brings up the context menu (and you can then paste by selecting
`Paste'). Should be more friendly to Windows-oriented users as
opposed to expatriate X users; also has the effect of making it more
difficult to paste into PuTTY by a single misplaced mouse click,
which has been a common theme of complaint recently.
For the moment, `Compromise' (the X-like behaviour with the right
and middle buttons reversed so that two-button users still get the
two most important functions) is still the default. I'm uncertain
that it might not be better to make the new option the default,
though, since the compromise option is optimal for _nobody_.
[originally from svn r3565]
option from the Selection panel to the Translation panel (where it
fits at least as well). This frees a line in the Selection panel
which I'm about to use for an additional mouse handling option.
[originally from svn r3564]
attempt to load WS2 and then fall back to WS1 if that fails. This
should allow us to use WS2-specific functionality to find out the
local system's list of IP addresses, thus fixing winnet-if2lo, while
degrading gracefully back to the previous behaviour if that
functionality is unavailable. (I haven't yet actually done this; I've
just laid the groundwork.)
This checkin _may_ cause instability; it seemed fine to me on
initial testing, but it's a bit of an upheaval and I wouldn't like
to make bets on it just yet.
[originally from svn r3502]
discriminating on the Windows version in order to decide whether to
call MessageBeep(-1) or Beep() - I'd prefer to directly test the
specific OS property in any given case - but it looks as if this is
the best available option.
[originally from svn r3208]
had to move another of its values out into wincfg.c - paradoxically,
this was the `font has X encoding' option! (Because the Unix font
handling code expects to be able to tell for _itself_ whether it has
a font with X-encoded line drawing glyphs.)
[originally from svn r3145]
particular, the config box uses it in place of the word `PuTTY',
which means mid-session reconfig in pterm will look less strange
once I implement it. Also, while I'm at it, I've personalised all
the dialog boxes and menu items and suchlike so that PuTTYtel
actually claims to be PuTTYtel rather than PuTTY.
[originally from svn r3074]
malloc functions, which automatically cast to the same type they're
allocating the size of. Should prevent any future errors involving
mallocing the size of the wrong structure type, and will also make
life easier if we ever need to turn the PuTTY core code from real C
into C++-friendly C. I haven't touched the Mac frontend in this
checkin because I couldn't compile or test it.
[originally from svn r3014]
Unix-specific config items; moved a stray Windows-specific config
item (scrollbar-in-fullscreen) out into wincfg.c to stop it
appearing on Unix; continued updates to gtkdlg.c. I now believe the
GTK config box looks basically correct (modulo minor cosmetic issues
and keyboard accelerators). Next step, add the event handling so
it's actually functional.
[originally from svn r2933]
to pieces, and put it back together in a new table-driven form.
config.c sets up a data structure describing most of the config box;
wincfg.c adds in the Windows-specific options (so that config.c can
also form the basis for Mac and Unix config boxes). Then winctrls.c
contains a shiny new layout engine which consumes that data
structure, and windlg.c passes all WM_COMMAND and similar messages
to a driver alongside that layout engine. In the process I've sorted
out nicer-looking panel titles and finally fixed the list-boxes-are-
never-the-right-size bug (turned out to be Windows's fault, of
course). I _believe_ it should do everything the old config box did,
including context help. Now everyone has to test it thoroughly...
[originally from svn r2908]