- Add more comments, and make existing ones more consistent.
- Rename commands so they consitently have a `conemu_` prefix.
- Ensure that OSC 9 desktop notifications can be sent in the maximum
number of circumstances. There are still many notifications that can't
be sent because of our support for the ConEmu OSCs but that's the
tradeoff we have chosen. We recommend that you switch to OSC 777 to
ensure desktop notifications can be sent in all circumstances.
- Make sure that the tests that exercise the ConEmu OSCs have a
consistent naming structure. That will make them easier to find
through searching as well as make it easier to filter only the ConEmu
OSC tests.
- Add more tests to make sure that desktop notifications are sent
properly.
If GTK can't acquire an OpenGL context, this shows a message.
Previously, we would only log a warning which was difficult to find. The
GUI previously was the default GTK view which showed "Failed to acquire
EGL display" which was equally confusing.
This is a draft. There are TODOs (listed below).
## TODO
- [x] Disable context menu in error state
- [x] Use property to bind to unhealthy state instead of directly
setting stack child
- [x] Create a web page and put that in the error description
- [x] Set non-transparent background in error state
- [x] Bug where closing the window isn't exiting Ghostty
If GTK can't acquire an OpenGL context, this shows a message.
Previously, we would only log a warning which was difficult to find. The
GUI previously was the default GTK view which showed "Failed to acquire
EGL display" which was equally confusing.
Scrolling with a mouse on macos doesn't work very well when doing small,
single tick scrolls. macos attempts to mimic precision scrolling by
changing the magnitude of the scroll deltas based on scrolling speed.
Slow scrolls only send deltas with a magnitude of 0.1, which isn't
enough to send a single scroll event with the default scroll multiplier
of 3. Changing the scroll multiplier to 10 as a workaround (so even
single small scroll ticks are enough to register a scroll event) cause
scrolling to be way too fast if the scroll speed is ramped up.
This commit causes the yoffset delta to be rounded out to at least a
magnitude of 1 in the appropriate direction. Single scroll ticks now
register as a single vertical cell scroll event, but as scroll speed is
ramped up, the true delta reported to the surface is used again. Setting
a scroll multiplier of 1 with the changes here makes mouse scrolling
feel just as good as trackpad precision scrolling.
Scrolling with a mouse on macos doesn't work very well when doing small,
single tick scrolls. macos attempts to mimic precision scrolling by
changing the magnitude of the scroll deltas based on scrolling speed.
Slow scrolls only send deltas with a magnitude of 0.1, which isn't
enough to send a single scroll event with the default scroll multiplier
of 3. Changing the scroll multiplier to 10 as a workaround (so even
single small scroll ticks are enough to register a scroll event) cause
scrolling to be way too fast if the scroll speed is ramped up.
This commit causes the yoffset delta to be rounded out to at least a
magnitude of 1 in the appropriate direction. For small single scroll
ticks, it's enough to register a scroll event, but as scroll speed is
ramped up, the true delta reported to the surface is used again. Setting
a scroll multiplier of 1 with the changes here makes mouse scrolling
feel just as good as trackpad precision scrolling.
Fullscreen on quick terminal was failing with a crash, when it tried
to save the state of a non-existent toolbar and its accessory view
controllers.
See #7980
You can now resize the quick terminal both vertically and horizontally. To incorporate adjusting the custom secondary size on the quick terminal we needed to have the ability to resize the width (if from top, bottom, or center), and height (if from right, left, or center). The quick terminal will retain the user's manually adjusted size while the app is open. A new feature with this is that when the secondary size is adjusted (or primary if the quick terminal is center), the size will increase or decrease on both sides of the terminal.
Applying the feedback given by @pluiedev to use an enum to specify the
type of quick terminal size configuration given (pixels or percentage).
Updated the Swift code to work with the enum as well.
Added C bindings for the already existing quick-terminal-size
configuration. Created a new QuickTerminalSize struct to hold these
values in Swift. Updated the QuickTerminal implementation to use the
user's configuration if supplied. Retains defaults. Also adds support to
customize the width of the quick terminal (height if quick terminal is
set to right or left).
Fixes#8386
This is a fairly simple implementaion, there's no interactivity or
searching. It will adapt the number of columns to the available width of
the display though.
Will fallback to a plain text dump if there's no tty or the `--plain`
argument is specified on the CLI.
<img width="2112" height="1278" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0dbeec72-2092-4ed5-b1ed-0df43e5c64a3"
/>
Fixes#8386
This is a fairly simple implementaion, there's no interactivity or
searching. It will adapt the number of columns to the available width of
the display though.
Will fallback to a plain text dump if there's no tty or the `--plain`
argument is specified on the CLI.
Supporting command line, file menu and keybindings. Default mac shortcut
of `super + alt + o` (other)
Not able to test on Linux so excluding `close_other_tabs` from `gtk` for
now
Supporting command line, file menu and keybindings.
Default mac shortcut of `super + alt + o` (other)
Not able to test on Linux so excluding `close_other_tabs` from `gtk` for now
make a default short cut for close other tabs