If an AbstractView receives focus without a valid cursor index, we now
ask it to move its cursor to the home position. This way, the user can
actually start moving the cursor after tabbing to a view.
We only use expect(...).toEval() / not.toEval() for checking syntax
errors, where we obviously can't put the code in a regular function. For
runtime errors we do exactly that, so toEval() should not fail - this
allows us to use undefined identifiers in syntax tests.
TreeView was still partly sticking to the pre-cursor way of using the
first index in the selection as the implied cursor. This patch fixes
all of the TreeView code to operate on the cursor instead.
This makes trees behave much more intuitively when alternating between
mouse and keyboard interaction.
Instead of filling the whole row with selection color, only fill behind
the text. This gives a snugger, more focused appearance.
For embedders that want the entire row to get filled with the selection
color when selected, they can opt in to the old behavior by calling
TreeView::set_should_fill_selected_rows(). This is used by Profiler.
Move the wrapping logic to get_item_rects(). This makes mouse events
able to hit the wrapped labels, and various other little things stop
glitching out as well.
Also, instead of having a per-line width when wrapping icon names,
make the text rect wide enough to fit every line.
This allows us to communicate details about invalid tokens to the parser
without having to invent a bunch of specific invalid tokens like
TokenType::InvalidNumericLiteral.
This fixes a bug where lines starting with a space would get parsed as
"level 0" headings - it would not find a "#" and therefore never
increase the level counter (starting at zero), which then would cause
the check for "space after #" pass (again, there is no "#").
Eventually we would get funny results like this:
<h0>[n-1 spaces]oops!</h0>
Also ASSERT(level > 0) in the Heading constructor.
This is implemented in Line::Editor meaning not only the Shell will
respect it, but also js, Debugger etc.
Possible values are "ignorespace", "ignoredups" and "ignoreboth", as
documented in Shell-vars(7), for now.
The default value for the anon user (set in .shellrc) is "ignoreboth".
This allows us to easily re-use history loading and saving in other
programs using Line::Editor, as well as implementing universally
recognized HISTCONTROL.
The qualified name of a font is "<Family> <Size> <Weight>". You can
get the QN of a Font via the Font::qualified_name() API, and you can
get any system font by QN from the GUI::FontDatabase. :^)
This make buttons look extra clickable when hovered by lifting up their
icons (-1,-1) and painting a little icon-shaped shadow under them.
Partially inspired by the Office XP toolbars, although we don't go all
the way with the faux-hyperlink stuff that was all the rage back then.
Newlines after line continuation were inserted into the string
literals. This patch makes the parser ignore the newlines after \ and
also makes it so that "use strict" containing a line continuation is
not a valid "use strict".
From https://youtu.be/YNSAZIW3EM0?t=1474:
"Hmm... I don't think that name is right! From the perspective of
userspace, this is a file descriptor. File description is what the
kernel internally keeps track of, but as far as userspace is concerned,
he just has a file descriptor. [...] Maybe that name should be changed."
Core::File even has a member of this enum type... called
m_should_close_file_descriptor - so let's just rename it :^)
- A regular function can have duplicate parameters except in strict mode
or if its parameter list is not "simple" (has a default or rest
parameter)
- An arrow function can never have duplicate parameters
Compared to other engines I opted for more useful syntax error messages
than a generic "duplicate parameter name not allowed in this context":
"use strict"; function test(foo, foo) {}
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Duplicate parameter 'foo' not allowed in strict mode (line: 1, column: 34)
function test(foo, foo = 1) {}
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Duplicate parameter 'foo' not allowed in function with default parameter (line: 1, column: 20)
function test(foo, ...foo) {}
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Duplicate parameter 'foo' not allowed in function with rest parameter (line: 1, column: 23)
(foo, foo) => {}
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Duplicate parameter 'foo' not allowed in arrow function (line: 1, column: 7)
Since we're using byte streamed Unix sockets for the IPC protocols,
it's possible for the kernel to run out of socket buffer space with
a partial message near the end of the buffer.
Handle this situation in IPC::Connection by buffering the bytes of
what may be a partial message, and prepending them to the incoming
data next time we receive from the peer.
This fixes WindowServer asserting when a peer is spamming it hard.
We need to skip over widgets that are not visible as the layout does
not update their location. This fixes finding the correct widgets
surrounding the splitter.
Fixes#3491
https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-directive-prologues-and-the-use-strict-directive
A Use Strict Directive is an ExpressionStatement in a Directive Prologue
whose StringLiteral is either of the exact code point sequences
"use strict" or 'use strict'. A Use Strict Directive may not contain an
EscapeSequence or LineContinuation.
https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-additional-syntax-string-literals
The syntax and semantics of 11.8.4 is extended as follows except that
this extension is not allowed for strict mode code:
Syntax
EscapeSequence::
CharacterEscapeSequence
LegacyOctalEscapeSequence
NonOctalDecimalEscapeSequence
HexEscapeSequence
UnicodeEscapeSequence
LegacyOctalEscapeSequence::
OctalDigit [lookahead ∉ OctalDigit]
ZeroToThree OctalDigit [lookahead ∉ OctalDigit]
FourToSeven OctalDigit
ZeroToThree OctalDigit OctalDigit
ZeroToThree :: one of
0 1 2 3
FourToSeven :: one of
4 5 6 7
NonOctalDecimalEscapeSequence :: one of
8 9
This definition of EscapeSequence is not used in strict mode or when
parsing TemplateCharacter.
Note
It is possible for string literals to precede a Use Strict Directive
that places the enclosing code in strict mode, and implementations must
take care to not use this extended definition of EscapeSequence with
such literals. For example, attempting to parse the following source
text must fail:
function invalid() { "\7"; "use strict"; }
We're passing a token to this function, so m_current_token is actually
the next token - which leads to incorrect line/column numbers for string
literal syntax errors:
"\u"
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Malformed unicode escape sequence (line: 1, column: 5)
Rather than:
"\u"
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Malformed unicode escape sequence (line: 1, column: 1)