Introduce the ability to configure stylesets, allowing customization of
aerc's look (color scheme, font weight, etc). Default styleset is
installed to /path/to/aerc/stylesets/default.
The following functionalities are added to configure aerc ui styles.
- Read stylesets from file with very basic fnmatch wildcard matching
- Add default styleset
- Support different stylesets as part of UiConfig allowing contextual
styles.
- Move widgets/ui elements to use the stylesets.
- Add configuration manual for the styleset
This adds the commands pin-tab and unpin-tab. Once pinned a tab lives on
the left of the tabstrip and has a configurable marker, defaulting to `
before its name.
Previously removing a tab would always pop from the history of tabs.
This checks to see if the closing tab is the one selected, if it is then
we use the history, otherwise we only need to change the selected tab if
it was after (to the right of) the closing tab, in which case we just
decrement the selected index.
This adds the Mouseable interface. When this is implemented for a
component that item can accept and process mouseevents.
At the top level when a mouse event is received it is passed to the
grid's handler and then it trickles down until it reaches a component
that can actually handle it, such as the tablist, dirlist or msglist.
A mouse event is passed so that components can handle other things such
as scrolling with the mousewheel. The components themselves then perform
the necessary actions.
Clicking emails in the messagelist opens them in a new tab.
Textinputs can be clicked to position the cursor inside them.
Mouseevents are not forwarded to the terminal at the moment.
Elements which do not handle mouse events are not required to implement
the Mouseable interface.
Tabstrip didn't take into account the width of the context. Now, it just
shows as many tabs as can fit and truncates the last one if necessary.
In future it probably would be best to ensure that the selected tab is
rendered on the screen.
Executing :close on a terminal would panic due to it already having been
removed.
This is also related to the fact that removing a tab doesn't check for
whether it actually found a tab to remove or not.
This command allows the user to change tab by giving the tab name. This
can be tab completed too. The previous tab is stored in the tabs module
so that when a new tab is created it is still possible to go to the
previous one.
Normal invocation is :ct folder
Previous tab is :ct -
This introduces a new interface `Clickable`. I'd imagine this would be
implemented for most widgets eventually and would allow for programs run
in the terminal to also have their mouse events forwarded to them.
For the tabs it was relatively simple to check that the position of the
click is within the boxes for the tabs. For other components I'd imagine
that some state representing their currently drawn bounding box would be
useful.
Fix a few potential out of bounds by placing proper checks, which should
be relevant if all tabs are removed for some reason.
Also avoid iterating all tabs in the invalidate handler, since we are
only interested in whether it's the selected tab either way
This is a simple mostly straight forward switch to tcell in favor of
termbox.
It uses the tcell native api (not the compat layer) but does not make
use of most features.
Further changes should include moving to tcell's views.TextArea and the
general built in widget behaviour instead of the current ad hoc
implementation.
Regression: Cursor isn't shown in ex-line