This is not completely obvious - when I first saw the message, I started
pressing backspace which really doesn't help.
Also clarify and shorten the message a bit - in "Could not execute the file
in the VTE because it probably contains a command" it's not clear if it's
the file or VTE which contains the command. Also use "terminal" instead
of "VTE" which is more user-friendly.
Right now users are confused when various VTE actions don't work because
there's no indication that the terminal is in the non-clean state.
Visualise "modified" terminal in the same way as modified document - by
a red label in the tab so it's clearer when terminal isn't clean.
Avoid quick red flashes when pressing enter by delaying the color change
a bit.
* Use Scintilla focus object instead of notebook document to fix
splitwindow behaviour for cut, copy, paste and delete callbacks.
* move else-if to same line (style)
Fixing this is however only theoretically useful, as:
* no actual code paths can currently lead to it;
* even if the code actually ended up reading the uninitialized value,
it would still have a fully defined behavior as the result of the
check is irrelevant in the only case the uninitialized read can
happen.
Anyway, fix this to avoid any possible bad surprises in the future.
We assume that the GTK 2.24 API docs will remain online in the long-term
so there is no reason why we should self-host those docs any longer.
This is the last missing bit of #245.
This seems necessary to properly display version information
in the Windows Explorer file properties dialog.
I think it worked on older Windows versions without but
at least on Windows 7 this seems necessary.
Under OSX, after child death, the read watches receive input
conditions instead of error conditions, so we convert the termination
statuses (ERROR and EOF) into their respective conditions. Should not
hurt the other OS.
libtool apparently builds every object twice by default when shared and
static objects need to be build differently. As we never use the
statically linked objects, avoid building them at all.
When mac integration or binary relocation are disabled, the compiled
object file contains no symbols because the guards in the source files
hide all code. On OS X there's a warning during compilation saying:
/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/bin/ranlib:
file: .libs/libgeany.a(libgeany_la-prefix.o) has no symbols
If these features are disabled, don't compile the corresponding
sources to avoid the warnings.
Interestingly, waf compilation works without warnings - it appears
linking is done through g++ which doesn't produce these warnings.
Let the user filter plugins by searching the plugin names and descriptions.
While at it, group the plugin buttons into the dialog's action area to
save some space.
Rename OK button to Close in the plugin manager dialog
Set the input focus to the filter entry and set initial plugin button state
On OS X signallist.i is always rebuilt because waf looks for it in the build
tree but generates it inside the source tree for some reason so it's
always missing in the build tree. Set the target explicitly to the
build tree to fix the problem.
Similarly, set the target for geany.html to the build tree. Thanks to this
waf also creates the 'doc' directory in the build tree which is otherwise
missing and the cwd command fails for this reason (e.g. when the
_build_ directory is removed).
These two task generators are the only ones that don't use the 'features'
parameter - the features in the other task generators should already
handle the source/build tree problems for us (see the Waf Book section
6.3.3. Nodes, tasks, and task generators).