characters. I've just used libcharset in macucs.c since there seemed
little reason not to, and implemented combining characters by naive
overprinting. It's not yet a lot of use without the ability to select
a font, of course.
[originally from svn r5322]
* Make sk_getxdmdata() return an arbitrary string rather than two integers.
This better matches the spec, even if the current version always returns
six bytes
* On Unix, for PF_UNIX sockets, return a counter rather than a constant along
with the PID. This should allow multiple clients to connect within one
second, and is what Xlib does.
* On Unix, interpret AF_INET6 addresses like Xlib does, returning the
embedded IPv4 address for v4-mapped addresses, and six bytes of zeroes
otherwise. The latter is silly, but if I'm going to do anything more sane
I need to check that X servers won't reject it.
[originally from svn r5219]
for the Mac OS. This isn't anywhere near complete, and is wrong in a few
important regards, but I think it's heading in the right direction.
[originally from svn r2953]
Filenames are represented as a FSSpec, which is converted to and from an
alias record ('alis' resource) when saving and loading sessions.
.
It might be an idea to allow in-core Filenames to contain alias records too,
so that they can refer to directories that don't exist on the current system,
but that requires Filenames to be dynamically allocated, which is likely to be
a pain.
[originally from svn r2771]
we're going to be a security program, we can at least make a token
effort to use the most secure local X auth available! And I'm still
half-tempted to see if I can support it for remote X servers too...
[originally from svn r2537]
This introduces a new front-end function, do_scroll(), which is expected to
scroll a part of the physical display and cause repaint events for any
areas that couldn't be scrolled (e.g. because they were hidden).
scroll_display() is a wrapper around this which also updates disptext to
match.
Currently, scroll_display is only used in response to user scrollback requests
(via term_scroll()), but extending scroll() to use it as well should be
easy.
All of this is conditional on the front end's defining OPTIMISE_SCROLL, since
only the Mac front end currently implements do_scroll().
[originally from svn r2242]
This doesn't include any mkfiles.pl glue, and is missing one or two other
fixes. The terminal emulator is kind of working, though, as, I believe, is
the store module. Everything else is yet to be done.
[originally from svn r2226]