is very
useful. It's often used as a method of last resort to communicate with
people outside of your main language. For example, if you want to type
the last letter of my real name, you can invoke the latin-1 character
0xe9 or unicode 0x00e9.
You can also use this to type special characters, for example, unicode
U+1F4A9 is of course, the infamous PILE OF POO, which is sure to
produce million laughs everywhere you go.
In foot, there's no keybinding by default to invoke the very useful
unicode-input command. There is no "standard" (as in "ISO") keybinding
this either. But there *is* a de-facto standard currently deployed
by *both* GTK and Qt (a rare feat) *and* Chrome OS (an even rarer
feat) and it's control-shift-u.
Alternatives include Control-x 8 (emacs), Control V u (vim),
Alt (Windows, LibreOffice), or Option (Mac). I doubt we want to adopt
any of those.
So let's use control-shift-u for this. Unfortunately, it's currently
assigned to show-urls-launch, which is unfortunate, but
insurmountable. We can reassign this keybinding elsewhere. I have
picked control-shift-o in my configuration, because "o" is a good
mnemonic for "open URLs". Others have suggested "m" instead.
Closes: #1183
We now default to scaling fonts using the scaling factor, not monitor
DPI.
The ‘auto’ value for dpi-aware has been removed.
Documentation (man pages and README) have been updated to reflect the
new default.
For this to work, the default app-id of footclient has been changed
from ‘foot’ to ‘footclient’.
By using distinct StartupWMClasses, the compositor can connect a
running foot/footclient instance to the correct .desktop-file. This
ensures the correct icon is being used in e.g. docks, and that actions
like “open another window” works correctly.
Note that the user can override the app-id, either by setting app-id
in foot.ini, or with the -a,--app-id command line option.
Closes#1355
This patch generalizes the utmp support, to not only support
libutempter, but also ulog (and in the future, even more interfaces).
* Rename config option main.utempter to main.utmp-helper
* Add meson option -Dutmp-backend=none|libutempter|ulog|auto
* Rename meson option -Ddefault-utempter-path to -Dutmp-default-helper-path
* utmp is no longer detected at compile time, but at runtime instead.
Meson will configure the following pre-processor macros, based on the
selected utmp backend:
* UTMP_ADD - argument to pass to utmp helper when adding a record (starting foot)
* UTMP_DEL - argument to pass to utmp helper when removing a record (exiting foot)
* UTMP_DEL_HAVE_ARGUMENT - if defined, UTMP_DEL expects an extra argument ($WAYLAND_DISPLAY)
* UTMP_DEFAULT_HELPER_PATH - path to the default utmp helper binary
The documentation has been updated to mention which arguments are
passed to the helper binary.
Closes#1314
The old default, wcswidth, simply calls wcswidth() on the grapheme
cluster. This was supposedly the implementation with the highest
application compatibility. Except we never even tried to measure
it. It was just assumed.
A lot of modern applications have better implementations. Let’s try to
push support for better emoji support by changing our default method
from wcswith to double-width.
While far from correct (it’s not based on the Unicode tables), the
‘double-width’ method produces accurate results anyway.
double-width is like wcswidth(), in that it adds together the
individual wcwidths of all codepoints in the grapheme cluster. But, it
limits the maximum width to 2.
This patch adds a new config option, font-size-adjustment.
It lets you configure how much the font size should be
incremented/decremented when zooming in or out (ctrl-+, ctrl+-).
Values can be specified in points, pixels or percent.
Closes#1188
Reflowing a large scrollback is *slow*. During an interactive resize,
it can easily take long enough that the compositor fills the Wayland
socket with configure events. Eventually, the socket becomes full and
the compositor terminates the connection, causing foot to exit.
This patch is work-in-progress, and the first step towards alleviating
this.
It delays the reflow by:
* Snapshotting (copying) the original grid when an interactive resize
is started.
* While resizing, we apply a simple truncation resize of the
grid (like we handle the alt screen).
* When the resize is done, or paused for ‘resize-delay-ms’, the grid
is reflowed.
TODO: we *must* not allow any changes to the temporary (truncated)
grid during the resize. Any changes to the grid would be lost when the
final reflow is applied. That is, we must completely pause the ptmx
pipe while a resize is in progress.
Future improvements:
The initial copy can be slow. We should be able to avoid it by
rewriting the reflow algorithm to not free anything. This is
complicated by the fact that some resources (e.g. sixel images) are
currently *moved* to the new grid. They’d instead have to be copied.
This patch adds support for creating utmp records using the ‘utempter’
helper binary from the ‘libutempter’ package.
* New config option ‘main.utempter’
* New meson command line option, -Ddefault-utempter-path. Defaults to
auto-detecting the path.
The default value of the new ‘main.utempter’ config option depends on
the meson command line option ‘-Ddefault-utempter-path’.
If ‘main.utempter’ is *not* set to ‘none’, foot will try to execute
the utempter helper binary to create utmp records when a new terminal
is instantiated. The record is removed when the terminal instance is
destroyed.
This is my variant of the solarized theme, were only the first eight
colors (i.e. the "normal") colors are from the solarized theme. The
remaining eight (the "bright" colors) are brightened versions of the
"normal" colors. This results in a theme that is usually in all
applications, not just those that are "aware" that the terminal color
theme is "solarized".
This adds an "underline-thickness" setting to the "main" section,
similar to the existing "underline-offset" setting. This setting is used
to specify a custom height for regular (= non-cursor) underlines.
Fixes#1136
This mode is activated through the new key-bindings.unicode-input and
search-bindings.unicode-input key bindings.
When active, the user can “build” a Unicode codepoint by typing its
hexadecimal value.
Note that there’s no visual feedback in this mode. This is
intentional. This mode is intended to be a fallback for users that
don’t use an IME.
Closes#1116
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
- foot.ini.5: mention location of example config file
- foot.1: replace outdated (or incomplete) information about the
location of the config file with references to foot.ini.5
- foot.1 and foot.ini.5: conform to scdoc specification, thus surround each
header with (at least) one blank line. additionally consistently use exactly
one line before/after each header (was sometimes two before)
- foot.1: some parts of the keybindings had their own section, move into
KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS section
- foot.1: move EXIT STATUS section to the end where it is commonly found
- foot.1: copy information about config file handling from the beginning of
foot.ini.5 into the CONFIGURATION section of foot.1
- INSTALL.md: foot.ini is no longer included in the documentation
- meson.build: do not bundle foot.ini with documentation anymore, see also
https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot/pulls/1015Closes#1002
This makes the example config `foot.ini` and its man page slightly more
coherent regarding the specification of default values.
Note that the cursor color is not hardcoded like e.g. foreground or
background, thus in the example config, `<inverse foreground/background>`
makes more sense.
These work as expected and don't interfere with anything else.
They are useful on the increasing number of keyboards with custom
firmware. The keycodes enable using the same key combination
for terminals as other apps.
For example: by holding down a layer-switching key with a thumb, the
Copy and Paste key codes can be assigned to the C and V keys on a secondary
layer, making for a natural universal copy/paste key combination.