the xterm escape sequence for the purpose (if xterm is configured to
allow it).
Written by and much discussed Ailin Nemui, guidance on
xterm/termcap/terminfo from Thomas Dickey.
using DCS with a "tmux;" prefix. Escape characters in the sequences must
be doubled. For example:
$ printf '\033Ptmux;\033\033]12;red\007\033\\'
Will pass \033]12;red\007 to the terminal (and change the cursor colour
in xterm). From Kevin Goodsell.
and supports larger terminals than the older way.
If the new mouse-utf8 option is on, UTF-8 mouse input is enabled for all
UTF-8 terminals. The option defaults to on if LANG etc are set in the
same manner as the utf8 option.
With help and based on code from hsim at gmx.li.
from parfait via deraadt.
While here, add a statement to set the width when filling with _s if not enough
space (width should never be high enough at the moment anyway), and wrap some
long lines.
Get rid of passing around u_char[4]s and define a struct utf8_data which has
character data, size (sequence length) and width. Move UTF-8 character
collection into two functions utf8_open/utf8_append in utf8.c which fill in
this struct and use these functions from input.c and the various functions in
screen-write.c.
Space for rather more data than is necessary for one UTF-8 sequence is in the
utf8_data struct because screen_write_copy is still nasty and needs to reinject
the character (after combining) into screen_write_cell.
Thai can have treble combinations (1 x width=1 then 2 x width=0) so bump the
UTF-8 cell data size to 9 and alter the code to allow this.
Also break off the combining code into a separate function, handle any further
combining beyond the buffer size by replacing the character with _s, and when
redrawing the UTF-8 character don't assume the first part has just been
printed, redraw the entire line.
permit them to wrap naturally again. This allows terminals that use this to
guess where lines start and end for eg mouse selecting (like xterm) to work
correctly.
This was another long-standing issue raised by several people over the last
while.
Thanks to martynas@ for much testing. This was not trivial to get right so
bringing it in for wider testing and adn to fix any further glitches in-tree.
wrapped, move the cursor back up to the end of the previous line.
Another one of the forgotten persons requested this quite a while ago (I need
to start noting names on todo items...) when it was quite hard to
implement. Now it is easy and I don't see it can do any harm, so hey presto...
allowed it to be bigger), and use clear line/EOL sequences rather than spaces
in copy/scroll mode.
This fixes xterm copy/paste from tmux which treats trailing spaces differently
from clearing a line with the escape sequences. Reported by martynas@.
buffer_ensure in buffer.c; expand grid lines by a greater increase than one
each time; and don't read UTF-8 data unless it actually needs to be checked
when overwriting a cell.
currently off-screen due to resize, but somewhere along the way this got
lost. Restore this behaviour to scroll mode by fixing screen_write_copy to read
up to the saved line length rather than the current screen width. Copy mode
remains unaltered for now.
of characters which may be inserted or deleted is the screen width, not one
less (and similarly for lines and height); and if characters or lines are
deleted by moving the ones that follow, the space at the end needs to be
cleared.
This appears to solve long-standing redraw issues most visible when using the
force-width option then scrolling in view(1) or unwrapping lines in emacs.
done for UTF-8, limit to the maximum length correctly when printing, and always
print a space even if the left string is longer than the width available.
status-left/status-right work properly. At the moment any top-bit-set
characters are assumed to be UTF-8: a status-utf8 option to configure this will
come shortly.