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Author SHA1 Message Date
Leonard Hecker
4a04823615 Refactor til::env 2023-10-17 17:42:38 +02:00
820 changed files with 20804 additions and 105884 deletions

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@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
"isRoot": true,
"tools": {
"XamlStyler.Console": {
"version": "3.2311.2",
"version": "3.2206.4",
"commands": [
"xstyler"
]

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@@ -6,6 +6,8 @@
By default the command suggestion will generate a file named based on your commit. That's generally ok as long as you add the file to your commit. Someone can reorganize it later.
:warning: The command is written for posix shells. If it doesn't work for you, you can manually _add_ (one word per line) / _remove_ items to `expect.txt` and the `excludes.txt` files.
If the listed items are:
* ... **misspelled**, then please *correct* them instead of using the command.
@@ -34,9 +36,7 @@ https://www.regexplanet.com/advanced/perl/) yours before committing to verify it
* well-formed pattern.
If you can write a [pattern](
https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples:-patterns
) that would match it,
If you can write a [pattern](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples:-patterns) that would match it,
try adding it to the `patterns.txt` file.
Patterns are Perl 5 Regular Expressions - you can [test](

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@@ -1,4 +1,3 @@
aci
admins
allcolors
Apc
@@ -9,17 +8,13 @@ breadcrumbs
bsd
calt
ccmp
ccon
changelog
clickable
clig
CMMI
consvc
copyable
Counterintuitively
CtrlDToClose
CVS
CUI
cybersecurity
dalet
Dcs
@@ -58,7 +53,6 @@ hyperlinks
iconify
img
inlined
issuetitle
It'd
kje
libfuzzer
@@ -83,28 +77,21 @@ noreply
ogonek
ok'd
overlined
perlw
pipeline
postmodern
Powerline
powerline
ptys
pwshw
qof
qps
Remappings
Retargets
rclt
reimplementation
reserialization
reserialize
reserializes
rlig
rubyw
runtimes
servicebus
shcha
similaritytolerance
slnt
Sos
ssh
@@ -121,7 +108,6 @@ toolset
truthiness
tshe
ubuntu
UEFI
uiatextrange
UIs
und
@@ -131,9 +117,7 @@ vsdevcmd
walkthrough
walkthroughs
We'd
westus
wildcards
workarounds
XBox
YBox
yeru

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@@ -1,12 +1,9 @@
aalt
abvm
ACCEPTFILES
ACCESSDENIED
acl
aclapi
alignas
alignof
allocconsolewithoptions
APPLYTOSUBMENUS
appxrecipe
bitfield
@@ -24,9 +21,7 @@ COLORPROPERTY
colspan
COMDLG
commandlinetoargv
commoncontrols
comparand
COPYFROMRESOURCE
cstdint
CXICON
CYICON
@@ -38,7 +33,6 @@ delayimp
DERR
dlldata
DNE
dnom
DONTADDTORECENT
DWMSBT
DWMWA
@@ -47,12 +41,10 @@ endfor
ENDSESSION
enumset
environstrings
EXACTSIZEONLY
EXPCMDFLAGS
EXPCMDSTATE
filetime
FILTERSPEC
fina
FORCEFILESYSTEM
FORCEMINIMIZE
frac
@@ -66,7 +58,6 @@ Hashtable
HIGHCONTRASTON
HIGHCONTRASTW
hinternet
HIGHQUALITYSCALE
HINTERNET
hotkeys
href
@@ -83,7 +74,6 @@ IBox
IClass
IComparable
IComparer
ICONINFO
IConnection
ICustom
IDialog
@@ -93,7 +83,6 @@ IExplorer
IFACEMETHOD
IFile
IGraphics
IImage
IInheritable
IMap
IMonarch
@@ -124,7 +113,6 @@ LSHIFT
LTGRAY
MAINWINDOW
MAXIMIZEBOX
medi
memchr
memicmp
MENUCOMMAND
@@ -155,7 +143,6 @@ NOTIFYBYPOS
NOTIFYICON
NOTIFYICONDATA
ntprivapi
numr
oaidl
ocidl
ODR
@@ -169,7 +156,6 @@ OUTLINETEXTMETRICW
overridable
PACL
PAGESCROLL
PALLOC
PATINVERT
PEXPLICIT
PICKFOLDERS
@@ -181,11 +167,9 @@ REGCLS
RETURNCMD
rfind
RLO
rnrn
ROOTOWNER
roundf
RSHIFT
rvrn
SACL
schandle
SEH
@@ -226,7 +210,6 @@ tlg
TME
tmp
tmpdir
tokeninfo
tolower
toupper
TRACKMOUSEEVENT

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@@ -20,7 +20,6 @@ cpptools
cppvsdbg
CPRs
cryptbase
cscript
DACL
DACLs
defaultlib
@@ -46,7 +45,6 @@ MSAA
msixbundle
MSVC
MSVCP
mtu
muxc
netcore
Onefuzz
@@ -90,10 +88,8 @@ Virtualization
visualstudio
vscode
VSTHRD
WINBASEAPI
winsdkver
wlk
wscript
wslpath
wtl
wtt

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,6 @@ bhoj
Bhojwani
Bluloco
carlos
craigloewen
dhowett
Diviness
dsafa

View File

@@ -1,37 +1,23 @@
# marker to ignore all code on line
^.*/\* #no-spell-check-line \*/.*$
# marker to ignore all code on line
^.*\bno-spell-check(?:-line|)(?:\s.*|)$
# https://cspell.org/configuration/document-settings/
# cspell inline
^.*\b[Cc][Ss][Pp][Ee][Ll]{2}:\s*[Dd][Ii][Ss][Aa][Bb][Ll][Ee]-[Ll][Ii][Nn][Ee]\b
# marker for ignoring a comment to the end of the line
// #no-spell-check.*$
# patch hunk comments
^\@\@ -\d+(?:,\d+|) \+\d+(?:,\d+|) \@\@ .*
# git index header
index (?:[0-9a-z]{7,40},|)[0-9a-z]{7,40}\.\.[0-9a-z]{7,40}
# file permissions
['"`\s][-bcdLlpsw](?:[-r][-w][-Ssx]){2}[-r][-w][-SsTtx]\+?['"`\s]
# css url wrappings
\burl\([^)]+\)
index [0-9a-z]{7,40}\.\.[0-9a-z]{7,40}
# cid urls
(['"])cid:.*?\g{-1}
# data url in parens
#\(data:(?:[^) ][^)]*?|)(?:[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,})[^)]*\)
\(data:[^)]*?(?:[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,})[^)]*\)
# data url in quotes
([`'"])data:(?:[^ `'"].*?|)(?:[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,}).*\g{-1}
([`'"])data:.*?(?:[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,}).*\g{-1}
# data url
data:[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*,\S*
# https/http/file urls
(?:\b(?:https?|ftp|file)://)[-A-Za-z0-9+&@#/%?=~_|!:,.;]+[-A-Za-z0-9+&@#/%=~_|]
# mailto urls
mailto:[-a-zA-Z=;:/?%&0-9+@.]{3,}
@@ -49,9 +35,6 @@ magnet:[?=:\w]+
# asciinema
\basciinema\.org/a/[0-9a-zA-Z]+
# asciinema v2
^\[\d+\.\d+, "[io]", ".*"\]$
# apple
\bdeveloper\.apple\.com/[-\w?=/]+
# Apple music
@@ -106,7 +89,7 @@ vpc-\w+
# Google Drive
\bdrive\.google\.com/(?:file/d/|open)[-0-9a-zA-Z_?=]*
# Google Groups
\bgroups\.google\.com(?:/[a-z]+/(?:#!|)[^/\s"]+)*
\bgroups\.google\.com/(?:(?:forum/#!|d/)(?:msg|topics?|searchin)|a)/[^/\s"]+/[-a-zA-Z0-9$]+(?:/[-a-zA-Z0-9]+)*
# Google Maps
\bmaps\.google\.com/maps\?[\w&;=]*
# Google themes
@@ -134,8 +117,6 @@ themes\.googleusercontent\.com/static/fonts/[^/\s"]+/v\d+/[^.]+.
(?:\[`?[0-9a-f]+`?\]\(https:/|)/(?:www\.|)github\.com(?:/[^/\s"]+){2,}(?:/[^/\s")]+)(?:[0-9a-f]+(?:[-0-9a-zA-Z/#.]*|)\b|)
# GitHub SHAs
\bgithub\.com(?:/[^/\s"]+){2}[@#][0-9a-f]+\b
# GitHub SHA refs
\[([0-9a-f]+)\]\(https://(?:www\.|)github.com/[-\w]+/[-\w]+/commit/\g{-1}[0-9a-f]*
# GitHub wiki
\bgithub\.com/(?:[^/]+/){2}wiki/(?:(?:[^/]+/|)_history|[^/]+(?:/_compare|)/[0-9a-f.]{40,})\b
# githubusercontent
@@ -147,9 +128,9 @@ themes\.googleusercontent\.com/static/fonts/[^/\s"]+/v\d+/[^.]+.
# git.io
\bgit\.io/[0-9a-zA-Z]+
# GitHub JSON
"node_id": "[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+_]*"
"node_id": "[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*"
# Contributor
\[[^\]]+\]\(https://github\.com/[^/\s"]+/?\)
\[[^\]]+\]\(https://github\.com/[^/\s"]+\)
# GHSA
GHSA(?:-[0-9a-z]{4}){3}
@@ -162,8 +143,8 @@ GHSA(?:-[0-9a-z]{4}){3}
# GitLab commits
\bgitlab\.[^/\s"]*/(?:[^/\s"]+/){2}commits?/[0-9a-f]+\b
# binance
accounts\.binance\.com/[a-z/]*oauth/authorize\?[-0-9a-zA-Z&%]*
# binanace
accounts.binance.com/[a-z/]*oauth/authorize\?[-0-9a-zA-Z&%]*
# bitbucket diff
\bapi\.bitbucket\.org/\d+\.\d+/repositories/(?:[^/\s"]+/){2}diff(?:stat|)(?:/[^/\s"]+){2}:[0-9a-f]+
@@ -299,9 +280,9 @@ slack://[a-zA-Z0-9?&=]+
\bdropbox\.com/sh?/[^/\s"]+/[-0-9A-Za-z_.%?=&;]+
# ipfs protocol
ipfs://[0-9a-zA-Z]{3,}
ipfs://[0-9a-z]*
# ipfs url
/ipfs/[0-9a-zA-Z]{3,}
/ipfs/[0-9a-z]*
# w3
\bw3\.org/[-0-9a-zA-Z/#.]+
@@ -378,33 +359,22 @@ ipfs://[0-9a-zA-Z]{3,}
# tinyurl
\btinyurl\.com/\w+
# codepen
\bcodepen\.io/[\w/]+
# registry.npmjs.org
\bregistry\.npmjs\.org/(?:@[^/"']+/|)[^/"']+/-/[-\w@.]+
# getopts
\bgetopts\s+(?:"[^"]+"|'[^']+')
# ANSI color codes
(?:\\(?:u00|x)1[Bb]|\x1b|\\u\{1[Bb]\})\[\d+(?:;\d+|)m
(?:\\(?:u00|x)1b|\x1b)\[\d+(?:;\d+|)m
# URL escaped characters
\%[0-9A-F][A-F](?=[A-Za-z])
# lower URL escaped characters
\%[0-9a-f][a-f](?=[a-z]{2,})
\%[0-9A-F][A-F]
# IPv6
#\b(?:[0-9a-fA-F]{0,4}:){3,7}[0-9a-fA-F]{0,4}\b
\b(?:[0-9a-fA-F]{0,4}:){3,7}[0-9a-fA-F]{0,4}\b
# c99 hex digits (not the full format, just one I've seen)
0x[0-9a-fA-F](?:\.[0-9a-fA-F]*|)[pP]
# Punycode
\bxn--[-0-9a-z]+
# sha
sha\d+:[0-9]*[a-f]{3,}[0-9a-f]*
# sha-... -- uses a fancy capture
(\\?['"]|")[0-9a-f]{40,}\g{-1}
(['"]|")[0-9a-f]{40,}\g{-1}
# hex runs
\b[0-9a-fA-F]{16,}\b
# hex in url queries
@@ -419,21 +389,18 @@ sha\d+:[0-9]*[a-f]{3,}[0-9a-f]*
# Well known gpg keys
.well-known/openpgpkey/[\w./]+
# pki
-----BEGIN.*-----END
# uuid:
\b[0-9a-fA-F]{8}-(?:[0-9a-fA-F]{4}-){3}[0-9a-fA-F]{12}\b
# hex digits including css/html color classes:
(?:[\\0][xX]|\\u|[uU]\+|#x?|\%23)[0-9_a-fA-FgGrR]*?[a-fA-FgGrR]{2,}[0-9_a-fA-FgGrR]*(?:[uUlL]{0,3}|[iu]\d+)\b
(?:[\\0][xX]|\\u|[uU]\+|#x?|\%23)[0-9_a-fA-FgGrR]*?[a-fA-FgGrR]{2,}[0-9_a-fA-FgGrR]*(?:[uUlL]{0,3}|u\d+)\b
# integrity
integrity=(['"])(?:\s*sha\d+-[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]{40,})+\g{-1}
integrity="sha\d+-[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]{40,}"
# https://www.gnu.org/software/groff/manual/groff.html
# man troff content
\\f[BCIPR]
# '/"
\\\([ad]q
# '
\\\(aq
# .desktop mime types
^MimeTypes?=.*$
@@ -442,33 +409,21 @@ integrity=(['"])(?:\s*sha\d+-[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]{40,})+\g{-1}
# Localized .desktop content
Name\[[^\]]+\]=.*
# IServiceProvider / isAThing
\b(?:I|isA)(?=(?:[A-Z][a-z]{2,})+\b)
# IServiceProvider
\bI(?=(?:[A-Z][a-z]{2,})+\b)
# crypt
(['"])\$2[ayb]\$.{56}\g{-1}
"\$2[ayb]\$.{56}"
# scrypt / argon
\$(?:scrypt|argon\d+[di]*)\$\S+
# go.sum
\bh1:\S+
# scala modules
("[^"]+"\s*%%?\s*){2,3}"[^"]+"
# Input to GitHub JSON
content: (['"])[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*=\g{-1}
content: "[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*="
# This does not cover multiline strings, if your repository has them,
# you'll want to remove the `(?=.*?")` suffix.
# The `(?=.*?")` suffix should limit the false positives rate
# printf
#%(?:(?:(?:hh?|ll?|[jzt])?[diuoxn]|l?[cs]|L?[fega]|p)(?=[a-z]{2,})|(?:X|L?[FEGA]|p)(?=[a-zA-Z]{2,}))(?=[_a-zA-Z]+\b)(?!%)(?=.*?['"])
# Python string prefix / binary prefix
# Python stringprefix / binaryprefix
# Note that there's a high false positive rate, remove the `?=` and search for the regex to see if the matches seem like reasonable strings
(?<!')\b(?:B|BR|Br|F|FR|Fr|R|RB|RF|Rb|Rf|U|UR|Ur|b|bR|br|f|fR|fr|r|rB|rF|rb|rf|u|uR|ur)'(?=[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,})
(?<!')\b(?:B|BR|Br|F|FR|Fr|R|RB|RF|Rb|Rf|U|UR|Ur|b|bR|br|f|fR|fr|r|rB|rF|rb|rf|u|uR|ur)'(?:[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,})
# Regular expressions for (P|p)assword
\([A-Z]\|[a-z]\)[a-z]+
@@ -484,35 +439,16 @@ content: (['"])[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*=\g{-1}
^\s*/\\[b].*/[gim]*\s*(?:\)(?:;|$)|,$)
# javascript replace regex
\.replace\(/[^/\s"]*/[gim]*\s*,
# assign regex
= /[^*]*?(?:[a-z]{3,}|[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}).*/
# perl regex test
[!=]~ (?:/.*/|m\{.*?\}|m<.*?>|m([|!/@#,;']).*?\g{-1})
# perl qr regex
(?<!\$)\bqr(?:\{.*?\}|<.*?>|\(.*?\)|([|!/@#,;']).*?\g{-1})
# Go regular expressions
regexp?\.MustCompile\(`[^`]*`\)
# regex choice
\(\?:[^)]+\|[^)]+\)
# proto
^\s*(\w+)\s\g{-1} =
# sed regular expressions
sed 's/(?:[^/]*?[a-zA-Z]{3,}[^/]*?/){2}
# node packages
(["'])\@[^/'" ]+/[^/'" ]+\g{-1}
# go install
go install(?:\s+[a-z]+\.[-@\w/.]+)+
# jetbrains schema https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/RSRP-489571
urn:shemas-jetbrains-com
# kubernetes pod status lists
# https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod-lifecycle/#pod-phase
\w+(?:-\w+)+\s+\d+/\d+\s+(?:Running|Pending|Succeeded|Failed|Unknown)\s+
@@ -524,47 +460,19 @@ urn:shemas-jetbrains-com
-[0-9a-f]{10}-\w{5}\s
# posthog secrets
([`'"])phc_[^"',]+\g{-1}
posthog\.init\((['"])phc_[^"',]+\g{-1},
# xcode
# xcodeproject scenes
(?:Controller|destination|ID|id)="\w{3}-\w{2}-\w{3}"
(?:Controller|ID|id)="\w{3}-\w{2}-\w{3}"
# xcode api botches
customObjectInstantitationMethod
# configure flags
.* \| --\w{2,}.*?(?=\w+\s\w+)
# font awesome classes
\.fa-[-a-z0-9]+
# bearer auth
(['"])Bear[e][r] .*?\g{-1}
# basic auth
(['"])Basic [-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]{3,}\g{-1}
# base64 encoded content
#([`'"])[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]+=\g{-1}
# base64 encoded content in xml/sgml
>[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]+=</
# base64 encoded content, possibly wrapped in mime
#(?:^|[\s=;:?])[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]{50,}(?:[\s=;:?]|$)
# encoded-word
=\?[-a-zA-Z0-9"*%]+\?[BQ]\?[^?]{0,75}\?=
# Time Zones
\b(?:Africa|Atlantic|America|Antarctica|Asia|Australia|Europe|Indian|Pacific)(?:/\w+)+
# linux kernel info
^(?:bugs|flags|Features)\s+:.*
# systemd mode
systemd.*?running in system mode \([-+].*\)$
# Update Lorem based on your content (requires `ge` and `w` from https://github.com/jsoref/spelling; and `review` from https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Looking-for-items-locally )
# grep '^[^#].*lorem' .github/actions/spelling/patterns.txt|perl -pne 's/.*i..\?://;s/\).*//' |tr '|' "\n"|sort -f |xargs -n1 ge|perl -pne 's/^[^:]*://'|sort -u|w|sed -e 's/ .*//'|w|review -
# Warning, while `(?i)` is very neat and fancy, if you have some binary files that aren't proper unicode, you might run into:
@@ -575,62 +483,32 @@ systemd.*?running in system mode \([-+].*\)$
(?:\w|\s|[,.])*\b(?i)(?:amet|consectetur|cursus|dolor|eros|ipsum|lacus|libero|ligula|lorem|magna|neque|nulla|suscipit|tempus)\b(?:\w|\s|[,.])*
# Non-English
[a-zA-Z]*[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆČÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæčçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź][a-zA-Z]{3}[a-zA-ZÀÁÂÃÄÅÆČÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæčçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź]*|[a-zA-Z]{3,}[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆČÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæčçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź]|[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆČÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæčçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź][a-zA-Z]{3,}
# highlighted letters
\[[A-Z]\][a-z]+
[a-zA-Z]*[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź][a-zA-Z]{3}[a-zA-ZÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź]*
# French
# This corpus only had capital letters, but you probably want lowercase ones as well.
\b[LN]'+[a-z]{2,}\b
# latex (check-spelling <= 0.0.21)
#\\(?:n(?:ew|ormal|osub)|r(?:enew)|t(?:able(?:of|)|he|itle))(?=[a-z]+)
# latex (check-spelling >= 0.0.22)
\\\w{2,}\{
# eslint
"varsIgnorePattern": ".+"
# Windows short paths
[/\\][^/\\]{5,6}~\d{1,2}[/\\]
# in check-spelling@v0.0.22+, printf markers aren't automatically consumed
# printf markers
#(?<!\\)\\[nrt](?=[a-z]{2,})
# alternate markers if you run into latex and friends
#(?<!\\)\\[nrt](?=[a-z]{2,})(?=.*['"`])
# apache
a2(?:en|dis)
# weak e-tag
W/"[^"]+"
# latex
\\(?:n(?:ew|ormal|osub)|r(?:enew)|t(?:able(?:of|)|he|itle))(?=[a-z]+)
# the negative lookahead here is to allow catching 'templatesz' as a misspelling
# but to otherwise recognize a Windows path with \templates\foo.template or similar:
#\\(?:necessary|r(?:eport|esolve[dr]?|esult)|t(?:arget|emplates?))(?![a-z])
\\(?:necessary|r(?:eport|esolve[dr]?|esult)|t(?:arget|emplates?))(?![a-z])
# ignore long runs of a single character:
\b([A-Za-z])\g{-1}{3,}\b
# Note that the next example is no longer necessary if you are using
# to match a string starting with a `#`, use a character-class:
[#]backwards
# version suffix <word>v#
(?:(?<=[A-Z]{2})V|(?<=[a-z]{2}|[A-Z]{2})v)\d+(?:\b|(?=[a-zA-Z_]))
# Compiler flags (Unix, Java/Scala)
# Use if you have things like `-Pdocker` and want to treat them as `docker`
#(?:^|[\t ,>"'`=(])-(?:(?:J-|)[DPWXY]|[Llf])(?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z]|[a-z]{2,})
# Compiler flags (Windows / PowerShell)
# This is a subset of the more general compiler flags pattern.
# It avoids matching `-Path` to prevent it from being treated as `ath`
#(?:^|[\t ,"'`=(])-(?:[DPL](?=[A-Z]{2,})|[WXYlf](?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z]|[a-z]{2,}))
# Compiler flags (Scala)
(?:^|[\t ,>"'`=(])-J-[DPWXY](?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z]|[a-z]{2,})
# Compiler flags
#(?:^|[\t ,"'`=(])-[DPWXYLlf](?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z]|[a-z]{2,})
# Compiler flags (linker)
,-B
# curl arguments
\b(?:\\n|)curl(?:\s+-[a-zA-Z]{1,2}\b)*(?:\s+-[a-zA-Z]{3,})(?:\s+-[a-zA-Z]+)*
# set arguments

View File

@@ -1,24 +1,21 @@
# See https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples:-excludes
(?:(?i)\.png$)
(?:^|/)(?i)COPYRIGHT
(?:^|/)(?i)LICEN[CS]E
(?:^|/)3rdparty/
(?:^|/)dirs$
(?:^|/)go\.mod$
(?:^|/)go\.sum$
(?:^|/)package(?:-lock|)\.json$
(?:^|/)Pipfile$
(?:^|/)pyproject.toml
(?:^|/)requirements(?:-dev|-doc|-test|)\.txt$
(?:^|/)sources(?:|\.dep)$
(?:^|/)vendor/
\.a$
\.ai$
\.all-contributorsrc$
\.avi$
\.bmp$
\.bz2$
\.cer$
\.class$
\.coveragerc$
\.crl$
\.crt$
\.csr$
@@ -30,15 +27,11 @@
\.eps$
\.exe$
\.gif$
\.git-blame-ignore-revs$
\.gitattributes$
\.gitignore$
\.gitkeep$
\.graffle$
\.gz$
\.icns$
\.ico$
\.ipynb$
\.jar$
\.jks$
\.jpeg$
@@ -48,62 +41,61 @@
\.lock$
\.map$
\.min\..
\.mo$
\.mod$
\.mp3$
\.mp4$
\.o$
\.ocf$
\.otf$
\.p12$
\.parquet$
\.pbxproj$
\.pdf$
\.pem$
\.pfx$
\.png$
\.psd$
\.pyc$
\.pylintrc$
\.qm$
\.runsettings$
\.s$
\.sig$
\.so$
\.svg$
\.svgz$
\.sys$
\.svgz?$
\.tar$
\.tgz$
\.tiff?$
\.ttf$
\.vcxproj\.filters$
\.vsdx$
\.wav$
\.webm$
\.webp$
\.woff
\.woff2?$
\.xcf$
\.xls
\.xlsx?$
\.xpm$
\.xz$
\.yml$
\.zip$
^\.github/actions/spelling/
^\.github/fabricbot.json$
^\.gitignore$
^\Q.git-blame-ignore-revs\E$
^\Q.github/workflows/spelling.yml\E$
^\Qbuild/config/release.gdnbaselines\E$
^\Qdoc/reference/windows-terminal-logo.ans\E$
^\Qsamples/ConPTY/EchoCon/EchoCon/EchoCon.vcxproj.filters\E$
^\Qsrc/host/exe/Host.EXE.vcxproj.filters\E$
^\Qsrc/host/ft_host/chafa.txt\E$
^\Qsrc/host/ft_uia/run.bat\E$
^\Qsrc/host/runft.bat\E$
^\Qsrc/tools/lnkd/lnkd.bat\E$
^\Qsrc/tools/pixels/pixels.bat\E$
^\Qsrc/tools/closetest/CloseTest.vcxproj.filters\E$
^\XamlStyler.json$
^build/config/
^consolegit2gitfilters\.json$
^dep/
^doc/reference/master-sequence-list\.csv$
^doc/reference/master-sequence-list.csv$
^doc/reference/UTF8-torture-test\.txt$
^doc/reference/windows-terminal-logo\.ans$
^oss/
^samples/PixelShaders/Screenshots/
^src/host/ft_uia/run\.bat$
^src/host/runft\.bat$
^src/host/runut\.bat$
^src/interactivity/onecore/BgfxEngine\.
^src/renderer/atlas/
^src/renderer/wddmcon/WddmConRenderer\.
@@ -115,15 +107,14 @@
^src/terminal/parser/ut_parser/Base64Test.cpp$
^src/terminal/parser/ut_parser/run\.bat$
^src/tools/benchcat
^src/tools/ConsoleBench
^src/tools/integrity/dirs$
^src/tools/integrity/packageuwp/ConsoleUWP\.appxSources$
^src/tools/RenderingTests/main\.cpp$
^src/tools/lnkd/lnkd\.bat$
^src/tools/pixels/pixels\.bat$
^src/tools/RenderingTests/main.cpp$
^src/tools/texttests/fira\.txt$
^src/tools/U8U16Test/(?!en)..\.
^src/types/ColorFix\.cpp$
^src/types/ut_types/UtilsTests\.cpp$
^tools/ReleaseEngineering/ServicingPipeline\.ps1$
^XamlStyler\.json$
^src/tools/U8U16Test/(?:fr|ru|zh)\.txt$
^src/types/ColorFix.cpp
^src/types/ut_types/UtilsTests.cpp$
^tools/ReleaseEngineering/ServicingPipeline.ps1$
ignore$
Resources/(?!en)
SUMS$

View File

@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
EOB
swrapped
wordi
wordiswrapped
wrappe

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
WCAG
winui
appshellintegration
mdtauk

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,4 @@
# reject `m_data` as VxWorks defined it and that breaks things if it's used elsewhere
# see [fprime](https://github.com/nasa/fprime/commit/d589f0a25c59ea9a800d851ea84c2f5df02fb529)
# and [Qt](https://github.com/qtproject/qt-solutions/blame/fb7bc42bfcc578ff3fa3b9ca21a41e96eb37c1c7/qtscriptclassic/src/qscriptbuffer_p.h#L46)
# reject `m_data` as there's a certain OS which has evil defines that break things if it's used elsewhere
# \bm_data\b
# If you have a framework that uses `it()` for testing and `fit()` for debugging a specific test,
@@ -8,72 +6,40 @@
# to use this:
#\bfit\(
# s.b. anymore
\bany more[,.]
# s.b. GitHub
(?<![&*.]|// |\btype )\bGithub\b(?![{)])
\bGithub\b
# s.b. GitLab
(?<![&*.]|// |\btype )\bGitlab\b(?![{)])
\bGitlab\b
# s.b. JavaScript
\bJavascript\b
# s.b. macOS or Mac OS X or ...
\bMacOS\b
# s.b. Microsoft
\bMicroSoft\b
# s.b. TypeScript
\bTypescript\b
# s.b. another
\ban[- ]other\b
# s.b. deprecation warning
\b[Dd]epreciation [Ww]arnings?\b
# s.b. greater than
\bgreater then\b
# s.b. in front of
\bin from of\b
# s.b. into
# when not phrasal and when `in order to` would be wrong:
# https://thewritepractice.com/into-vs-in-to/
#\sin to\s(?!if\b)
# s.b. is obsolete
\bis obsolescent\b
# s.b. it's or its
\bits[']
#\sin to\s
# s.b. opt-in
#(?<!\sfor)\sopt in\s
\sopt in\s
# s.b. less than
\bless then\b
# s.b. one of
\bon of\b
# s.b. otherwise
\bother[- ]wise\b
# s.b. or (more|less)
\bore (?:more|less)\b
# s.b. nonexistent
\bnon existing\b
\b[Nn]o[nt][- ]existent\b
# s.b. brief / details/ param / return / retval
(?:^\s*|(?:\*|//|/*)\s+`)[\\@](?:breif|(?:detail|detials)|(?:params(?!\.)|prama?)|ret(?:uns?)|retvl)\b
# s.b. preexisting
[Pp]re[- ]existing
@@ -83,37 +49,14 @@
# s.b. preemptively
[Pp]re[- ]emptively
# s.b. recently changed or recent changes
[Rr]ecent changed
# s.b. reentrancy
[Rr]e[- ]entrancy
# s.b. reentrant
[Rr]e[- ]entrant
# s.b. understand
\bunder stand\b
# s.b. workaround(s)
#\bwork[- ]arounds?\b
# s.b. workarounds
#\bwork[- ]arounds\b
# s.b. workaround
(?:(?:[Aa]|[Tt]he|ugly)\swork[- ]around\b|\swork[- ]around\s+for)
# s.b. (coarse|fine)-grained
\b(?:coarse|fine) grained\b
# s.b. neither/nor -- or reword
#\bnot\b[^.?!"/(]+\bnor\b
# probably a double negative
# s.b. neither/nor (plus rewording the beginning)
\bnot\b[^.?!"/]*\bneither\b[^.?!"/(]*\bnor\b
# In English, it is generally wrong to have the same word twice in a row without punctuation.
# Duplicated words are generally mistakes.
# There are a few exceptions where it is acceptable (e.g. "that that").
# If the highlighted doubled word pair is in a code snippet, you can write a pattern to mask it.
# If the highlighted doubled word pair is in prose, have someone read the English before you dismiss this error.
# Reject duplicate words
\s([A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,})\s\g{-1}\s

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
\\native(?![a-z])
\\nihilist(?![a-z])

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
\\registry(?![a-z])
\\release(?![a-z])
\\resources?(?![a-z])
\\result(?![a-z])
\\resultmacros(?![a-z])
\\rules(?![a-z])
\\renderer(?![a-z])
\\rectread(?![a-z])

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
\\telemetry(?![a-z])
\\templates(?![a-z])
\\term(?![a-z])
\\terminal(?![a-z])
\\terminalcore(?![a-z])
\\terminalinput(?![a-z])
\\testlist(?![a-z])
\\testmd(?![a-z])
\\testpasses(?![a-z])
\\tests(?![a-z])
\\thread(?![a-z])
\\tools(?![a-z])
\\types?(?![a-z])

View File

@@ -7,6 +7,10 @@ Note: order of the contents of these files can matter.
Lines from an individual file are handled in file order.
Files are selected in alphabetical order.
* [n](0_n.txt), [r](0_r.txt), and [t](0_t.txt) are specifically to work around
a quirk in the spell checker:
it often sees C strings of the form "Hello\nwerld". And would prefer to
spot the typo of `werld`.
* [patterns](patterns.txt) is the main list -- there is nothing
particularly special about the file name (beyond the extension which is
important).

View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
https?://\S+
[Pp]ublicKeyToken="?[0-9a-fA-F]{16}"?
(?:[{"]|UniqueIdentifier>)[0-9a-fA-F]{8}-(?:[0-9a-fA-F]{4}-){3}[0-9a-fA-F]{12}(?:[}"]|</UniqueIdentifier)
(?:0[Xx]|\\x|U\+|#)[a-f0-9A-FGgRr]{2,}(?!\[)[Uu]?[Ll]{0,2}\b
(?:0[Xx]|\\x|U\+|#)[a-f0-9A-FGgRr]{2,}[Uu]?[Ll]{0,2}\b
microsoft/cascadia-code\@[0-9a-fA-F]{40}
\d+x\d+Logo
Scro\&ll
@@ -12,6 +12,7 @@ Scro\&ll
TestUtils::VerifyExpectedString\(tb, L"[^"]+"
(?:hostSm|mach)\.ProcessString\(L"[^"]+"
\b([A-Za-z])\g{-1}{3,}\b
0x[0-9A-Za-z]+
Base64::s_(?:En|De)code\(L"[^"]+"
VERIFY_ARE_EQUAL\(L"[^"]+"
"ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789\+/"
@@ -23,129 +24,70 @@ ROY\sG\.\sBIV
!(?:(?i)ESC)!\[
!(?:(?i)CSI)!(?:\d+(?:;\d+|)m|[ABCDF])
# Python stringprefix / binaryprefix
\b(?:B|BR|Br|F|FR|Fr|R|RB|RF|Rb|Rf|U|UR|Ur|b|bR|br|f|fR|fr|r|rB|rF|rb|rf|u|uR|ur)'
# SSE intrinsics like "_mm_subs_epu16"
\b_mm(?:|256|512)_\w+\b
# ARM NEON intrinsics like "vsubq_u16"
\bv\w+_[fsu](?:8|16|32|64)\b
# color floating numbers
0x[0-9a-f](?:\.[0-9a-f]*p)[-+]\d+f
# AppX package
_\d[0-9a-z]{12}['\.]
# string test
equals_insensitive_ascii\("\w+", "\w+"
# Automatically suggested patterns
# hit-count: 3788 file-count: 599
# IServiceProvider / isAThing
\b(?:I|isA)(?=(?:[A-Z][a-z]{2,})+\b)
# hit-count: 3831 file-count: 582
# IServiceProvider
\bI(?=(?:[A-Z][a-z]{2,})+\b)
# hit-count: 314 file-count: 21
# hex runs
\b[0-9a-fA-F]{16,}\b
# hit-count: 71 file-count: 35
# Compiler flags
(?:^|[\t ,"'`=(])-[D](?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z])
(?:^|[\t ,"'`=(])-[X](?!aml)(?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z]|[a-z]{2,})
# hit-count: 47 file-count: 11
# special cased printf markers
\\r\\n(?=[a-z])|(?<!\\)\\[nrt](?=[a-z]{2,})(?=.*(?:<.*['"`]|"(?:[;,]|\);)$|\) \+$))
# ConsoleArgumentsTests
--headless\\.*?"
# hit-count: 109 file-count: 62
# Compiler flags (Unix, Java/Scala)
# Use if you have things like `-Pdocker` and want to treat them as `docker`
(?:^|[\t ,>"'`=(])-(?:D(?=[A-Z])|[WX]|f(?=[ms]))(?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z]|[a-z]{2,})
# hit-count: 60 file-count: 35
# hit-count: 41 file-count: 28
# version suffix <word>v#
(?:(?<=[A-Z]{2})V|(?<=[a-z]{2}|[A-Z]{2})v)\d+(?:\b|(?=[a-zA-Z_]))
# hit-count: 2 file-count: 2
# This does not cover multiline strings, if your repository has them,
# you'll want to remove the `(?=.*?")` suffix.
# The `(?=.*?")` suffix should limit the false positives rate
# printf
%(?:s)(?!ize)(?=[a-z]{2,})
# hit-count: 20 file-count: 9
# hex runs
\b[0-9a-fA-F]{16,}\b
# hit-count: 16 file-count: 10
# hit-count: 10 file-count: 7
# uuid:
\b[0-9a-fA-F]{8}-(?:[0-9a-fA-F]{4}-){3}[0-9a-fA-F]{12}\b
# hit-count: 13 file-count: 4
# Non-English
[a-zA-Z]*[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆČÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæčçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź][a-zA-Z]{3}[a-zA-ZÀÁÂÃÄÅÆČÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæčçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź]*|[a-zA-Z]{3,}[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆČÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæčçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź]|[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆČÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæčçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź][a-zA-Z]{3,}
# hit-count: 7 file-count: 5
# hex digits including css/html color classes:
(?:[\\0][xX]|\\u|[uU]\+|#x?|\%23)[0-9_a-fA-FgGrR]*?[a-fA-FgGrR]{2,}[0-9_a-fA-FgGrR]*(?:[uUlL]{0,3}|[iu]\d+)\b
# hit-count: 7 file-count: 1
# regex choice
\(\?:[^)]+\|[^)]+\)
# hit-count: 4 file-count: 4
# tar arguments
\b(?:\\n|)g?tar(?:\.exe|)(?:(?:\s+--[-a-zA-Z]+|\s+-[a-zA-Z]+|\s[ABGJMOPRSUWZacdfh-pr-xz]+\b)(?:=[^ ]*|))+
# hit-count: 4 file-count: 1
# ANSI color codes
(?:\\(?:u00|x)1[Bb]|\x1b|\\u\{1[Bb]\})\[\d+(?:;\d+|)m
# hit-count: 4 file-count: 1
# Update Lorem based on your content (requires `ge` and `w` from https://github.com/jsoref/spelling; and `review` from https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Looking-for-items-locally )
# grep '^[^#].*lorem' .github/actions/spelling/patterns.txt|perl -pne 's/.*i..\?://;s/\).*//' |tr '|' "\n"|sort -f |xargs -n1 ge|perl -pne 's/^[^:]*://'|sort -u|w|sed -e 's/ .*//'|w|review -
# Warning, while `(?i)` is very neat and fancy, if you have some binary files that aren't proper unicode, you might run into:
## Operation "substitution (s///)" returns its argument for non-Unicode code point 0x1C19AE (the code point will vary).
## You could manually change `(?i)X...` to use `[Xx]...`
## or you could add the files to your `excludes` file (a version after 0.0.19 should identify the file path)
# Lorem
(?:\w|\s|[,.])*\b(?i)(?:amet|consectetur|cursus|dolor|eros|ipsum|lacus|libero|ligula|lorem|magna|neque|nulla|suscipit|tempus)\b(?:\w|\s|[,.])*
# hit-count: 3 file-count: 3
# mailto urls
mailto:[-a-zA-Z=;:/?%&0-9+@.]{3,}
# hit-count: 4 file-count: 1
# ANSI color codes
(?:\\(?:u00|x)1b|\x1b)\[\d+(?:;\d+|)m
# hit-count: 2 file-count: 1
# Python string prefix / binary prefix
# Note that there's a high false positive rate, remove the `?=` and search for the regex to see if the matches seem like reasonable strings
(?<!')\b(?:B|BR|Br|F|FR|Fr|R|RB|RF|Rb|Rf|U|UR|Ur|b|bR|br|f|fR|fr|r|rB|rF|rb|rf|u|uR|ur)'(?=[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,})
# latex
\\(?:n(?:ew|ormal|osub)|r(?:enew)|t(?:able(?:of|)|he|itle))(?=[a-z]+)
# hit-count: 1 file-count: 1
# Punycode
\bxn--[-0-9a-z]+
# hex digits including css/html color classes:
(?:[\\0][xX]|\\u|[uU]\+|#x?|\%23)[0-9_a-fA-FgGrR]*?[a-fA-FgGrR]{2,}[0-9_a-fA-FgGrR]*(?:[uUlL]{0,3}|u\d+)\b
# hit-count: 1 file-count: 1
# latex (check-spelling >= 0.0.22)
\\\w{2,}\{
# Non-English
[a-zA-Z]*[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź][a-zA-Z]{3}[a-zA-ZÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź]*
# hit-count: 1 file-count: 1
# tput arguments -- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man5/terminfo.5.html -- technically they can be more than 5 chars long...
\btput\s+(?:(?:-[SV]|-T\s*\w+)\s+)*\w{3,5}\b
# Questionably acceptable forms of `in to`
# Personally, I prefer `log into`, but people object
# https://www.tprteaching.com/log-into-log-in-to-login/
\b(?:[Ll]og|[Ss]ign) in to\b
# to opt in
\bto opt in\b
# French
# This corpus only had capital letters, but you probably want lowercase ones as well.
\b[LN]'+[a-z]{2,}\b
# acceptable duplicates
# ls directory listings
[-bcdlpsw](?:[-r][-w][-Ssx]){3}\s+\d+\s+\S+\s+\S+\s+\d+\s+
# mount
\bmount\s+-t\s+(\w+)\s+\g{-1}\b
# C types and repeated CSS values
\s(auto|center|div|Guid|inherit|long|LONG|none|normal|solid|that|thin|transparent|very)(?: \g{-1})+\s
# C struct
\bstruct\s+(\w+)\s+\g{-1}\b
# go templates
\s(\w+)\s+\g{-1}\s+\`(?:graphql|inject|json|yaml):
# doxygen / javadoc / .net
(?:[\\@](?:brief|groupname|t?param|return|retval)|(?:public|private|\[Parameter(?:\(.+\)|)\])(?:\s+static|\s+override|\s+readonly)*)(?:\s+\{\w+\}|)\s+(\w+)\s+\g{-1}\s
[-bcdlpsw](?:[-r][-w][-sx]){3}\s+\d+\s+(\S+)\s+\g{-1}\s+\d+\s+
# C/idl types + English ...
\s(Guid|long|LONG|that) \g{-1}\s
# javadoc / .net
(?:[\\@](?:groupname|param)|(?:public|private)(?:\s+static|\s+readonly)*)\s+(\w+)\s+\g{-1}\s
# Commit message -- Signed-off-by and friends
^\s*(?:(?:Based-on-patch|Co-authored|Helped|Mentored|Reported|Reviewed|Signed-off)-by|Thanks-to): (?:[^<]*<[^>]*>|[^<]*)\s*$

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
^attache$
^attacher$
^attachers$
^bellow$
benefitting
occurences?
^dependan.*

View File

@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@ on:
- labeled
- unlabeled
permissions: {}
permissions: {}
jobs:
add-to-project:
name: Add issue to project
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/add-to-project@v0.5.0
- uses: actions/add-to-project@v0.3.0
with:
project-url: https://github.com/orgs/microsoft/projects/159
github-token: ${{ secrets.ADD_TO_PROJECT_PAT }}

View File

@@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
name: GitGudSimilarIssues comments
on:
issues:
types: [opened]
jobs:
getSimilarIssues:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
outputs:
message: ${{ steps.getBody.outputs.message }}
steps:
- id: getBody
uses: craigloewen-msft/GitGudSimilarIssues@main
with:
issuetitle: ${{ github.event.issue.title }}
repo: ${{ github.repository }}
similaritytolerance: "0.75"
add-comment:
needs: getSimilarIssues
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
issues: write
if: needs.getSimilarIssues.outputs.message != ''
steps:
- name: Add comment
run: gh issue comment "$NUMBER" --repo "$REPO" --body "$BODY"
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
NUMBER: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
REPO: ${{ github.repository }}
BODY: ${{ needs.getSimilarIssues.outputs.message }}

View File

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ name: Spell checking
# https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Feature%3A-Restricted-Permissions
#
# `jobs.comment-push` runs when a push is made to a repository and the `jobs.spelling` job needs to make a comment
# (in odd cases, it might actually run just to collapse a comment, but that's fairly rare)
# (in odd cases, it might actually run just to collapse a commment, but that's fairly rare)
# it needs `contents: write` in order to add a comment.
#
# `jobs.comment-pr` runs when a pull_request is made to a repository and the `jobs.spelling` job needs to make a comment
@@ -34,29 +34,6 @@ name: Spell checking
#
# For background, see: https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Feature:-Update-with-deploy-key
# Sarif reporting
#
# Access to Sarif reports is generally restricted (by GitHub) to members of the repository.
#
# Requires enabling `security-events: write`
# and configuring the action with `use_sarif: 1`
#
# For information on the feature, see: https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Feature:-Sarif-output
# Minimal workflow structure:
#
# on:
# push:
# ...
# pull_request_target:
# ...
# jobs:
# # you only want the spelling job, all others should be omitted
# spelling:
# # remove `security-events: write` and `use_sarif: 1`
# # remove `experimental_apply_changes_via_bot: 1`
# ... otherwise adjust the `with:` as you wish
on:
push:
branches:
@@ -66,6 +43,8 @@ on:
pull_request_target:
branches:
- "**"
tags-ignore:
- "**"
types:
- 'opened'
- 'reopened'
@@ -81,11 +60,10 @@ jobs:
contents: read
pull-requests: read
actions: read
security-events: write
outputs:
followup: ${{ steps.spelling.outputs.followup }}
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: ${{ contains(github.event_name, 'pull_request') || github.event_name == 'push' }}
if: "contains(github.event_name, 'pull_request') || github.event_name == 'push'"
concurrency:
group: spelling-${{ github.event.pull_request.number || github.ref }}
# note: If you use only_check_changed_files, you do not want cancel-in-progress
@@ -93,50 +71,35 @@ jobs:
steps:
- name: check-spelling
id: spelling
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.22
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.21
with:
suppress_push_for_open_pull_request: ${{ github.actor != 'dependabot[bot]' && 1 }}
suppress_push_for_open_pull_request: 1
checkout: true
check_file_names: 1
spell_check_this: microsoft/terminal@main
spell_check_this: check-spelling/spell-check-this@prerelease
post_comment: 0
use_magic_file: 1
report-timing: 1
warnings: bad-regex,binary-file,deprecated-feature,ignored-expect-variant,large-file,limited-references,no-newline-at-eof,noisy-file,non-alpha-in-dictionary,token-is-substring,unexpected-line-ending,whitespace-in-dictionary,minified-file,unsupported-configuration,no-files-to-check
experimental_apply_changes_via_bot: ${{ github.repository_owner != 'microsoft' && 1 }}
use_sarif: ${{ (!github.event.pull_request || (github.event.pull_request.head.repo.full_name == github.repository)) && 1 }}
extra_dictionary_limit: 20
extra_dictionary_limit: 10
extra_dictionaries:
cspell:software-terms/dict/softwareTerms.txt
cspell:cpp/src/stdlib-cpp.txt
cspell:lorem-ipsum/dictionary.txt
cspell:cpp/src/stdlib-c.txt
cspell:php/dict/php.txt
cspell:filetypes/filetypes.txt
cspell:java/src/java.txt
cspell:python/src/common/extra.txt
cspell:node/dict/node.txt
cspell:java/src/java-terms.txt
cspell:aws/aws.txt
cspell:typescript/dict/typescript.txt
cspell:dotnet/dict/dotnet.txt
cspell:golang/dict/go.txt
cspell:fullstack/dict/fullstack.txt
cspell:cpp/src/compiler-msvc.txt
cspell:software-terms/src/software-terms.txt
cspell:python/src/python/python-lib.txt
cspell:mnemonics/src/mnemonics.txt
cspell:cpp/src/stdlib-cmath.txt
cspell:css/dict/css.txt
cspell:node/node.txt
cspell:cpp/src/stdlib-c.txt
cspell:cpp/src/stdlib-cpp.txt
cspell:fullstack/fullstack.txt
cspell:filetypes/filetypes.txt
cspell:html/html.txt
cspell:cpp/src/compiler-msvc.txt
cspell:python/src/common/extra.txt
cspell:powershell/powershell.txt
cspell:aws/aws.txt
cspell:cpp/src/lang-keywords.txt
cspell:django/dict/django.txt
cspell:npm/npm.txt
cspell:dotnet/dotnet.txt
cspell:python/src/python/python.txt
cspell:html/dict/html.txt
cspell:cpp/src/ecosystem.txt
cspell:cpp/src/compiler-clang-attributes.txt
cspell:npm/dict/npm.txt
cspell:r/src/r.txt
cspell:powershell/dict/powershell.txt
cspell:csharp/csharp.txt
cspell:css/css.txt
cspell:cpp/src/stdlib-cmath.txt
check_extra_dictionaries: ''
comment-push:
name: Report (Push)
@@ -148,10 +111,10 @@ jobs:
if: (success() || failure()) && needs.spelling.outputs.followup && github.event_name == 'push'
steps:
- name: comment
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.22
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.21
with:
checkout: true
spell_check_this: microsoft/terminal@main
spell_check_this: check-spelling/spell-check-this@prerelease
task: ${{ needs.spelling.outputs.followup }}
comment-pr:
@@ -160,38 +123,12 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: spelling
permissions:
contents: read
pull-requests: write
if: (success() || failure()) && needs.spelling.outputs.followup && contains(github.event_name, 'pull_request')
steps:
- name: comment
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.22
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.21
with:
checkout: true
spell_check_this: microsoft/terminal@main
spell_check_this: check-spelling/spell-check-this@prerelease
task: ${{ needs.spelling.outputs.followup }}
experimental_apply_changes_via_bot: ${{ github.repository_owner != 'microsoft' && 1 }}
update:
name: Update PR
permissions:
contents: write
pull-requests: write
actions: read
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: ${{
github.repository_owner != 'microsoft' &&
github.event_name == 'issue_comment' &&
github.event.issue.pull_request &&
contains(github.event.comment.body, '@check-spelling-bot apply')
}}
concurrency:
group: spelling-update-${{ github.event.issue.number }}
cancel-in-progress: false
steps:
- name: apply spelling updates
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.22
with:
experimental_apply_changes_via_bot: ${{ github.repository_owner != 'microsoft' && 1 }}
checkout: true
ssh_key: "${{ secrets.CHECK_SPELLING }}"

View File

@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ The point of doing all this work in public is to ensure that we are holding ours
The team triages new issues several times a week. During triage, the team uses labels to categorize, manage, and drive the project workflow.
We employ [a bot engine](./doc/bot.md) to help us automate common processes within our workflow.
We employ [a bot engine](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/bot.md) to help us automate common processes within our workflow.
We drive the bot by tagging issues with specific labels which cause the bot engine to close issues, merge branches, etc. This bot engine helps us keep the repo clean by automating the process of notifying appropriate parties if/when information/follow-up is needed, and closing stale issues/PRs after reminders have remained unanswered for several days.

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -8,8 +8,8 @@ This repository contains the source code for:
* [Windows Terminal Preview](https://aka.ms/terminal-preview)
* The Windows console host (`conhost.exe`)
* Components shared between the two projects
* [ColorTool](./src/tools/ColorTool)
* [Sample projects](./samples)
* [ColorTool](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/tree/main/src/tools/ColorTool)
* [Sample projects](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/tree/main/samples)
that show how to consume the Windows Console APIs
Related repositories include:
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ Related repositories include:
## Installing and running Windows Terminal
> [!NOTE]
> **Note**\
> Windows Terminal requires Windows 10 2004 (build 19041) or later
### Microsoft Store [Recommended]
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ fails for any reason, you can try the following command at a PowerShell prompt:
Add-AppxPackage Microsoft.WindowsTerminal_<versionNumber>.msixbundle
```
> [!NOTE]
> **Note**\
> If you install Terminal manually:
>
> * You may need to install the [VC++ v14 Desktop Framework Package](https://docs.microsoft.com/troubleshoot/cpp/c-runtime-packages-desktop-bridge#how-to-install-and-update-desktop-framework-packages).
@@ -72,7 +72,7 @@ package:
winget install --id Microsoft.WindowsTerminal -e
```
> [!NOTE]
> **Note**\
> Dependency support is available in WinGet version [1.6.2631 or later](https://github.com/microsoft/winget-cli/releases). To install the Terminal stable release 1.18 or later, please make sure you have the updated version of the WinGet client.
#### Via Chocolatey (unofficial)
@@ -262,7 +262,7 @@ Cause: You're launching the incorrect solution in Visual Studio.
Solution: Make sure you're building & deploying the `CascadiaPackage` project in
Visual Studio.
> [!NOTE]
> **Note**\
> `OpenConsole.exe` is just a locally-built `conhost.exe`, the classic
> Windows Console that hosts Windows' command-line infrastructure. OpenConsole
> is used by Windows Terminal to connect to and communicate with command-line
@@ -286,7 +286,7 @@ enhance Windows Terminal\!
***BEFORE you start work on a feature/fix***, please read & follow our
[Contributor's
Guide](./CONTRIBUTING.md) to
Guide](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md) to
help avoid any wasted or duplicate effort.
## Communicating with the Team
@@ -387,10 +387,10 @@ Please review these brief docs below about our coding practices.
This is a work in progress as we learn what we'll need to provide people in
order to be effective contributors to our project.
* [Coding Style](./doc/STYLE.md)
* [Code Organization](./doc/ORGANIZATION.md)
* [Exceptions in our legacy codebase](./doc/EXCEPTIONS.md)
* [Helpful smart pointers and macros for interfacing with Windows in WIL](./doc/WIL.md)
* [Coding Style](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/STYLE.md)
* [Code Organization](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/ORGANIZATION.md)
* [Exceptions in our legacy codebase](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/EXCEPTIONS.md)
* [Helpful smart pointers and macros for interfacing with Windows in WIL](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/WIL.md)
---

View File

@@ -14,4 +14,4 @@ Support for Windows Terminal is limited to the resources listed above.
[gh-bug]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/new?assignees=&labels=Issue-Bug&template=bug_report.md&title=
[gh-feature]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/new?assignees=&labels=Issue-Feature&template=Feature_Request.md&title=
[docs]: https://docs.microsoft.com/windows/terminal
[contributor]: ./CONTRIBUTING.md
[contributor]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md

View File

@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ stages:
- ${{ if ne(variables['Build.Reason'], 'PullRequest') }}:
- stage: CodeIndexer
displayName: GitHub CodeNav Indexer
displayName: Github CodeNav Indexer
dependsOn: []
jobs:
- template: ./templates-v2/job-index-github-codenav.yml

View File

@@ -8,12 +8,6 @@ schedules:
- main
always: false # only run if there's code changes!
parameters:
- name: targetBranch
type: string
default: "automated/loc-update"
pool:
vmImage: windows-2019
@@ -44,13 +38,6 @@ steps:
persistCredentials: true
path: s/Terminal.Internal
- pwsh: |-
Install-Module PSGitHub -Scope CurrentUser -Force
git config --local user.email "consvc@microsoft.com"
git config --local user.name "Console Service Bot"
git config --local core.autocrlf true
displayName: Prepare git submission environment
- task: MicrosoftTDBuild.tdbuild-task.tdbuild-task.TouchdownBuildTask@1
displayName: 'Touchdown Build - 7105, PRODEXT'
inputs:
@@ -64,44 +51,13 @@ steps:
outputDirectoryRoot: LocOutput
appendRelativeDir: true
pseudoSetting: Included
localizationTarget: true
- pwsh: |-
Remove-Item -EA:Ignore -R -Force LocOutput\Terminal.Internal
$Files = Get-ChildItem LocOutput -R -Include 'ContextMenu.resw','Resources.resw' | ? FullName -Like '*en-US\*\*.resw'
$Files | % { Move-Item -Verbose $_.Directory $_.Directory.Parent.Parent -EA:Ignore }
& tar.exe -c -f LocOutputMunged.tar -C LocOutput .
& tar.exe -x -v -f LocOutputMunged.tar
rm LocOutputMunged.tar
rm -r -fo LocOutput
& ./build/scripts/Copy-ContextMenuResourcesToCascadiaPackage.ps1
displayName: Move Loc files to the right places
# Saving one of these makes it really easy to inspect the loc output...
- powershell: 'tar czf LocOutput.tar.gz LocOutput'
displayName: 'Archive Loc Output for Submission'
- pwsh: |-
git add **/*.resw
git status
git diff --quiet --cached --exit-code
If ($LASTEXITCODE -Ne 0) {
$Now = Get-Date
git commit -m "Localization Updates - $Now"
git push origin HEAD:refs/heads/${{parameters.targetBranch}} -f
Write-Host "##vso[task.setvariable variable=ChangesPushedToRepo]1"
} Else {
Write-Host "##vso[task.setvariable variable=ChangesPushedToRepo]0"
}
displayName: git commit and push
- pwsh: |-
Import-Module PSGitHub
$BaseBranch = "$(Build.SourceBranch)" -Replace "^refs/heads/",""
Write-Host "Preparing PR against $BaseBranch"
$PSDefaultParameterValues['*GitHub*:Owner'] = "microsoft"
$PSDefaultParameterValues['*GitHub*:RepositoryName'] = "terminal"
$PSDefaultParameterValues['*GitHub*:Token'] = ("$(GithubPullRequestToken)" | ConvertTo-SecureString -AsPlainText -Force)
$existingPr = Get-GitHubPullRequest -HeadBranch "${{parameters.targetBranch}}" -BaseBranch $BaseBranch
If ($null -Eq $existingPr) {
$Now = Get-Date
New-GitHubPullRequest -Head "${{parameters.targetBranch}}" -Base $BaseBranch -Title "Localization Updates - $BaseBranch - $Now" -Verbose
}
displayName: Publish pull request
condition: and(eq(variables['ChangesPushedToRepo'], '1'), succeeded())
- task: PublishBuildArtifacts@1
displayName: 'Publish Artifact: LocOutput'
inputs:
PathtoPublish: LocOutput.tar.gz
ArtifactName: LocOutput

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
jobs:
- job: CodeNavIndexer
displayName: Run GitHub CodeNav Indexer
displayName: Run Github CodeNav Indexer
pool: { vmImage: windows-2022 }
steps:

View File

@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ jobs:
- template: steps-ensure-nuget-version.yml
- task: NuGetAuthenticate@1
- task: NuGetAuthenticate@0
inputs:
nuGetServiceConnections: 'Terminal Public Artifact Feed'

View File

@@ -56,7 +56,6 @@ jobs:
- task: PowerShell@2
displayName: 'Run PGO Tests'
inputs:
pwsh: true
targetType: filePath
filePath: build\scripts\Run-Tests.ps1
arguments: >-

View File

@@ -44,7 +44,6 @@ jobs:
- task: PowerShell@2
displayName: 'Run Unit Tests'
inputs:
pwsh: true
targetType: filePath
filePath: build\scripts\Run-Tests.ps1
arguments: -MatchPattern '*unit.test*.dll' -Platform '$(OutputBuildPlatform)' -Configuration '$(BuildConfiguration)' -LogPath '${{ parameters.testLogPath }}' -Root "$(Terminal.BinDir)"
@@ -53,7 +52,6 @@ jobs:
- task: PowerShell@2
displayName: 'Run Feature Tests'
inputs:
pwsh: true
targetType: filePath
filePath: build\scripts\Run-Tests.ps1
arguments: -MatchPattern '*feature.test*.dll' -Platform '$(OutputBuildPlatform)' -Configuration '$(BuildConfiguration)' -LogPath '${{ parameters.testLogPath }}' -Root "$(Terminal.BinDir)"

View File

@@ -104,6 +104,10 @@ stages:
packageListDownload: e82d490c-af86-4733-9dc4-07b772033204
versionListDownload: ${{ parameters.terminalInternalPackageVersion }}
- template: ./steps-fetch-and-prepare-localizations.yml
parameters:
includePseudoLoc: true
- ${{ if eq(parameters.buildWPF, true) }}:
# Add an Any CPU build flavor for the WPF control bits
- template: ./job-build-project.yml

View File

@@ -78,9 +78,6 @@ extends:
cloudvault: # https://aka.ms/obpipelines/cloudvault
enabled: false
globalSdl: # https://aka.ms/obpipelines/sdl
asyncSdl:
enabled: true
tsaOptionsFile: 'build/config/tsa.json'
tsa:
enabled: true
configFile: '$(Build.SourcesDirectory)\build\config\tsa.json'
@@ -131,6 +128,10 @@ extends:
packageListDownload: e82d490c-af86-4733-9dc4-07b772033204
versionListDownload: ${{ parameters.terminalInternalPackageVersion }}
- template: ./build/pipelines/templates-v2/steps-fetch-and-prepare-localizations.yml@self
parameters:
includePseudoLoc: true
- ${{ if eq(parameters.buildWPF, true) }}:
# Add an Any CPU build flavor for the WPF control bits
- template: ./build/pipelines/templates-v2/job-build-project.yml@self
@@ -246,7 +247,7 @@ extends:
- stage: Publish
displayName: Publish
dependsOn: [Build]
dependsOn: [Build, Package]
jobs:
- template: ./build/pipelines/templates-v2/job-publish-symbols.yml@self
parameters:

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
parameters:
- name: includePseudoLoc
type: boolean
default: true
steps:
- task: TouchdownBuildTask@1
displayName: Download Localization Files
inputs:
teamId: 7105
authId: $(TouchdownAppId)
authKey: $(TouchdownAppKey)
resourceFilePath: |
src\cascadia\**\en-US\*.resw
appendRelativeDir: true
localizationTarget: false
${{ if eq(parameters.includePseudoLoc, true) }}:
pseudoSetting: Included
- pwsh: |-
$Files = Get-ChildItem . -R -Filter 'Resources.resw' | ? FullName -Like '*en-US\*\Resources.resw'
$Files | % { Move-Item -Verbose $_.Directory $_.Directory.Parent.Parent -EA:Ignore }
displayName: Move Loc files into final locations
- pwsh: |-
./build/scripts/Copy-ContextMenuResourcesToCascadiaPackage.ps1
displayName: Copy the Context Menu Loc Resources to CascadiaPackage

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
steps:
- template: steps-ensure-nuget-version.yml
- task: NuGetAuthenticate@1
- task: NuGetAuthenticate@0
- script: |-
echo ##vso[task.setvariable variable=NUGET_RESTORE_MSBUILD_ARGS]/p:Platform=$(BuildPlatform)

View File

@@ -1,49 +0,0 @@
<Project xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003">
<PropertyGroup>
<OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn></OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn>
<OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn Condition="'$(TerminalCppWinRT)'=='true'">
GetCppWinRTProjectWinMDReferences;
$(OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn)
</OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn>
<OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn Condition="'$(TerminalMidlRT)'=='true'">
GetMidlRTProjectWinMDReferences;
$(OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn)
</OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn>
<CppWinRTResolveReferencesDependsOn>$(CppWinRTResolveReferencesDependsOn);OpenConsoleSwitchUpMergeInputs;</CppWinRTResolveReferencesDependsOn>
<MidlRTResolveReferencesDependsOn>$(MidlRTResolveReferencesDependsOn);OpenConsoleSwitchUpMergeInputs;</MidlRTResolveReferencesDependsOn>
</PropertyGroup>
<Target Name="OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferences"
DependsOnTargets="ResolveProjectReferences;$(OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferencesDependsOn)"
Returns="@(OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences)">
<ItemGroup>
<_OpenConsoleUtilityProjectReferences Remove="@(_OpenConsoleUtilityProjectReferences)"/>
<_OpenConsoleUtilityProjectReferences Include="@(_ResolvedProjectReferencePaths)"
Condition= "'%(_ResolvedProjectReferencePaths.ProjectType)'=='Utility' AND
'%(_ResolvedProjectReferencePaths.WinMDFile)' == 'true' AND
'%(_ResolvedProjectReferencePaths.OpenConsoleImplementInterface)' == 'true'"/>
</ItemGroup>
<ItemGroup>
<OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences Remove="@(OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences)" />
<OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences Include="@(_OpenConsoleUtilityProjectReferences)">
<WinMDPath>%(FullPath)</WinMDPath>
</OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences>
</ItemGroup>
</Target>
<!-- Calculates the input files and metadata directories to be passed to MdMerge -->
<Target Name="OpenConsoleSwitchUpMergeInputs"
DependsOnTargets="OpenConsoleGetUtilityProjectWinMDReferences">
<ItemGroup>
<!-- Utility projects should be consumed statically, not as dynamic references. -->
<CppWinRTDynamicProjectWinMDReferences Remove="@(OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences)" />
<CppWinRTStaticProjectWinMDReferences Include="@(OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences)" />
<MidlRTDynamicProjectWinMDReferences Remove="@(OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences)" />
<MidlRTStaticProjectWinMDReferences Include="@(OpenConsoleUtilityProjectWinMDReferences)" />
</ItemGroup>
</Target>
</Project>

View File

@@ -30,7 +30,6 @@
<IntermediateOutputPath>$(SolutionDir)obj\$(Configuration)\GenerateFeatureFlags\</IntermediateOutputPath>
<OpenConsoleCommonOutDir>$(SolutionDir)bin\$(Configuration)\</OpenConsoleCommonOutDir>
<_WTBrandingName Condition="'$(WindowsTerminalBranding)'=='Canary'">Canary</_WTBrandingName>
<_WTBrandingName Condition="'$(WindowsTerminalBranding)'=='Preview'">Preview</_WTBrandingName>
<_WTBrandingName Condition="'$(WindowsTerminalBranding)'=='Release'">Release</_WTBrandingName>
<_WTBrandingName Condition="'$(_WTBrandingName)'==''">Dev</_WTBrandingName>

View File

@@ -10,12 +10,11 @@ $LocalizationsFromContextMenu | ForEach-Object {
ForEach ($pair in $Languages.GetEnumerator()) {
$LanguageDir = "./src/cascadia/CascadiaPackage/Resources/$($pair.Key)"
$ResPath = "$LanguageDir/Resources.resw"
$XmlDocument = $null
$PreexistingResw = Get-Item $ResPath -EA:Ignore
If ($null -eq $PreexistingResw) {
Write-Host "Copying $($pair.Value.FullName) to $ResPath"
$XmlDocument = [xml](Get-Content $pair.Value.FullName)
New-Item -type Directory $LanguageDir -EA:Ignore
Copy-Item $pair.Value.FullName $ResPath
} Else {
# Merge Them!
Write-Host "Merging $($pair.Value.FullName) into $ResPath"
@@ -30,19 +29,6 @@ ForEach ($pair in $Languages.GetEnumerator()) {
$newXml.root.data | % {
$null = $existingXml.root.AppendChild($existingXml.ImportNode($_, $true))
}
$XmlDocument = $existingXml # (which has been updated)
$existingXml.Save($PreexistingResw.FullName)
}
# Reset paths to be absolute (for .NET)
$LanguageDir = (Get-Item $LanguageDir).FullName
$ResPath = "$LanguageDir/Resources.resw"
# Force the "new" and "preexisting" paths to serialize with XmlWriter,
# to ensure consistency.
$writerSettings = [System.Xml.XmlWriterSettings]::new()
$writerSettings.NewLineChars = "`r`n"
$writerSettings.Indent = $true
$writer = [System.Xml.XmlWriter]::Create($ResPath, $writerSettings)
$XmlDocument.Save($writer)
$writer.Flush()
$writer.Close()
}

View File

@@ -16,48 +16,22 @@ Param(
# Find test DLLs based on the provided root, match pattern, and recursion
$testDlls = Get-ChildItem -Path $Root -Recurse -Filter $MatchPattern
$teArgs = @()
$args = @()
# Check if the LogPath parameter is provided and enable WTT logging
if ($LogPath) {
$teArgs += '/enablewttlogging'
$teArgs += '/appendwttlogging'
$teArgs += "/logFile:$LogPath"
$args += '/enablewttlogging'
$args += '/appendwttlogging'
$args += "/logFile:$LogPath"
Write-Host "WTT Logging Enabled"
}
$rootTe = "$Root\te.exe"
# Invoke the te.exe executable with arguments and test DLLs
& "$Root\te.exe" $args $testDlls.FullName $AdditionalTaefArguments
# Some of our test fixtures depend on resources.pri in the same folder as the .exe hosting them.
# Unfortunately, that means that we need to run the te.exe *next to* each test DLL we discover.
# This code establishes a mapping from te.exe to test DLL (or DLLs)
$testDllTaefGroups = $testDlls | % {
$localTe = Get-Item (Join-Path (Split-Path $_ -Parent) "te.exe") -EA:Ignore
If ($null -eq $localTe) {
$finalTePath = $rootTe
} Else {
$finalTePath = $localTe.FullName
}
[PSCustomObject]@{
TePath = $finalTePath;
TestDll = $_;
}
}
# Invoke the te.exe executables with arguments and test DLLs
$anyFailed = $false
$testDllTaefGroups | Group-Object TePath | % {
$te = $_.Group[0].TePath
$dlls = $_.Group.TestDll
Write-Verbose "Running $te (for $($dlls.Name))"
& $te $teArgs $dlls.FullName $AdditionalTaefArguments
if ($LASTEXITCODE -ne 0) {
$anyFailed = $true
}
}
if ($anyFailed) {
Exit 1
# Check the exit code of the te.exe process and exit accordingly
if ($LASTEXITCODE -ne 0) {
Exit $LASTEXITCODE
}
Exit 0

View File

@@ -3,9 +3,9 @@
<!-- This file is read by XES, which we use in our Release builds. -->
<PropertyGroup Label="Version">
<XesUseOneStoreVersioning>true</XesUseOneStoreVersioning>
<XesBaseYearForStoreVersion>2024</XesBaseYearForStoreVersion>
<XesBaseYearForStoreVersion>2023</XesBaseYearForStoreVersion>
<VersionMajor>1</VersionMajor>
<VersionMinor>21</VersionMinor>
<VersionMinor>20</VersionMinor>
<VersionInfoProductName>Windows Terminal</VersionInfoProductName>
</PropertyGroup>
</Project>

View File

@@ -9,8 +9,7 @@
<package id="Microsoft.VisualStudio.Setup.Configuration.Native" version="2.3.2262" targetFramework="native" developmentDependency="true" />
<package id="Microsoft.UI.Xaml" version="2.8.4" targetFramework="native" />
<package id="Microsoft.Web.WebView2" version="1.0.1661.34" targetFramework="native" />
<package id="Microsoft.Windows.ImplementationLibrary" version="1.0.240122.1" targetFramework="native" developmentDependency="true" />
<package id="Microsoft.Windows.MidlRT" version="2.0.200924.1" targetFramework="native" />
<package id="Microsoft.Windows.ImplementationLibrary" version="1.0.230824.2" targetFramework="native" developmentDependency="true" />
<!-- Managed packages -->
<package id="Appium.WebDriver" version="3.0.0.2" targetFramework="net45" />

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@@ -5,10 +5,10 @@
`.../console/published/wincon.w` in the OS repo when you submit the PR.
The branch won't build without it.
* For now, you can update winconp.h with your consumable changes.
* Define registry name (ex: `CONSOLE_REGISTRY_CURSORCOLOR`)
* Add the setting to `CONSOLE_STATE_INFO`.
* Define registry name (ex `CONSOLE_REGISTRY_CURSORCOLOR`)
* Add the setting to `CONSOLE_STATE_INFO`
* Define the property key ID and the property key itself.
- Yes, the large majority of the `DEFINE_PROPERTYKEY` defs are the same, it's only the last byte of the guid that changes.
- Yes, the large majority of the `DEFINE_PROPERTYKEY` defs are the same, it's only the last byte of the guid that changes
2. Add matching fields to Settings.hpp
- Add getters, setters, the whole drill.
@@ -17,9 +17,9 @@
- We need to add it to *reading and writing* the registry from the propsheet, and *reading* the link from the propsheet. Yes, that's weird, but the propsheet is smart enough to re-use ShortcutSerialization::s_SetLinkValues, but not smart enough to do the same with RegistrySerialization.
- `src/propsheet/registry.cpp`
- `propsheet/registry.cpp@InitRegistryValues` should initialize the default value for the property.
- `propsheet/registry.cpp@GetRegistryValues` should make sure to read the property from the registry.
- `propsheet/registry.cpp@GetRegistryValues` should make sure to read the property from the registry
4. Add the field to the propslib registry map.
4. Add the field to the propslib registry map
5. Add the value to `ShortcutSerialization.cpp`
- Read the value in `ShortcutSerialization::s_PopulateV2Properties`
@@ -30,11 +30,11 @@ Now, your new setting should be stored just like all the other properties.
7. Update the feature test properties to get add the setting as well
- `ft_uia/Common/NativeMethods.cs@WinConP`:
- `Wtypes.PROPERTYKEY PKEY_Console_`.
- `NT_CONSOLE_PROPS`.
- `Wtypes.PROPERTYKEY PKEY_Console_`
- `NT_CONSOLE_PROPS`
8. Add the default value for the setting to `win32k-settings.man`
- If the setting shouldn't default to 0 or `nullptr`, then you'll need to set the default value of the setting in `win32k-settings.man`.
9. Update `Settings::InitFromStateInfo` and `Settings::CreateConsoleStateInfo` to get/set the value in a CONSOLE_STATE_INFO appropriately.
9. Update `Settings::InitFromStateInfo` and `Settings::CreateConsoleStateInfo` to get/set the value in a CONSOLE_STATE_INFO appropriately

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@@ -1,96 +0,0 @@
# COOKED_READ_DATA, aka conhost's readline implementation
## Test instructions
All of the following ✅ marks must be fulfilled during manual testing:
* ASCII input
* Chinese input (中文維基百科) ❔
* Resizing the window properly wraps/unwraps wide glyphs ❌
Broken due to `TextBuffer::Reflow` bugs
* Surrogate pair input (🙂) ❔
* Resizing the window properly wraps/unwraps surrogate pairs ❌
Broken due to `TextBuffer::Reflow` bugs
* In cmd.exe
* Create 2 file: "a😊b.txt" and "a😟b.txt"
* Press tab: Autocomplete to "a😊b.txt" ✅
* Navigate the cursor right past the "a"
* Press tab twice: Autocomplete to "a😟b.txt" ✅
* Execute `printf(" "); gets(buffer);` in C (or equivalent)
* Press Tab, A, Ctrl+V, Tab, A ✅
* The prompt is " A^V A" ✅
* Cursor navigation works ✅
* Backspacing/Deleting random parts of it works ✅
* It never deletes the initial 4 spaces ✅
* Backspace deletes preceding glyphs ✅
* Ctrl+Backspace deletes preceding words ✅
* Escape clears input ✅
* Home navigates to start ✅
* Ctrl+Home deletes text between cursor and start ✅
* End navigates to end ✅
* Ctrl+End deletes text between cursor and end ✅
* Left navigates over previous code points ✅
* Ctrl+Left navigates to previous word-starts ✅
* Right and F1 navigate over next code points ✅
* Pressing right at the end of input copies characters
from the previous command ✅
* Ctrl+Right navigates to next word-ends ✅
* Insert toggles overwrite mode ✅
* Delete deletes next code point ✅
* Up and F5 cycle through history ✅
* Doesn't crash with no history ✅
* Stops at first entry ✅
* Down cycles through history ✅
* Doesn't crash with no history ✅
* Stops at last entry ✅
* PageUp retrieves the oldest command ✅
* PageDown retrieves the newest command ✅
* F2 starts "copy to char" prompt ✅
* Escape dismisses prompt ✅
* Typing a character copies text from the previous command up
until that character into the current buffer (acts identical
to F3, but with automatic character search) ✅
* F3 copies the previous command into the current buffer,
starting at the current cursor position,
for as many characters as possible ✅
* Doesn't erase trailing text if the current buffer
is longer than the previous command ✅
* Puts the cursor at the end of the copied text ✅
* F4 starts "copy from char" prompt ✅
* Escape dismisses prompt ✅
* Erases text between the current cursor position and the
first instance of a given char (but not including it) ✅
* F6 inserts Ctrl+Z ✅
* F7 without modifiers starts "command list" prompt ✅
* Escape dismisses prompt ✅
* Minimum size of 40x10 characters ✅
* Width expands to fit the widest history command ✅
* Height expands up to 20 rows with longer histories ✅
* F9 starts "command number" prompt ✅
* Left/Right paste replace the buffer with the given command ✅
* And put cursor at the end of the buffer ✅
* Up/Down navigate selection through history ✅
* Stops at start/end with <10 entries ✅
* Stops at start/end with >20 entries ✅
* Wide text rendering during pagination with >20 entries ✅
* Shift+Up/Down moves history items around ✅
* Home navigates to first entry ✅
* End navigates to last entry ✅
* PageUp navigates by 20 items at a time or to first ✅
* PageDown navigates by 20 items at a time or to last ✅
* Alt+F7 clears command history ✅
* F8 cycles through commands that start with the same text as
the current buffer up until the current cursor position ✅
* Doesn't crash with no history ✅
* F9 starts "command number" prompt ✅
* Escape dismisses prompt ✅
* Ignores non-ASCII-decimal characters ✅
* Allows entering between 1 and 5 digits ✅
* Pressing Enter fetches the given command from the history ✅
* Alt+F10 clears doskey aliases ✅
* In cmd.exe, with an empty prompt in an empty directory:
Pressing tab produces an audible bing and prints no text ✅
* When Narrator is enabled, in cmd.exe:
* Typing individual characters announces only
exactly each character that is being typed ✅
* Backspacing at the end of a prompt announces
only exactly each deleted character ✅

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@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ Will this UI enhancement come to other apps on Windows? Almost certainly not. Th
Will we try to keep it from regressing? Yes! Right now it's sort of a manual process. We identify that something is getting slow and then we go haul out [WPR](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/test/wpt/windows-performance-recorder) and start taking traces. We stare down the hot paths and try to reason out what is going on and then improve them. For instance, in the last cycle or two, we focused on heap allocations as a major area where we could improve our end-to-end performance, changing a ton of our code to use stack-constructed iterator-like facades over the underlying request buffer instead of translating and allocating it into a new heap space for each level of processing.
As an aside, @bitcrazed wants us to automate performance tests in some conhost specific way, but I haven't quite figured out a controlled environment to do this in yet. The Windows Engineering System runs performance tests each night that give us a coarse-grained way of knowing if we messed something up for the whole operating system, and they technically offer a fine-grained way for us to insert our own performance tests... but I just haven't got around to that yet. If you have an idea for a way for us to do this in an automated fashion, I'm all ears.
As an aside, @bitcrazed wants us to automate performance tests in some conhost specific way, but I haven't quite figured out a controlled environment to do this in yet. The Windows Engineering System runs performance tests each night that give us a coarse grained way of knowing if we messed something up for the whole operating system, and they technically offer a fine grained way for us to insert our own performance tests... but I just haven't got around to that yet. If you have an idea for a way for us to do this in an automated fashion, I'm all ears.
If there's anything else you'd like to know, let me know. I could go on all day. I deleted like 15 tangents from this reply before posting it....

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@@ -125,6 +125,8 @@
* Private calls into the Windows Window Manager to perform privileged actions related to the console process (working to eliminate) or for High DPI stuff (also working to eliminate)
* `Userprivapi.cpp`
* `Windowdpiapi.cpp`
* New UTF8 state machine in progress to improve Bash (and other apps) support for UTF-8 in console
* `Utf8ToWideCharParser.cpp`
* Window resizing/layout/management/window messaging loops and all that other stuff that has us interact with Windows to create a visual display surface and control the user interaction entry point
* `Window.cpp`
* `Windowproc.cpp`

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@@ -2782,15 +2782,15 @@
"description": "When set to true, marks added to the buffer via the addMark action will appear on the scrollbar.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"experimental.repositionCursorWithMouse": {
"default": false,
"description": "When set to true, you can move the text cursor by clicking with the mouse on the current commandline. This is an experimental feature - there are lots of edge cases where this will not work as expected.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"experimental.pixelShaderPath": {
"description": "Use to set a path to a pixel shader to use with the Terminal. Overrides `experimental.retroTerminalEffect`. This is an experimental feature, and its continued existence is not guaranteed.",
"type": "string"
},
"useAtlasEngine": {
"description": "Windows Terminal 1.16 and later ship with a new, performant text renderer. Set this to false to revert back to the old text renderer.",
"type": "boolean",
"default": true
},
"fontFace": {
"default": "Cascadia Mono",
"description": "[deprecated] Define 'face' within the 'font' object instead.",

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@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ Incoming issues/asks/etc. are triaged several times a week, labeled appropriatel
[Up Next]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/milestone/37
[Backlog]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/milestone/45
[Terminal v2 Roadmap]: ./terminal-v2-roadmap.md
[Terminal v2 Roadmap]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/tree/main/doc/terminal-v2-roadmap.md
[Windows Terminal Preview 1.2 Release]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/windows-terminal-preview-1-2-release/
[Windows Terminal Preview 1.3 Release]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/windows-terminal-preview-1-3-release/
@@ -131,4 +131,4 @@ Incoming issues/asks/etc. are triaged several times a week, labeled appropriatel
[Windows Terminal Preview 1.13 Release]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/windows-terminal-preview-1-13-release/
[Windows Terminal Preview 1.14 Release]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/windows-terminal-preview-1-14-release/
[Terminal 2023 Roadmap]: ./roadmap-2023.md
[Terminal 2023 Roadmap]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/tree/main/doc/roadmap-2023.md

View File

@@ -54,9 +54,9 @@ _informative, not normative_
For a more fluid take on what each of the team's personal goals are, head on over to [Core team North Stars]. This has a list of more long-term goals that each team member is working towards, but not things that are necessarily committed work.
[^1]: A conclusive list of these features can be found at [../src/features.xml](../src/features.xml). Note that this is a raw XML doc used to light up specific parts of the codebase, and not something authored for human consumption.
[^1]: A conclusive list of these features can be found at https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/src/features.xml. Note that this is a raw XML doc used to light up specific parts of the codebase, and not something authored for human consumption.
[2022 Roadmap]: ./roadmap-2022.md
[2022 Roadmap]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/tree/main/doc/roadmap-2022.md
[Terminal 1.17]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/releases/tag/v1.17.1023
[Terminal 1.18]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/releases/tag/v1.18.1462.0

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@@ -435,7 +435,7 @@ ultimately deemed it to be out of scope for the initial spec review.
<!-- Footnotes -->
[#2046]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046
[Command Palette, Addendum 1]: ../%232046%20-%20Unified%20keybindings%20and%20commands%2C%20and%20synthesized%20action%20names.md
[Command Palette, Addendum 1]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%232046%20-%20Unified%20keybindings%20and%20commands%2C%20and%20synthesized%20action%20names.md
[#3337]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/3337
[#6899]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/6899

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@@ -734,7 +734,7 @@ shape of extensions will be is very much still to be determined.
[#14939]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/7285
[#keep]: https://github.com/zadjii/keep
[VsCode Tasks]: ../../../.vscode/tasks.json
[VsCode Tasks]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/.vscode/tasks.json
<!-- Note: This is its own spec in progress, but for the time being #12862 will do -->
[Tasks]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/12862

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@@ -605,4 +605,4 @@ as well as 3 schemes: "Scheme 1", "Scheme 2", and "Scheme 3".
<!-- Footnotes -->
[Command Palette Spec]: ./%232046%20-%20Command%20Palette.md
[Command Palette Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%232046%20-%20Command%20Palette.md

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@@ -612,8 +612,8 @@ You could have a profile that layers on an existing profile, with elevated-speci
[#8514]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/8514
[#10276]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/10276
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: ../%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
[Configuration object for profiles]: ../%233062%20-%20Appearance configuration object for profiles.md
[Session Management Spec]: ./%234472%20-%20Windows%20Terminal%20Session%20Management.md
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
[Configuration object for profiles]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/Configuration%20object%20for%20profiles.md
[Session Management Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%234472%20-%20Windows%20Terminal%20Session%20Management.md
[The Old New Thing: How can I launch an unelevated process from my elevated process, redux]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20190425-00/?p=102443
[Workspace Trust]: https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/workspace-trust

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@@ -559,4 +559,4 @@ runtime.
[Tab Tear-out in the community toolkit]: https://github.com/windows-toolkit/Sample-TabView-TearOff
[Quake mode scenarios]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/653#issuecomment-661370107
[`ISwapChainPanelNative2::SetSwapChainHandle`]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/windows.ui.xaml.media.dxinterop/nf-windows-ui-xaml-media-dxinterop-iswapchainpanelnative2-setswapchainhandle
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: ./doc/specs/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md

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@@ -730,7 +730,7 @@ user to differentiate between the two behaviors.
[#5727]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/5727
[#9992]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/9992
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: ../%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
[Quake 3 sample]: https://youtu.be/ZmR6HQbuHPA?t=27
[`RegisterHotKey`]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winuser/nf-winuser-registerhotkey
[`dev/migrie/f/653-QUAKE-MODE`]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/tree/dev/migrie/f/653-QUAKE-MODE

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@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ contexts without needing to replicate an entire json blob.
This spec was largely inspired by the following diagram from @DHowett:
![figure 1](data-mockup-002.png)
![figure 1](data-mockup.png)
The goal is to introduce an `id` parameter by which actions could be uniquely
referred to. If we'd ever like to use an action outside the list of `actions`, we
@@ -36,54 +36,38 @@ Discussion with the team lead to the understanding that the name `actions` would
be even better, as a way of making the meaning of the "list of actions" more
obvious.
We will then restructure `defaults.json`, and also users' settings files (via `fixUpUserSettings`), in the following manner:
* Instead of each `command` json block containing both the `action` (along with additional arguments) and the `keys`, these will now be split up -
* There will now be one json block for just the `command`/`action`, which will also contain the `id`. These json blocks will be in their own list called `actions`.
* There will be another json block for the `keys`, which will refer to the action to be invoked by `id`. These json blocks will be in their own list called `keybindings`.
For example, let's take a look at the `split pane right` action in `defaults.json` as we currently have it:
`"actions": [..., { "command": { "action": "splitPane", "split": "right" }, "keys": "alt+shift+plus" }, ...]`
This will now become:
`"actions": [..., { "command": { "action": "splitPane", "split": "right" }, "id": "Terminal.SplitPaneRight" }, ...]`
`"keybindings": [..., { "keys": "alt+shift+plus", "id": "Terminal.SplitPaneRight" }, ...]`
Here is how we will parse settings file and construct the relevant settings model objects:
* We will first scan the `actions` list. We'll
When we're parsing `actions`, we'll make three passes:
* The first pass will scan the list for objects with an `id` property. We'll
attempt to parse those entries into `ActionAndArgs` which we'll store in the
global `id->ActionAndArgs` map. All actions defined in `defaults.json` must have an `id` specified, and all actions provided by fragments must also have `id`s. Any actions from the defaults or fragments that do not provide `id`s will be ignored. As for user-specified commands, if no `id` is set, we will auto-generate one for that command based on the action and any additional arguments. For example, the `split pane right` command above might result in an autogenerated id `User.SplitPaneRight`.
* Note: this step is also where we will generate _commands_. We will use the name provided in the entry if it's set or the action's `GenerateName` method.
* Next we will scan the `keybindings` list. These entries will
create a `KeyChord->ActionAndArgs` entry in the keybindings map. Since these objects should all contain an `id`, we will simply use the `id->ActionAndArgs` map we created in the previous step. Any object with `keys` set but no `id` will be ignored.
global `id->ActionAndArgs` map. If any entry doesn't have an `id` set, we'll
skip it in this phase. If an entry doesn't have a `command` set, we'll ignore
it in this pass.
* The second pass will scan for _keybindings_. Any entries with `keys` set will
create a `KeyChord->ActionAndArgs` entry in the keybindings map. If the entry
has an `id` set, then we'll simply re-use the action we've already parsed for
the `id`, from the action map. If there isn't an `id`, then we'll parse the
action manually at this time. Entries without a `keys` set will be ignored in
this pass.
* The final pass will be to generate _commands_. Similar to the keybindings
pass, we'll attempt to lookup actions for entries with an `id` set. If there
isn't an `id`, then we'll parse the action manually at this time. We'll then
get the name for the entry, either from the `name` property if it's set, or
the action's `GenerateName` method.
For a visual representation:
For a visual representation, let's assume the user has the following in their
`actions`:
![figure 2](data-mockup-actions-ids-keys-maps.png)
![figure 2](data-mockup-actions.png)
### Nested actions
We'll first parse the `actions` to generate the mapping of `id`->`Actions`:
We allow certain actions that take a form like this:
![figure 3](data-mockup-actions-and-ids.png)
```
{
// Select color scheme...
"name": { "key": "SetColorSchemeParentCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "schemes",
"name": "${scheme.name}",
"command": { "action": "setColorScheme", "colorScheme": "${scheme.name}" }
}
]
}
```
Then, we'll parse the `actions` to generate the mapping of keys to actions, with
some actions already being defined in the map of `id`->`Actions`:
For this case, having an `id` on the top level could potentially make sense when it comes to using that `id` in a menu, but not in the case of using that `id` for a keybinding. For the initial implementation, we will not support an `id` for these types of actions, which leaves us open to revisiting this in the future.
![figure 4](data-mockup-actions-and-ids-and-keys.png)
### Layering
When layering `actions`, if a later settings file contains an action with the
same `id`, it will replace the current value. In this way, users can redefine
@@ -103,9 +87,6 @@ As we add additional menus to the Terminal, like the customization for the new
tab dropdown, or the tab context menu, or the `TermControl` context menu, they
could all refer to these actions by `id`, rather than duplicating the same json.
As for fragments, all actions in fragments _must_ have an `id`. If a fragment provides an action without an `id`, or provides an `id` that clashes with one of the actions in `defaults.json`, that action will be ignored.
> 👉 NOTE: This will mean that actions will now need an `OriginTag`, similar to profiles and color schemes
### Existing Scenarios
@@ -234,8 +215,8 @@ actions manually.
the tab context menu or the control context menu.
<!-- Footnotes -->
[Command Palette Spec]: ./doc/specs/%232046%20-%20Command%20Palette.md
[New Tab Menu Customization Spec]: ./doc/specs/%231571%20-%20New%20Tab%20Menu%20Customization.md
[Command Palette Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%232046%20-%20Command%20Palette.md
[New Tab Menu Customization Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%231571%20-%20New%20Tab%20Menu%20Customization.md
[#1571]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1571
[#1912]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1912

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---
author: Dustin Howett @DHowett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
created on: 2020-08-16
last updated: 2023-12-12
issue id: "#7335"
---
# Console Allocation Policy
## Abstract
Due to the design of the console subsystem on Windows as it has existed since Windows 95, every application that is
stamped with the `IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_CUI` subsystem in its PE header will be allocated a console by kernel32.
Any application that is stamped `IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_GUI` will not automatically be allocated a console.
This has worked fine for many years: when you double-click a console application in your GUI shell, it is allocated a
console. When you run a GUI application from your console shell, it is **not** allocated a console. The shell will
**not** wait for it to exit before returning you to a prompt.
There is a large class of applications that do not fit neatly into this mold. Take Python, Ruby, Perl, Lua, or even
VBScript: These languages are not relegated to running in a console session; they can be used to write fully-fledged GUI
applications like any other language.
Because their interpreters are console subsystem applications, however, any user double-clicking a shortcut to a Python
or Perl application will be presented with a console window that the language runtime may choose to garbage collect, or
may choose not to.
If the runtime chooses to hide the window, there will still be a brief period during which that window is visible. It is
inescapable.
Likewise, any user running that GUI application from a console shell will see their shell hang until the application
terminates.
All of these scripting languages worked around this by shipping two binaries each, identical in every way expect in
their subsystem fields. python/pythonw, perl/perlw, ruby/rubyw, wscript/cscript.
PowerShell[^1] is waiting to deal with this problem because they don't necessarily want to ship a `pwshw.exe` for all
of their GUI-only authors. Every additional `*w` version of an application is an additional maintenance burden and
source of cognitive overhead[^2] for users.
On the other side, you have mostly-GUI applications that want to print output to a console **if there is one
connected**.
These applications are still primarily GUI-driven, but they might support arguments like `/?` or `--help`. They only
need a console when they need to print out some text. Sometimes they'll allocate their own console (which opens a new
window) to display in, and sometimes they'll reattach to the originating console. VSCode does the latter, and so when
you run `code` from CMD, and then `exit` CMD, your console window sticks around because VSCode is still attached to it.
It will never print anything, and your only option is to close it.
There's another risk in reattaching, too. Given that the shell decides whether to wait based on the subsystem
field, GUI subsystem applications that reattach to their owning consoles *just to print some text* end up stomping on
the output of any shell that doesn't wait for them:
```
C:\> application --help
application - the interesting application
C:\> Usage: application [OPTIONS] ...
```
> _(the prompt is interleaved with the output)_
## Solution Design
I propose that we introduce a fusion manifest field, **consoleAllocationPolicy**, with the following values:
* _absent_
* `detached`
This field allows an application to disable the automatic allocation of a console, regardless of the [process creation flags]
passed to [`CreateProcess`] and its subsystem value.
It would look (roughly) like this:
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<assembly xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1" manifestVersion="1.0">
<application>
<windowsSettings>
<consoleAllocationPolicy xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/SMI/2024/WindowsSettings">detached</consoleAllocationPolicy>
</windowsSettings>
</application>
</assembly>
```
The effects of this field will only apply to binaries in the `IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_CUI` subsystem, as it pertains to
the particulars of their console allocation.
**All console inheritance will proceed as normal.** Since this field takes effect only in the absence of console
inheritance, CUI applications will still be able to run inside an existing console session.
| policy | behavior |
| - | - |
| _absent_ | _default behavior_ |
| `detached` | The new process is not attached to a console session (similar to `DETACHED_PROCESS`) unless one was inherited. |
An application that specifies the `detached` allocation policy will _not_ present a console window when launched by
Explorer, Task Scheduler, etc.
### Interaction with existing APIs
[`CreateProcess`] supports a number of [process creation flags] that dictate how a spawned application will behave with
regards to console allocation:
* `DETACHED_PROCESS`: No console inheritance, no console host spawned for the new process.
* `CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE`: No console inheritance, new console host **is** spawned for the new process.
* `CREATE_NO_WINDOW`: No console inheritance, new console host **is** spawned for the new process.
* this is the same as `CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE`, except that the first connection packet specifies that the window should
be invisible
Due to the design of [`CreateProcess`] and `ShellExecute`, this specification recommends that an allocation policy of
`detached` _override_ the inclusion of `CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE` in the `dwFlags` parameter to [`CreateProcess`].
> **Note**
> `ShellExecute` passes `CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE` _by default_ on all invocations. This impacts our ability to resolve the
> conflicts between these two APIs--`detached` policy and `CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE`--without auditing every call site in
> every Windows application that calls `ShellExecute` on a console application. Doing so is infeasible.
### Application impact
An application that opts into the `detached` console allocation policy will **not** be allocated a console unless one is
inherited. This presents an issue for applications like PowerShell that do want a console window when they are launched
directly.
Applications in this category can call `AllocConsole()` early in their startup to get fine-grained control over when a
console is presented.
The call to `AllocConsole()` will fail safely if the application has already inherited a console handle. It will succeed
if the application does not currently have a console handle.
> **Note**
> **Backwards Compatibility**: The behavior of `AllocConsole()` is not changing in response to this specification;
> therefore, applications that intend to run on older versions of Windows that do not support console allocation
> policies, which call `AllocConsole()`, will continue to behave normally.
### New APIs
Because a console-subsystem application may still want fine-grained control over when and how its console window is
spawned, we propose the inclusion of a new API, `AllocConsoleWithOptions(PALLOC_CONSOLE_OPTIONS)`.
#### `AllocConsoleWithOptions`
```c++
// Console Allocation Modes
typedef enum ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE {
ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_DEFAULT = 0,
ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_NEW_WINDOW = 1,
ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_NO_WINDOW = 2
} ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE;
typedef enum ALLOC_CONSOLE_RESULT {
ALLOC_CONSOLE_RESULT_NO_CONSOLE = 0,
ALLOC_CONSOLE_RESULT_NEW_CONSOLE = 1,
ALLOC_CONSOLE_RESULT_EXISTING_CONSOLE = 2
} ALLOC_CONSOLE_RESULT, *PALLOC_CONSOLE_RESULT;
typedef
struct ALLOC_CONSOLE_OPTIONS
{
ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE mode;
BOOL useShowWindow;
WORD showWindow;
} ALLOC_CONSOLE_OPTIONS, *PALLOC_CONSOLE_OPTIONS;
WINBASEAPI
HRESULT
WINAPI
AllocConsoleWithOptions(_In_opt_ PALLOC_CONSOLE_OPTIONS allocOptions, _Out_opt_ PALLOC_CONSOLE_RESULT result);
```
**AllocConsoleWithOptions** affords an application control over how and when it begins a console session.
> [!NOTE]
> Unlike `AllocConsole`, `AllocConsoleWithOptions` without a mode (`ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_DEFAULT`) will only allocate a console if one was
> requested during `CreateProcess`.
>
> To override this behavior, pass one of `ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_NEW_WINDOW` (which is equivalent to being spawned with
> `CREATE_NEW_WINDOW`) or `ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_NO_WINDOW` (which is equivalent to being spawned with `CREATE_NO_CONSOLE`.)
##### Parameters
**allocOptions**: A pointer to a `ALLOC_CONSOLE_OPTIONS`.
**result**: An optional out pointer, which will be populated with a member of the `ALLOC_CONSOLE_RESULT` enum.
##### `ALLOC_CONSOLE_OPTIONS`
###### Members
**mode**: See the table below for the descriptions of the available modes.
**useShowWindow**: Specifies whether the value in `showWindow` should be used.
**showWindow**: If `useShowWindow` is set, specifies the ["show command"] used to display your
console window.
###### Return Value
`AllocConsoleWithOptions` will return `S_OK` and populate `result` to indicate whether--and how--a console session was
created.
`AllocConsoleWithOptions` will return a failing `HRESULT` if the request could not be completed.
###### Modes
| Mode | Description |
|:-------------------------------:| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| `ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_DEFAULT` | Allocate a console session if (and how) one was requested by the parent process. |
| `ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_NEW_WINDOW` | Allocate a console session with a window, even if this process was created with `CREATE_NO_CONSOLE` or `DETACHED_PROCESS`. |
| `ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_NO_WINDOW` | Allocate a console session _without_ a window, even if this process was created with `CREATE_NEW_WINDOW` or `DETACHED_PROCESS` |
###### Notes
Applications seeking backwards compatibility are encouraged to delay-load `AllocConsoleWithOptions` or check for its presence in
the `api-ms-win-core-console-l1` APISet.
## Inspiration
Fusion manifest entries are used to make application-scoped decisions like this all the time, like `longPathAware` and
`heapType`.
CUI applications that can spawn a UI (or GUI applications that can print to a console) are commonplace on other
platforms because there is no subsystem differentiation.
## UI/UX Design
There is no UI for this feature.
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
This should have no impact on accessibility.
### Security
One reviewer brought up the potential for a malicious actor to spawn an endless stream of headless daemon processes.
This proposal in no way changes the facilities available to malicious people for causing harm: they could have simply
used `IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_GUI` and not presented a UI--an option that has been available to them for 35 years.
### Reliability
This should have no impact on reliability.
### Compatibility
An existing application opting into **detached** may constitute a breaking change, but the scope of the breakage is
restricted to that application and is expected to be managed by the application.
All behavioral changes are opt-in.
> **EXAMPLE**: If Python updates python.exe to specify an allocation policy of **detached**, graphical python applications
> will become double-click runnable from the graphical shell without spawning a console window. _However_, console-based
> python applications will no longer spawn a console window when double-clicked from the graphical shell.
>
> In addition, if python.exe specifies **detached**, Console APIs will fail until a console is allocated.
Python could work around this by calling [`AllocConsole`] or [new API `AllocConsoleWithOptions`](#allocconsolewithoptions)
if it can be detected that console I/O is required.
#### Downlevel
On downlevel versions of Windows that do not understand (or expect) this manifest field, applications will allocate
consoles as specified by their image subsystem (described in the [abstract](#abstract) above).
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
This should have no impact on performance, power or efficiency.
## Potential Issues
### Shell Hang
I am **not** proposing a change in how shells determine whether to wait for an application before returning to a prompt.
This means that a console subsystem application that intends to primarily present a UI but occasionally print text to a
console (therefore choosing the **detached** allocation policy) will cause the shell to "hang" and wait for it to
exit.
The decision to pause/wait is made entirely in the calling shell, and the console subsystem cannot influence that
decision.
Because the vast majority of shells on Windows "hang" by calling `WaitFor...Object` with a HANDLE to the spawned
process, an application that wants to be a "hybrid" CUI/GUI application will be forced to spawn a separate process to
detach from the shell and then terminate its main process.
This is very similar to the forking model seen in many POSIX-compliant operating systems.
### Launching interactively from Explorer, Task Scheduler, etc.
Applications like PowerShell may wish to retain automatic console allocation, and **detached** would be unsuitable for
them. If PowerShell specifies the `detached` console allocation policy, launching `pwsh.exe` from File Explorer it will
no longer spawn a console. This would almost certainly break PowerShell for all users.
Such applications can use `AllocConsole()` early in their startup.
At the same time, PowerShell wants `-WindowStyle Hidden` to suppress the console _before it's created_.
Applications in this category can use `AllocConsoleWithOptions()` to specify additional information about the new console window.
PowerShell, and any other shell that wishes to maintain interactive launch from the graphical shell, can start in
**detached** mode and then allocate a console as necessary. Therefore:
* PowerShell will set `<consoleAllocationPolicy>detached</consoleAllocationPolicy>`
* On startup, it will process its commandline arguments.
* If `-WindowStyle Hidden` is **not** present (the default case), it can:
* `AllocConsole()` or `AllocConsoleWithOptions(NULL)`
* Either of these APIs will present a console window (or not) based on the flags passed through `STARTUPINFO` during
[`CreateProcess`].
* If `-WindowStyle Hidden` is present, it can:
* `AllocConsoleWithOptions(&alloc)` where `alloc.mode` specifies `ALLOC_CONSOLE_MODE_HIDDEN`
## Future considerations
We're introducing a new manifest field today -- what if we want to introduce more? Should we have a `consoleSettings`
manifest block?
Are there other allocation policies we need to consider?
## Resources
### Rejected Solutions
- A new PE subsystem, `IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_HYBRID`
- it would behave like **inheritOnly**
- relies on shells to update and check for this
- checking a subsystem doesn't work right with app execution aliases[^3]
- This is not a new problem, but it digs the hole a little deeper.
- requires standardization outside of Microsoft because the PE format is a dependency of the UEFI specification[^4]
- requires coordination between tooling teams both within and without Microsoft (regarding any tool that operates on
or produces PE files)
- An exported symbol that shells can check for to determine whether to wait for the attached process to exit
- relies on shells to update and check for this
- cracking an executable to look for symbols is probably the last thing shells want to do
- we could provide an API to determine whether to wait or return?
- fragile, somewhat silly, exporting symbols from EXEs is annoying and uncommon
An earlier version of this specification offered the **always** allocation policy, with the following behaviors:
> **STRUCK FROM SPECIFICATION**
>
> * A GUI subsystem application would always get a console window.
> * A command-line shell would not wait for it to exit before returning a prompt.
It was cut because a GUI application that wants a console window can simply attach to an existing console session or
allocate a new one. We found no compelling use case that would require the forced allocation of a console session
outside of the application's code.
An earlier version of this specification offered the **inheritOnly** allocation policy, instead of the finer-grained
**hidden** and **detached** policies. We deemed it insufficient for PowerShell's use case because any application
launched by an **inheritOnly** PowerShell would immediately force the uncontrolled allocation of a console window.
> **STRUCK FROM SPECIFICATION**
>
> The move to **hidden** allows PowerShell to offer a fully-fledged console connection that can be itself inherited by a
> downstream application.
#### Additional allocation policies
An earlier revision of this specification suggested two allocation policies:
> **STRUCK FROM SPECIFICATION**
>
> **hidden** is intended to be used by console applications that want finer-grained control over the visibility of their
> console windows, but that still need a console host to service console APIs. This includes most scripting language
> interpreters.
>
> **detached** is intended to be used by primarily graphical applications that would like to operate against a console _if
> one is present_ but do not mind its absence. This includes any graphical tool with a `--help` or `/?` argument.
The `hidden` policy was rejected due to an incompatibility with modern console hosting, as `hidden` would require an
application to interact with the console window via `GetConsoleWindow()` and explicitly show it.
> **STRUCK FROM SPECIFICATION**
>
> ##### ShowWindow and ConPTY
>
> The pseudoconsole creates a hidden window to service `GetConsoleWindow()`, and it can be trivially shown using
> `ShowWindow`. If we recommend that applications `ShowWindow` on startup, we will need to guard the pseudoconsole's
> pseudo-window from being shown.
[^1]: [Powershell -WindowStyle Hidden still shows a window briefly]
[^2]: [StackOverflow: pythonw.exe or python.exe?]
[^3]: [PowerShell: Windows Store applications incorrectly assumed to be console applications]
[^4]: [UEFI spec 2.6 appendix Q.1]
[Powershell -WindowStyle Hidden still shows a window briefly]: https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/issues/3028
[PowerShell: Windows Store applications incorrectly assumed to be console applications]: https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/issues/9970
[StackOverflow: pythonw.exe or python.exe?]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9705982/pythonw-exe-or-python-exe
[UEFI spec 2.6 appendix Q.1]: https://www.uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/UEFI%20Spec%202_6.pdf
[`AllocConsole`]: https://docs.microsoft.com/windows/console/allocconsole
[`CreateProcess`]: https://docs.microsoft.com/windows/win32/api/processthreadsapi/nf-processthreadsapi-createprocessw
[process creation flags]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/procthread/process-creation-flags
["show command"]: https://learn.microsoft.com/windows/win32/api/winuser/nf-winuser-showwindow

View File

@@ -290,7 +290,7 @@ though. **I recommend we ignore this for now, and leave this as a follow-up**.
For reference, refer to the following from iTerm2:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2578976/64075757-fa971980-ccee-11e9-9e44-47aaf3bca76c.png)
We don't have a menu bar like on macOS, but we do have a tab context menu. We
We don't have a menu bar like on MacOS, but we do have a tab context menu. We
could add these items as a nested entry under each tab. If we wanted to do this,
we should also make sure to dynamically change the icon of the MenuItem to
reflect the current broadcast state.

View File

@@ -373,7 +373,7 @@ changes, or the active pane in a tab changes:
`TabRowControl` to match.
The `tab.cornerRadius` might be a bit trickier to implement. Currently, there's
no XAML resource that controls this, nor is this something that's exposed by
not a XAML resource that controls this, nor is this something that's exposed by
the TabView control. Fortunately, this is something that's exposed to us
programmatically. We'll need to manually set that value on each `TabViewItem` as
we create new tabs. When we reload settings, we'll need to make sure to come

View File

@@ -142,4 +142,4 @@ Feature Notes:
[#4472]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4472
[#8048]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/8048
[Terminal 2022 Roadmap]: ./roadmap-2022.md
[Terminal 2022 Roadmap]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/tree/main/doc/roadmap-2022.md

View File

@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@
#define HAVE_AVX512
#endif
#if defined(X86_OR_X64) && !defined(_M_ARM64EC)
#if defined(X86_OR_X64)
/* MSVC compatible compilers (Windows) */
#if defined(_MSC_VER)
/* clang-cl (LLVM 10 from 2020) requires /arch:AVX2 or

View File

@@ -1,23 +0,0 @@
// Demo shader to show passing in an image using
// experimental.pixelShaderImagePath. This shader simply displays the Terminal
// contents on top of the given image.
//
// The image loaded by the terminal will be placed into the `image` texture.
SamplerState samplerState;
Texture2D shaderTexture : register(t0);
Texture2D image : register(t1);
cbuffer PixelShaderSettings {
float Time;
float Scale;
float2 Resolution;
float4 Background;
};
float4 main(float4 pos : SV_POSITION, float2 tex : TEXCOORD) : SV_TARGET
{
float4 terminalColor = shaderTexture.Sample(samplerState, tex);
float4 imageColor = image.Sample(samplerState, tex);
return lerp(imageColor, terminalColor, terminalColor.a);
}

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
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<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>Eine Scratch-App für XAML Islands-Tests</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

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Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
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Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
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View File

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... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>Une application de travail pour les tests XAML Islands</value>
</data>
</root>

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@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>Un'app scratch per i test delle isole XAML</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>XAML Islands テスト用のスクラッチ アプリ</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>XAML Islands 테스트용 스크래치 앱</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>Um aplicativo temporário para testes de Ilhas XAML</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>А şςѓάţćћ ǻрр ƒθŗ χÂΜĿ Íŝĺąήðş ŧеšτş !!! !!! !!! !</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>Ă šςґаτćĥ àρφ ƒǿя ЖΆΜĹ Іѕℓаñďş ťêšţŝ !!! !!! !!! !</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>Ă śćяǻт¢н ãрρ ƒσг ХĂМĽ Īşłдήďѕ ťέśτş !!! !!! !!! !</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>Вспомогательное приложение для тестов XAML Islands</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>用于 XAML 群岛测试的临时应用</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<data name="AppDescription" xml:space="preserve">
<value>進行 XAML Islands 測試的草稿應用程式</value>
</data>
</root>

View File

@@ -31,12 +31,9 @@ namespace winrt::SampleApp::implementation
auto connectionSettings{ TerminalConnection::ConptyConnection::CreateSettings(L"cmd.exe /k echo This TermControl is hosted in-proc...",
winrt::hstring{},
L"",
false,
L"",
nullptr,
32,
80,
winrt::guid(),
winrt::guid()) };
// "Microsoft.Terminal.TerminalConnection.ConptyConnection"

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<!--
Microsoft ResX Schema
Version 2.0
The primary goals of this format is to allow a simple XML format
that is mostly human readable. The generation and parsing of the
various data types are done through the TypeConverter classes
associated with the data types.
Example:
... ado.net/XML headers & schema ...
<resheader name="resmimetype">text/microsoft-resx</resheader>
<resheader name="version">2.0</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, ...</resheader>
<data name="Name1"><value>this is my long string</value><comment>this is a comment</comment></data>
<data name="Color1" type="System.Drawing.Color, System.Drawing">Blue</data>
<data name="Bitmap1" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded serialized .NET Framework object]</value>
</data>
<data name="Icon1" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing" mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>[base64 mime encoded string representing a byte array form of the .NET Framework object]</value>
<comment>This is a comment</comment>
</data>
There are any number of "resheader" rows that contain simple
name/value pairs.
Each data row contains a name, and value. The row also contains a
type or mimetype. Type corresponds to a .NET class that support
text/value conversion through the TypeConverter architecture.
Classes that don't support this are serialized and stored with the
mimetype set.
The mimetype is used for serialized objects, and tells the
ResXResourceReader how to depersist the object. This is currently not
extensible. For a given mimetype the value must be set accordingly:
Note - application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64 is the format
that the ResXResourceWriter will generate, however the reader can
read any of the formats listed below.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.binary.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Binary.BinaryFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.soap.base64
value : The object must be serialized with
: System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
mimetype: application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64
value : The object must be serialized into a byte array
: using a System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
: and then encoded with base64 encoding.
-->
<xsd:schema id="root" xmlns="" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:msdata="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-msdata">
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" />
<xsd:element name="root" msdata:IsDataSet="true">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element name="metadata">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" use="required" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="assembly">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:attribute name="alias" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="data">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:element name="comment" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="2" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="3" />
<xsd:attribute name="mimetype" type="xsd:string" msdata:Ordinal="4" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:space" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
<xsd:element name="resheader">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="value" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" msdata:Ordinal="1" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
<resheader name="resmimetype">
<value>text/microsoft-resx</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="version">
<value>2.0</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="reader">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
<resheader name="writer">
<value>System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089</value>
</resheader>
</root>

View File

@@ -92,35 +92,47 @@ CharToColumnMapper::CharToColumnMapper(const wchar_t* chars, const uint16_t* cha
// If given a position (`offset`) inside the ROW's text, this function will return the corresponding column.
// This function in particular returns the glyph's first column.
til::CoordType CharToColumnMapper::GetLeadingColumnAt(ptrdiff_t targetOffset) noexcept
til::CoordType CharToColumnMapper::GetLeadingColumnAt(ptrdiff_t offset) noexcept
{
targetOffset = clamp(targetOffset, 0, _lastCharOffset);
// This code needs to fulfill two conditions on top of the obvious (a forward/backward search):
// A: We never want to stop on a column that is marked with CharOffsetsTrailer (= "GetLeadingColumn").
// B: With these parameters we always want to stop at currentOffset=4:
// _charOffsets={4, 6}
// currentOffset=4 *OR* 6
// targetOffset=5
// This is because we're being asked for a "LeadingColumn", while the caller gave us the offset of a
// trailing surrogate pair or similar. Returning the column of the leading half is the correct choice.
offset = clamp(offset, 0, _lastCharOffset);
auto col = _currentColumn;
auto currentOffset = _charOffsets[col];
const auto currentOffset = _charOffsets[col];
// A plain forward-search until we find our targetOffset.
// This loop may iterate too far and thus violate our example in condition B, however...
while (targetOffset > (currentOffset & CharOffsetsMask))
// Goal: Move the _currentColumn cursor to a cell which contains the given target offset.
// Depending on where the target offset is we have to either search forward or backward.
if (offset < currentOffset)
{
currentOffset = _charOffsets[++col];
// Backward search.
// Goal: Find the first preceding column where the offset is <= the target offset. This results in the first
// cell that contains our target offset, even if that offset is in the middle of a long grapheme.
//
// We abuse the fact that the trailing half of wide glyphs is marked with CharOffsetsTrailer to our advantage.
// Since they're >0x8000, the `offset < _charOffsets[col]` check will always be true and ensure we iterate over them.
//
// Since _charOffsets cannot contain negative values and because offset has been
// clamped to be positive we naturally exit when reaching the first column.
for (; offset < _charOffsets[col - 1]; --col)
{
}
}
// This backward-search is not just a counter-part to the above, but simultaneously also handles conditions A and B.
// It abuses the fact that columns marked with CharOffsetsTrailer are >0x8000 and targetOffset is always <0x8000.
// This means we skip all "trailer" columns when iterating backwards, and only stop on a non-trailer (= condition A).
// Condition B is fixed simply because we iterate backwards after the forward-search (in that exact order).
while (targetOffset < currentOffset)
else if (offset > currentOffset)
{
currentOffset = _charOffsets[--col];
// Forward search.
// Goal: Find the first subsequent column where the offset is > the target offset.
// We stop 1 column before that however so that the next loop works correctly.
// It's the inverse of the loop above.
//
// Since offset has been clamped to be at most 1 less than the maximum
// _charOffsets value the loop naturally exits before hitting the end.
for (; offset >= (_charOffsets[col + 1] & CharOffsetsMask); ++col)
{
}
// Now that we found the cell that definitely includes this char offset,
// we have to iterate back to the cell's starting column.
for (; WI_IsFlagSet(_charOffsets[col], CharOffsetsTrailer); --col)
{
}
}
_currentColumn = col;
@@ -392,18 +404,6 @@ til::CoordType ROW::AdjustToGlyphStart(til::CoordType column) const noexcept
return _adjustBackward(_clampedColumn(column));
}
// Returns the (exclusive) ending column of the glyph at the given column.
// In other words, if you have 3 wide glyphs
// AA BB CC
// 01 23 45 <-- column
// Examples:
// - `AdjustToGlyphEnd(4)` returns 6.
// - `AdjustToGlyphEnd(3)` returns 4.
til::CoordType ROW::AdjustToGlyphEnd(til::CoordType column) const noexcept
{
return _adjustForward(_clampedColumnInclusive(column));
}
// Routine Description:
// - clears char data in column in row
// Arguments:
@@ -939,10 +939,36 @@ uint16_t ROW::size() const noexcept
return _columnCount;
}
// Routine Description:
// - Retrieves the column that is one after the last non-space character in the row.
til::CoordType ROW::GetLastNonSpaceColumn() const noexcept
til::CoordType ROW::MeasureLeft() const noexcept
{
const auto text = GetText();
const auto beg = text.begin();
const auto end = text.end();
auto it = beg;
for (; it != end; ++it)
{
if (*it != L' ')
{
break;
}
}
return gsl::narrow_cast<til::CoordType>(it - beg);
}
til::CoordType ROW::MeasureRight() const noexcept
{
if (_wrapForced)
{
auto width = _columnCount;
if (_doubleBytePadded)
{
width--;
}
return width;
}
const auto text = GetText();
const auto beg = text.begin();
const auto end = text.end();
@@ -962,42 +988,7 @@ til::CoordType ROW::GetLastNonSpaceColumn() const noexcept
//
// An example: The row is 10 cells wide and `it` points to the second character.
// `it - beg` would return 1, but it's possible it's actually 1 wide glyph and 8 whitespace.
return gsl::narrow_cast<til::CoordType>(GetReadableColumnCount() - (end - it));
}
til::CoordType ROW::MeasureLeft() const noexcept
{
const auto text = GetText();
const auto beg = text.begin();
const auto end = text.end();
auto it = beg;
for (; it != end; ++it)
{
if (*it != L' ')
{
break;
}
}
return gsl::narrow_cast<til::CoordType>(it - beg);
}
// Routine Description:
// - Retrieves the column that is one after the last valid character in the row.
til::CoordType ROW::MeasureRight() const noexcept
{
if (_wrapForced)
{
auto width = _columnCount;
if (_doubleBytePadded)
{
width--;
}
return width;
}
return GetLastNonSpaceColumn();
return gsl::narrow_cast<til::CoordType>(_columnCount - (end - it));
}
bool ROW::ContainsText() const noexcept

View File

@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ struct CharToColumnMapper
{
CharToColumnMapper(const wchar_t* chars, const uint16_t* charOffsets, ptrdiff_t lastCharOffset, til::CoordType currentColumn) noexcept;
til::CoordType GetLeadingColumnAt(ptrdiff_t targetOffset) noexcept;
til::CoordType GetLeadingColumnAt(ptrdiff_t offset) noexcept;
til::CoordType GetTrailingColumnAt(ptrdiff_t offset) noexcept;
til::CoordType GetLeadingColumnAt(const wchar_t* str) noexcept;
til::CoordType GetTrailingColumnAt(const wchar_t* str) noexcept;
@@ -137,7 +137,6 @@ public:
til::CoordType NavigateToPrevious(til::CoordType column) const noexcept;
til::CoordType NavigateToNext(til::CoordType column) const noexcept;
til::CoordType AdjustToGlyphStart(til::CoordType column) const noexcept;
til::CoordType AdjustToGlyphEnd(til::CoordType column) const noexcept;
void ClearCell(til::CoordType column);
OutputCellIterator WriteCells(OutputCellIterator it, til::CoordType columnBegin, std::optional<bool> wrap = std::nullopt, std::optional<til::CoordType> limitRight = std::nullopt);
@@ -152,7 +151,6 @@ public:
TextAttribute GetAttrByColumn(til::CoordType column) const;
std::vector<uint16_t> GetHyperlinks() const;
uint16_t size() const noexcept;
til::CoordType GetLastNonSpaceColumn() const noexcept;
til::CoordType MeasureLeft() const noexcept;
til::CoordType MeasureRight() const noexcept;
bool ContainsText() const noexcept;

View File

@@ -111,28 +111,6 @@ const til::point_span* Search::GetCurrent() const noexcept
return nullptr;
}
void Search::HighlightResults() const
{
std::vector<til::inclusive_rect> toSelect;
const auto& textBuffer = _renderData->GetTextBuffer();
for (const auto& r : _results)
{
const auto rbStart = textBuffer.BufferToScreenPosition(r.start);
const auto rbEnd = textBuffer.BufferToScreenPosition(r.end);
til::inclusive_rect re;
re.top = rbStart.y;
re.bottom = rbEnd.y;
re.left = rbStart.x;
re.right = rbEnd.x;
toSelect.emplace_back(re);
}
_renderData->SelectSearchRegions(std::move(toSelect));
}
// Routine Description:
// - Takes the found word and selects it in the screen buffer
@@ -149,7 +127,6 @@ bool Search::SelectCurrent() const
return true;
}
_renderData->ClearSelection();
return false;
}

View File

@@ -33,7 +33,6 @@ public:
void FindNext() noexcept;
const til::point_span* GetCurrent() const noexcept;
void HighlightResults() const;
bool SelectCurrent() const;
const std::vector<til::point_span>& Results() const noexcept;

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -137,7 +137,6 @@ public:
static size_t GraphemeNext(const std::wstring_view& chars, size_t position) noexcept;
static size_t GraphemePrev(const std::wstring_view& chars, size_t position) noexcept;
static size_t FitTextIntoColumns(const std::wstring_view& chars, til::CoordType columnLimit, til::CoordType& columns) noexcept;
til::point NavigateCursor(til::point position, til::CoordType distance) const;
@@ -194,7 +193,6 @@ public:
til::point BufferToScreenPosition(const til::point position) const;
void Reset() noexcept;
void ClearScrollback(const til::CoordType start, const til::CoordType height);
void ResizeTraditional(const til::size newSize);
@@ -230,94 +228,33 @@ public:
std::wstring GetCustomIdFromId(uint16_t id) const;
void CopyHyperlinkMaps(const TextBuffer& OtherBuffer);
class TextAndColor
{
public:
std::vector<std::wstring> text;
std::vector<std::vector<COLORREF>> FgAttr;
std::vector<std::vector<COLORREF>> BkAttr;
};
size_t SpanLength(const til::point coordStart, const til::point coordEnd) const;
const TextAndColor GetText(const bool includeCRLF,
const bool trimTrailingWhitespace,
const std::vector<til::inclusive_rect>& textRects,
std::function<std::pair<COLORREF, COLORREF>(const TextAttribute&)> GetAttributeColors = nullptr,
const bool formatWrappedRows = false) const;
std::wstring GetPlainText(const til::point& start, const til::point& end) const;
struct CopyRequest
{
// beg and end coordinates are inclusive
til::point beg;
til::point end;
static std::string GenHTML(const TextAndColor& rows,
const int fontHeightPoints,
const std::wstring_view fontFaceName,
const COLORREF backgroundColor);
til::CoordType minX;
til::CoordType maxX;
bool blockSelection = false;
bool trimTrailingWhitespace = true;
bool includeLineBreak = true;
bool formatWrappedRows = false;
// whether beg, end coordinates are in buffer coordinates or screen coordinates
bool bufferCoordinates = false;
CopyRequest() = default;
constexpr CopyRequest(const TextBuffer& buffer, const til::point& beg, const til::point& end, const bool blockSelection, const bool includeLineBreak, const bool trimTrailingWhitespace, const bool formatWrappedRows, const bool bufferCoordinates = false) noexcept :
beg{ std::max(beg, til::point{ 0, 0 }) },
end{ std::min(end, til::point{ buffer._width - 1, buffer._height - 1 }) },
minX{ std::min(this->beg.x, this->end.x) },
maxX{ std::max(this->beg.x, this->end.x) },
blockSelection{ blockSelection },
includeLineBreak{ includeLineBreak },
trimTrailingWhitespace{ trimTrailingWhitespace },
formatWrappedRows{ formatWrappedRows },
bufferCoordinates{ bufferCoordinates }
{
}
static CopyRequest FromConfig(const TextBuffer& buffer,
const til::point& beg,
const til::point& end,
const bool singleLine,
const bool blockSelection,
const bool trimBlockSelection,
const bool bufferCoordinates = false) noexcept
{
return {
buffer,
beg,
end,
blockSelection,
/* includeLineBreak */
// - SingleLine mode collapses all rows into one line, unless we're in
// block selection mode.
// - Block selection should preserve the visual structure by including
// line breaks on all rows (together with `formatWrappedRows`).
// (Selects like a box, pastes like a box)
!singleLine || blockSelection,
/* trimTrailingWhitespace */
// Trim trailing whitespace if we're not in single line mode and — either
// we're not in block selection mode or, we're in block selection mode and
// trimming is allowed.
!singleLine && (!blockSelection || trimBlockSelection),
/* formatWrappedRows */
// In block selection, we should apply formatting to wrapped rows as well.
// (Otherwise, they're only applied to non-wrapped rows.)
blockSelection,
bufferCoordinates
};
}
};
std::wstring GetPlainText(const CopyRequest& req) const;
std::string GenHTML(const CopyRequest& req,
const int fontHeightPoints,
const std::wstring_view fontFaceName,
const COLORREF backgroundColor,
const bool isIntenseBold,
std::function<std::tuple<COLORREF, COLORREF, COLORREF>(const TextAttribute&)> GetAttributeColors) const noexcept;
std::string GenRTF(const CopyRequest& req,
const int fontHeightPoints,
const std::wstring_view fontFaceName,
const COLORREF backgroundColor,
const bool isIntenseBold,
std::function<std::tuple<COLORREF, COLORREF, COLORREF>(const TextAttribute&)> GetAttributeColors) const noexcept;
static std::string GenRTF(const TextAndColor& rows,
const int fontHeightPoints,
const std::wstring_view fontFaceName,
const COLORREF backgroundColor);
struct PositionInformation
{
@@ -365,9 +302,8 @@ private:
til::point _GetWordEndForSelection(const til::point target, const std::wstring_view wordDelimiters) const;
void _PruneHyperlinks();
void _trimMarksOutsideBuffer();
std::tuple<til::CoordType, til::CoordType, bool> _RowCopyHelper(const CopyRequest& req, const til::CoordType iRow, const ROW& row) const;
static void _AppendRTFText(std::string& contentBuilder, const std::wstring_view& text);
static void _AppendRTFText(std::ostringstream& contentBuilder, const std::wstring_view& text);
Microsoft::Console::Render::Renderer& _renderer;

View File

@@ -14,7 +14,6 @@
<ClCompile Include="ReflowTests.cpp" />
<ClCompile Include="TextColorTests.cpp" />
<ClCompile Include="TextAttributeTests.cpp" />
<ClCompile Include="UTextAdapterTests.cpp" />
<ClCompile Include="precomp.cpp">
<PrecompiledHeader>Create</PrecompiledHeader>
</ClCompile>
@@ -42,4 +41,4 @@
<Import Project="$(SolutionDir)src\common.build.post.props" />
<Import Project="$(SolutionDir)src\common.build.tests.props" />
<Import Project="$(SolutionDir)src\common.nugetversions.targets" />
</Project>
</Project>

View File

@@ -1,63 +0,0 @@
// Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation.
// Licensed under the MIT license.
#include "precomp.h"
#include "WexTestClass.h"
#include "../textBuffer.hpp"
#include "../../renderer/inc/DummyRenderer.hpp"
template<>
class WEX::TestExecution::VerifyOutputTraits<std::vector<til::point_span>>
{
public:
static WEX::Common::NoThrowString ToString(const std::vector<til::point_span>& vec)
{
WEX::Common::NoThrowString str;
str.Append(L"{ ");
for (size_t i = 0; i < vec.size(); ++i)
{
const auto& s = vec[i];
if (i != 0)
{
str.Append(L", ");
}
str.AppendFormat(L"{(%d, %d), (%d, %d)}", s.start.x, s.start.y, s.end.x, s.end.y);
}
str.Append(L" }");
return str;
}
};
class UTextAdapterTests
{
TEST_CLASS(UTextAdapterTests);
TEST_METHOD(Unicode)
{
DummyRenderer renderer;
TextBuffer buffer{ til::size{ 24, 1 }, TextAttribute{}, 0, false, renderer };
RowWriteState state{
.text = L"abc 𝒶𝒷𝒸 abc ネコちゃん",
};
buffer.Write(0, TextAttribute{}, state);
VERIFY_IS_TRUE(state.text.empty());
static constexpr auto s = [](til::CoordType beg, til::CoordType end) -> til::point_span {
return { { beg, 0 }, { end, 0 } };
};
auto expected = std::vector{ s(0, 2), s(8, 10) };
auto actual = buffer.SearchText(L"abc", false);
VERIFY_ARE_EQUAL(expected, actual);
expected = std::vector{ s(5, 5) };
actual = buffer.SearchText(L"𝒷", false);
VERIFY_ARE_EQUAL(expected, actual);
expected = std::vector{ s(12, 15) };
actual = buffer.SearchText(L"ネコ", false);
VERIFY_ARE_EQUAL(expected, actual);
}
};

View File

@@ -17,7 +17,6 @@ SOURCES = \
ReflowTests.cpp \
TextColorTests.cpp \
TextAttributeTests.cpp \
UTextAdapterTests.cpp \
DefaultResource.rc \
TARGETLIBS = \

View File

@@ -8,14 +8,13 @@
xmlns:uap3="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10/3"
xmlns:uap4="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10/4"
xmlns:uap5="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10/5"
xmlns:uap17="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10/17"
xmlns:desktop="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/desktop/windows10"
xmlns:desktop4="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/desktop/windows10/4"
xmlns:desktop5="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/desktop/windows10/5"
xmlns:desktop6="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/desktop/windows10/6"
xmlns:rescap="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/foundation/windows10/restrictedcapabilities"
xmlns:virtualization="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/virtualization/windows10"
IgnorableNamespaces="uap mp rescap uap3 uap17 desktop6 virtualization">
IgnorableNamespaces="uap mp rescap uap3 desktop6 virtualization">
<Identity
Name="Microsoft.WindowsTerminalCanary"
@@ -34,13 +33,11 @@
<virtualization:ExcludedKey>HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Console\%%Startup</virtualization:ExcludedKey>
</virtualization:ExcludedKeys>
</virtualization:RegistryWriteVirtualization>
<uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>defer</uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>
</Properties>
<Dependencies>
<!-- rescap:appLicensing only works on 22000+. Until that's fixed, MinVersion will not let people install it on Windows 10... -->
<TargetDeviceFamily Name="Windows.Desktop" MinVersion="10.0.22000.0" MaxVersionTested="10.0.22621.0" />
<TargetDeviceFamily Name="Windows.DesktopServer" MinVersion="10.0.22000.0" MaxVersionTested="10.0.22621.0" />
</Dependencies>
<Resources>
@@ -94,7 +91,7 @@
Description="Console host built from microsoft/terminal open source repository"
PublicFolder="Public">
<uap3:Properties>
<Clsid>{A854D02A-F2FE-44A5-BB24-D03F4CF830D4}</Clsid>
<Clsid>{1F9F2BF5-5BC3-4F17-B0E6-912413F1F451}</Clsid>
</uap3:Properties>
</uap3:AppExtension>
</uap3:Extension>
@@ -105,7 +102,7 @@
Description="Terminal host built from microsoft/terminal open source repository"
PublicFolder="Public">
<uap3:Properties>
<Clsid>{1706609C-A4CE-4C0D-B7D2-C19BF66398A5}</Clsid>
<Clsid>{051F34EE-C1FD-4B19-AF75-9BA54648434C}</Clsid>
</uap3:Properties>
</uap3:AppExtension>
</uap3:Extension>

View File

@@ -7,7 +7,6 @@
xmlns:uap="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10"
xmlns:uap3="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10/3"
xmlns:uap4="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10/4"
xmlns:uap17="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10/17"
xmlns:desktop="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/desktop/windows10"
xmlns:desktop4="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/desktop/windows10/4"
xmlns:desktop5="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/desktop/windows10/5"
@@ -15,7 +14,7 @@
xmlns:rescap="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/foundation/windows10/restrictedcapabilities"
xmlns:virtualization="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/virtualization/windows10"
xmlns:uap5="http://schemas.microsoft.com/appx/manifest/uap/windows10/5"
IgnorableNamespaces="uap mp rescap uap3 uap17 desktop6 virtualization">
IgnorableNamespaces="uap mp rescap uap3 desktop6 virtualization">
<Identity
Name="WindowsTerminalDev"
@@ -34,7 +33,6 @@
<virtualization:ExcludedKey>HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Console\%%Startup</virtualization:ExcludedKey>
</virtualization:ExcludedKeys>
</virtualization:RegistryWriteVirtualization>
<uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>defer</uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>
</Properties>
<Dependencies>

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