window unless it is the current window, and if we do and don't resize the pane
until later there are problems if the size changes from A to B then back to A.
everything up in tty_ctx. Provide a way to initialize the tty_ctx from a
callback and use it to let popups draw directly through input_parse in the same
way as panes do, rather than forcing a full redraw on every change.
allows formats to be expanded. Any styles without a '#{' are still validated
when they are set but any with a '#{' are not. Formats are not expanded
usefully in many cases yet, that will be changed later.
To make this work, a few other changes:
- set-option -a with a style option automatically appends a ",".
- OSC 10 and 11 don't set the window-style option anymore, instead the fg and
bg are stored in the pane struct and act as the defaults that can be
overridden by window-style.
- status-fg and -bg now override status-style instead of trying to keep them in
sync.
reference to it, it isn't necessary that the pane in copy mode is the
same as the one copying from. Add a -s flag to copy-mode to specify a
different pane for the source content. This means it is possible to view
two places in a pane's history at the same time in different panes, or
copy from a pane's history into an editor or shell in the same pane.
From Anindya Mukherjee.
freeze updates (which does not play nicely with some applications, a
longstanding problem) and will allow some other changes later. From
Anindya Mukherjee.
not attached, the server process asks it to open the file, similar to
how works for stdin, stdout, stderr. This makes special files like
/dev/fd/X work (used by some shells). stdin, stdout and stderr and
control mode are now just special cases of the same mechanism. This will
also make it easier to use for other commands that read files such as
source-file.
was output in the pane faster than the timer would fire, so change how
it works to only defer the timer again if the pane was actually resized
within the last timer period. Reported by James Tai in GitHub issue
1880.