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Author SHA1 Message Date
Dustin L. Howett
b80d0bca5f Migrate spelling-0.0.21 changes from main 2020-08-28 15:55:35 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett
eb4ba30077 Migrate spelling-0.0.19 changes from main 2020-08-28 15:55:35 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
2ee3f61260 draft of changes 2020-08-28 15:55:35 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
d4f7b517b9 good bot 2020-07-22 16:42:26 -04:00
Carlos Zamora
b025ab676b apply feedback from brownbag 2020-07-22 16:37:26 -04:00
Carlos Zamora
59460b8028 minor cleanup; more details on dropdown idea 2020-07-21 13:32:01 -04:00
Carlos Zamora
2a87c4e4f5 address Dustin's PR comments 2020-07-20 16:28:48 -04:00
Carlos Zamora
1ef02752da describe how to export/apply changes from Settings UI 2020-07-20 11:54:21 -04:00
Carlos Zamora
5cb8f6e664 add more details on interacting with settings model 2020-07-17 19:28:17 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
a99f459128 Correctly link issue id 2020-07-17 19:28:17 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
8be5ef5688 Fix TerminalSettings object purpose and definition 2020-07-17 19:28:17 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
707429ef06 Add Spec for winrt TerminalSettings 2020-07-17 19:28:17 -07:00
Mike Griese
d0ff5f6b5e Add support for running a wt commandline in the curent window WITH A KEYBINDING (#6537)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds a execute commandline action (`wt`), which lets a user bind a key to a specific `wt` commandline. This commandline will get parsed and run _in the current window_. 

## References

* Related to #4472 
* Related to #5400 - I need this for the commandline mode of the Command Palette
* Related to #5970

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes oh, there's not actually an issue for this.
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - yes it does

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

One important part of this change concerns how panes are initialized at runtime. We've had some persistent trouble with initializing multiple panes, because they rely on knowing how big they'll actually be, to be able to determine if they can split again. 

We previously worked around this by ignoring the size check when we were in "startup", processing an initial commandline. This PR however requires us to be able to know the initial size of a pane at runtime, but before the parents have necessarily been added to the tree, or had their renderer's set up.

This led to the development of `Pane::PreCalculateCanSplit`, which is very highly similar to `Pane::PreCalculateAutoSplit`. This method attempts to figure out how big a pane _will_ take, before the parent has necessarily laid out. 

This also involves a small change to `TermControl`, because if its renderer hasn't been set up yet, it'll always think the font is `{0, fontHeight}`, which will let the Terminal keep splitting in the x direction. This change also makes the TermControl set up a renderer to get the real font size when it hasn't yet been initialized.

## Validation Steps Performed

This was what the json blob I was using for testing evolved into

```json
        {
            "command": {
                "action":"wt",
                "commandline": "new-tab cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k media-commandline ; new-tab powershell dev\\symbols.ps1 ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ; new-tab -p \"haunter.gif\" ; focus-tab -t 0",

            },
            "keys": ["ctrl+shift+n"]
        }
```

I also added some tests.

# TODO
* [x] Creating a `{ "command": "wt" }` action without a commandline will spawn a new `wt.exe` process?
  - Probably should just do nothing for the empty string
2020-07-17 21:05:29 +00:00
Michael Niksa
3a91fc0ab4 Skip DX invalidation if we've already scrolled an entire screen worth of height (#6922)
We spend a lot of time invalidating in the DX Renderer. This is a
creative trick to not bother invalidating any further if we can tell
that the bitmap is already completely invalidated. That is, if we've
scrolled at least an entire screen in height... then the entire bitmap
had to have been marked as invalid as the new areas were "uncovered" by
the `InvalidateScroll` command. So further setting invalid bits on top
of a fully invalid map is pointless. 

Note: I didn't use `bitmap::all()` here because it is significantly
slower to check all the bits than it is to just reason out that the
bitmap was already fully marked.

## Validation Steps Performed
- Run `time cat big.txt`. Checked average time before/after, WPR traces
  before/after.
2020-07-17 19:32:36 +00:00
jtippet
0c3841a8b0 Add gutter to Command Palette to avoid overlapping with scrollbar (#6965)
The command palette has some content that can overlap with its
scrollbar.  This PR adds a 16px gutter for the scrollbar, as recommended
[here](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/uwp/design/controls-and-patterns/scroll-controls#:~:text=leave%2016px%20of%20padding%20on%20the%20edge%20of%20the%20viewport).

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
You can repro the overlap in the default configuration by grabbing the
scrollbar with the mouse pointer.  But there's an accessibility option
that makes this more obvious: Settings > Display > Automatically hide
scroll bars.  With that option enabled, the text is _always_
overlapping.

The gutter does look slightly larger than it needs to be when the
scrollbar is thin or completely hidden.  Dynamic reflow may help, but
unfortunately, I don't know enough XAML to wire that up.  MUX has a
promising visual state named `ScrollBarsSeparatorExpanded`, so the
scientists suggest we _could_, while the designers are still pondering
whether we _should_.

## Validation Steps Performed

Old appearance:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87817879-94d85100-c81e-11ea-956c-ca0e23576fef.png)

New appearance with fat scrollbars:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87817914-a4579a00-c81e-11ea-9e9d-195969e6da95.png)

New appearance with thin scrollbars:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87818061-dff26400-c81e-11ea-866e-088f72276343.png)

New appearance with no scrollbar:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87819674-7758b680-c821-11ea-98b7-dddd1573c242.png)
2020-07-17 19:27:32 +00:00
Michael Niksa
4351f32f5d Commit attr runs less frequently by accumulating length of color run (#6919)
The act of calling `InsertAttrRuns` is relatively slow. Instead of
calling it a bunch of times to meddle with colors one cell at a time,
we'll accumulate a length of color and call it to make it act all at
once. This is great for when one color full line is getting replaced
with another color full line OR when a line is being replaced with the
same color all at once. There's significantly fewer checks to be made
inside `InsertAttrRuns` if we can help it out by accumulating the length
of each color before asking it to stitch it into the storage.

Validation
----------

- Run `time cat big.txt` and `time cat ls.txt` under VS Performance
  Profiler.
2020-07-17 17:53:01 +00:00
Michael Niksa
ea2bd42ff4 Set memory order on slow atomics (#6920)
By default, the memory order on atomics is `seq_cst`. This is a relatively expensive ordering and it shows in situations where we're rapidly signaling a consumer to pick up something from a producer. I've instead attempted to switch these to `release` (producer) and `acquire` (consumer) to improve the performance of these signals. 

## Validation Steps Performed
- Run `time cat big.txt` and `time cat ls.txt` under VS Performance Profiler. 

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes perf itch
* [x] I work here
* [x] Manual test
* [x] Documentation irrelevant.
* [x] Schema irrelevant.
* [x] Am core contributor.
2020-07-17 17:11:45 +00:00
Dan Thompson
1f8264d86b Tweaks: normalize TextAttribute method names (adjective form) (#6951)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Text can have various attributes, such as "bold", "italic", "underlined", etc.  The TextAttribute class embodies this. It has methods to set/query these attributes.

This change tweaks a few of the method names to make them match. I.e. for an imaginary text property "Foo", we should have methods along the lines of:

```
IsFoo
SetFoo(bool isFoo)
```

And variations should match: we should have "Foo" and "OverFoo", not "Fooey" and "OverFoo".

I chose to standardize on the adjective form, since that's what we are closest to already. The attributes I attacked here are:

SetItalic**s** --> SetItalic
SetUnderline --> SetUnderline**d**
SetOverline --> SetOverline**d**

("italic" is an adjective; "italics" is a plural noun, representing letters or words in an italic typeface)

And I also added methods for "DoublyUnderlined" for good measure.

I stopped short of renaming the GraphicsOptions enum values to match, too; but I'd be willing to do that in a follow-up change if people wanted it.

## Validation Steps Performed
It builds, and tests still pass.
2020-07-17 15:50:23 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
efb1fddb99 Convert most of our JSON deserializers to use type-based conversion (#6590)
This pull request converts the following JSON deserializers to use the
new JSON deserializer pattern:

* Profile
* Command
* ColorScheme
* Action/Args
* GlobalSettings
* CascadiaSettingsSerialization

This is the completion of a long-term JSON refactoring that makes our
parser and deserializer more type-safe and robust. We're finally able to
get rid of all our manual enum conversion code and unify JSON conversion
around _types_ instead of around _keys_.

I've introduced another file filled with template specializations,
TerminalSettingsSerializationHelpers.h, which comprises a single unit
that holds all of the JSON deserializers (and eventually serializers)
for every type that comes from TerminalApp or TerminalSettings.

I've also moved some types out of Profile and GlobalAppSettings into a
new SettingsTypes.h to improve settings locality.

This does to some extent constitute a breaking change for already-broken
settings. Instead of parsing "successfully" (where invalid values are
null or 0 or unknown or unset), deserialization will now fail when
there's a type mismatch. Because of that, some tests had to be removed.

While I was on a refactoring spree, I removed a number of helpless
helpers, like GetWstringFromJson (which converted a u8 string to an
hstring to make a wstring out of its data pointer :|) and
_ConvertJsonToBool.

In the future, we can make the error types more robust and give them
position and type information such that a conformant application can
display rich error information ("line 3 column 3, I expected a string,
you gave me an integer").

Closes #2550.
2020-07-17 01:31:09 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
7bc5de613c version: bump to 1.3 on master 2020-07-16 18:18:33 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett
bcbe246a93 Update Cascadia Code to 2007.15 (#6958) 2020-07-16 18:14:57 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett
03e25f12e9 Move to the TerminalDependencies NuGet feed (#6954)
After we stood up our own NuGet feed in Azure blob storage, Azure DevOps
came out with a public artifact feed feature. I've migrated all our
packages over, and the only thing left to do is switch our project's
NuGet config to use it.

Fixes #6952
2020-07-16 17:33:23 -07:00
jtippet
7062a830b8 Smooth animation of command palette filtering (#6939)
The command palette is a ListView of commands.  As you type into the
search box, commands are added or removed from the ListView.  Currently,
each update is done by completely clearing the backing list, then adding
back any items that should be displayed.  However, this defeats the
ListView's built-in animations: upon every keystroke, ListView displays
its list-clearing animation, then animates the insertion of every item
that wasn't deleted.  This results in noticeable flickering.

This PR changes the update logic so that it updates the list using
(roughly) the minimum number of Insert and Remove calls, so the ListView
makes smoother transitions as you type.

I implemented it by keeping the existing code that builds the filtered
list, but I changed it to build into a scratch list.  Then I grafted on
a generic delta algorithm to make the real list look like the scratch
list.

To verify the delta algorithm, I tested all 360,000 permutations of
pairs of up to 5 element lists in a toy C# app.

## Validation
I'm not sure if my screen capture tool really caught all the flickering
here, but the screencasts below should give a rough idea of the
difference.  (All the flickering was becoming a nuisance while I was
testing out the HC changes.)

See the images in #6939 for more info.

Co-authored-by: Jeffrey Tippet <jtippet@microsoft.com>
2020-07-16 17:33:03 -07:00
Dan Thompson
53df6c7f96 Fix 'bcz exclusive' typo (#6938)
Without this fix, you'd end up with an empty target variable, and so
msbuild would complain and tell you to give it a target.
2020-07-16 16:58:48 -07:00
Michael Niksa
81b7e54659 Cache the viewport to make invalidation faster (#6918)
In `Renderer::TriggerRedraw`, the act of fetching the viewport from the
`pData` over and over is wasted time. We already have a cached variable
of the viewport that is updated on every scroll check (on
`TriggerScroll` and on `PaintFrame`.) Scrolling wouldn't be working
correctly if the clients weren't already notifying us that the viewport
has changed for scroll purposes, so we can just keep using that cached
value for the invalidation restriction to speed things up over fetching
it again.

## Validation Steps Performed
- Run `time cat big.txt`. Checked average time before/after, WPR traces
  before/after.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes perf itch
* [x] I work here
* [x] Manual test
* [x] Documentation irrelevant.
* [x] Schema irrelevant.
* [x] Am core contributor.
2020-07-16 21:46:10 +00:00
Michael Niksa
3255177dd0 Correct comment in this SPSC test as a quick follow up to merge. 2020-07-16 13:53:56 -07:00
Leonard Hecker
b62f5ea850 Added til::spsc, a lock-free, single-producer/-consumer FIFO queue (#6751)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR adds the `til::spsc` namespace, which implements a lock-free, single-producer, single-consumer FIFO queue ("channel"). The queue efficiently blocks the caller using Futexes if no data can be written to / read from the queue (e.g. using `WaitOnAddress` on Windows). Furthermore it allows batching of data and contains logic to signal the caller if the other side has been dropped/destructed.

## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated. If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

`til::spsc::details::arc<T>` contains most of the queue's logic and as such has the relevant documentation for its design.

## Validation Steps Performed

The queue was tested on Windows, Linux and macOS using MSVC, gcc and llvm and each of their available runtime introspection utilities in order to ensure no race conditions or memory leaks occur.
2020-07-16 20:49:06 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
09471c3753 Replace gsl::at with a new til::at(span) for pre-checked bounds (#6925)
The recent changes to use gsl::span everywhere added a few bounds checks
along codepaths where we were already checking bounds. Some of them may
be non-obvious to the optimizer, so we can now use til::at to help them
along.

To accomplish this, I've added a new overload of til::at that takes a
span and directly accesses its backing buffer.
2020-07-15 10:29:36 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett
80da24ecf8 Replace basic_string_view<T> with span<const T> (#6921)
We were using std::basic_string_view as a stand-in for std::span so that
we could change over all at once when C++20 dropped with full span
support. That day's not here yet, but as of 54a7fce3e we're using GSL 3,
whose span is C++20-compliant.

This commit replaces every instance of basic_string_view that was not
referring to an actual string with a span of the appropriate type.

I moved the `const` qualifier into span's `T` because while
`basic_string_view.at()` returns `const T&`, `span.at()` returns `T&`
(without the const). I wanted to maintain the invariant that members of
the span were immutable.

* Mechanical Changes
   * `sv.at(x)` -> `gsl::at(sp, x)`
   * `sv.c{begin,end}` -> `sp.{begin,end}` (span's iterators are const)

I had to replace a `std::basic_string<>` with a `std::vector<>` in
ConImeInfo, and I chose to replace a manual array walk in
ScreenInfoUiaProviderBase with a ranged-for. Please review those
specifically.

This will almost certainly cause a code size regression in Windows
because I'm blowing out all the PGO counts. Whoops.

Related: #3956, #975.
2020-07-15 16:40:42 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
4715bf5525 Replace the color table init code with two const arrays (#6913)
This results in smaller code and faster copying. I chose til::color even
though it results in slightly worse codegen (byteswapping in a tight
loop) than COLORREF (SSE-enlightened block copy) because eventually the
internal representations of the color tables will also be til::color and
_then_ it will become a block copy.
2020-07-15 15:53:38 +00:00
jtippet
bd93cb5e8a Add High Contrast image assets (#6915)
This commit adds image assets for High Contrast mode

Tagging this issue so it contains a nice list of all the recent HC
fixes: #5360

I made several changes to DHowett's script and added it to the repo:
* Add support for generating high contrast icons
* Add the ability to easily edit the "intermediate" (previously "zbase")
  files for manual hinting
* Appease the spellchecker

I created new SVGs for HC mode. There's one SVG for both Black and White
modes -- I just invert the colors. Then I manually hinted the generated
bitmaps for the production icons. I didn't bother hinting the Dev/Pre
ones, so the text does get unreadable at small sizes.

View the original images in #6915.

Co-authored-by: Jeffrey Tippet <jtippet@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Dustin L. Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
Closes #6822
2020-07-14 14:45:30 -07:00
Mike Griese
3b2ee448f9 Add support for "Always on top" mode (#6903)
This PR adds support for always on top mode, via two mechanisms:
* The global setting `alwaysOnTop`. When set to true, the window will be
  created in the "topmost" group of windows.  Changing this value will
  hot-reload whether the window is in the topmost group.
* The action `toggleAlwaysOnTop`, which will toggle the `alwaysOnTop`
  property at runtime.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

All "topmost" windows maintain an internal z-ordering relative to one
another, but they're all always above all other "non-topmost" windows.
So multiple Windows Terminal windows which are both `alwaysOnTop` will
maintain a z-order relative to one another, but they'll all be on top of
all other windows.

## Validation Steps Performed

Toggled always on top mode, both in the settings and also at runtime,
and verified that it largely did what I expected.

Closes #3038
2020-07-14 21:02:18 +00:00
Mike Griese
445da4bae4 wt.exe: Add support for "short" sub-commands (#6576)
This adds `nt`, `sp`, and `ft` as aliases for `new-tab`, `split-pane`,
and `focus-tab`, respectively. These do exactly the same thing as their
long for counterparts, but are just shorter, for those of us who type
slower than a fifth grader 👀 

Now you can do
```
wt nt cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; sp cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; sp cmd.exe /k
media-commandline ; nt powershell dev\\symbols.ps1 ; nt -p \"Ubuntu\" ;
nt -p \"Ubuntu\" ; ft -t 0
``` 

instead of 

```
new-tab cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k #work 15 ;
split-pane cmd.exe /k media-commandline ; new-tab powershell
dev\\symbols.ps1 ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ;
focus-tab -t 0
```

The pattern I'm using here is that each of these subcommands now has a
little helper lambda that actually sets up the subcommand with the
required arguments, and we just call that lambda twice, once for the
long-form of the command, and again for the short.

I imagine that in the future, we won't necessarily have short-forms for
every subcommands, so if there are future conflicts we'd have to figure
that out pre-emptively, but these all seem like they'll need a short
form. 

Closes #5466
2020-07-14 18:50:32 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
54a7fce3e0 Move to GSL 3.1.0 (#6908)
GSL 3, the next major version of GSL after the one we're using, replaced
their local implementation of `span` with one that more closely mimics
C++20's span. Unfortunately, that is a breaking change for all of GSL's
consumers.

This commit updates our use of span to comply with the new changes in
GSL 3.

Chief among those breaking changes is:

* `span::at` no longer exists; I replaced many instances of `span::at`
  with `gsl::at(x)`
* `span::size_type` has finally given up on `ptrdiff_t` and become
  `size_t` like all other containers

While I was here, I also made the following mechanical replacements:

* In some of our "early standardized" code, we used std::optional's
  `has_value` and `value` back-to-back. Each `value` incurs an
  additional presence test.
  * Change: `x.value().member` -> `x->member` (`optional::operator->`
    skips the presence test)
  * Change: `x.value()` -> `*x` (as above)
* GSL 3 uses `size_t` for `size_type`.
  * Change: `gsl::narrow<size_t>(x.size())` -> `x.size()`
  * Change: `gsl::narrow<ptrdiff_t>(nonSpan.size())` -> `nonSpan.size()`
    during span construction

I also replaced two instances of `x[x.size() - 1]` with `x.back()` and
one instance of a manual array walk (for comparison) with a direct
comparison.

NOTE: Span comparison and `make_span` are not part of the C++20 span
library.

Fixes #6251
2020-07-14 18:30:59 +00:00
jtippet
ff27fdfed1 Tweak the Palette's KeyChord for High Contrast mode (#6910)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
Update the Palette to be readable under High Contrast mode

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References
Regressed in #6833

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #6892
* [X] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated. If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [X] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #6892

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
I pulled the styling of the KeyChord text into a Style, so we can give it a different style under High Contrast.  Under HC, I just left all the colors at their default, so ListView can do its thing.  (IMHO, the HC style now looks better than the non-HC mode, but maybe I'm biased ;) )

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
| | Old | New |
|---|:---:|:---:|
| Light | ![light](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87398203-6b8f9a80-c56a-11ea-99d0-2eeefcfea269.png) | ![newlight](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87399212-e3aa9000-c56b-11ea-9e94-c8fae8825cd1.png) |
| Dark | ![dark](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87398269-819d5b00-c56a-11ea-9180-5c6ec1071b95.png) | ![newdark](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87399227-ead19e00-c56b-11ea-996d-ad52bc2dcbf3.png) |
| HC White | ![oldwhite](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87398320-92e66780-c56a-11ea-9d52-e2f6e31ae487.png) | ![newwhite](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87398340-98dc4880-c56a-11ea-87e2-ed257ad89c4a.png) |
| HC Black | ![oldblack](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87398357-9f6ac000-c56a-11ea-848c-1ccef6a65442.png) | ![newblack](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/87398370-a396dd80-c56a-11ea-9540-8aa9bb934791.png) |
2020-07-14 16:21:59 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
ddb3614e30 Update {fmt} to 7.0.1 (#6906)
{fmt} 7.0.1 improves binary size, compile-time format string handling,
compile time improvements and named arguments.

In a test Windows build, it shrank our binary by ~14kb.

Closes #6905.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6905
* [x] CLA
2020-07-14 16:16:43 +00:00
James Holderness
b2973eb573 Add support for the "concealed" graphic rendition attribute (#6907)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR adds support for the `SGR 8` and `SGR 28` escape sequences,
which enable and disable the _concealed/invisible_ graphic rendition
attribute. When a character is output with this attribute set, it is
rendered with the same foreground and background colors, so the text is
essentially invisible.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6876
* [x] CLA signed. 
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated.
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. Issue number
  where discussion took place: #6876

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Most of the framework for this attribute was already implemented, so it
was just a matter of updating the `TextAttribute::CalculateRgbColors`
method to make the foreground the same as the background when the
_Invisible_ flag was set. Note that this has to happen after the
_Reverse Video_ attribute is applied, so if you have white-on-black text
that is reversed and invisible, it should be all white, rather than all
black.

## Validation Steps Performed

There were already existing SGR unit tests covering this attribute in
the `ScreenBufferTests`, and the `VtRendererTest`. But I've added to the
`AdapterTest` which verifies the SGR sequences for setting and resetting
the attribute, and I've extended the `TextAttributeTests` to verify that
the color calculations return the correct values when the attribute is
set.

I've also manually confirmed that we now render the _concealed text_
values correctly in the _ISO 6429_ tests in Vttest. And I've manually
tested the output of _concealed_ when combined with other attributes,
and made sure that we're matching the behaviour of most other terminals.
2020-07-14 14:11:03 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
06b50b47ca Remove the rowsToScroll setting and just always use the system setting (#6891)
This parameter was added as a workaround for our fast trackpad
scrolling. Since that was fixed before 1.0 shipped, in #4554, it has
been largely vestigial. There is no reason for us to keep it around any
longer.

It was also the only "logic" in TerminalSettings, which is otherwise a
library that only transits data between two other libraries.

I have not removed it from the schema, as I do not want to mark folks'
settings files invalid to a strict schema parser.

While I was in the area, I added support for "scroll one screen at a
time" (which is represented by the API returning WHEEL_PAGESCROLL),
fixing #5610. We were also storing it in an int (whoops) instead of a
uint.

Fixes #5610
2020-07-14 01:38:11 +00:00
Dustin Howett
e504bf2140 Add DFMT to the spelling expect list 2020-07-13 16:11:54 -07:00
Dustin Howett
c70c76e041 Merge remote-tracking branch 'openconsole/inbox' into HEAD 2020-07-13 16:06:05 -07:00
Dustin Howett
b12420725f Merged PR 4915574: console: switch to /Zc:wchar_t (native wchar_t)
console: switch to /Zc:wchar_t (native wchar_t)

This matches what we use in OpenConsole and makes {fmt} play nice.

I've also removed the workaround we introduced into OutputCellIterator
to work around not using /Zc:wchar_t.

Fixes MSFT:27626309.
Fixes GH-2673.

Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp 1508f7c232ec58bebc37fedfdec3eb8f9bff5502
2020-07-13 23:04:32 +00:00
Dustin Howett
eda216fbbc Merged PR 4915530: Reflect OS Build fixes on top of 58f5d7c7 2020-07-13 23:00:53 +00:00
James Holderness
7d677c5511 Add support for the "faint" graphic rendition attribute (#6873)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR adds support for the `SGR 2` escape sequence, which enables the
ANSI _faint_ graphic rendition attribute. When a character is output
with this attribute set, it uses a dimmer version of the active
foreground color.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6703
* [x] CLA signed. 
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated.
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. Issue number where discussion took place: #6703

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

There was already an `ExtendedAttributes::Faint` flag in the
`TextAttribute` class, but I needed to add `SetFaint` and `IsFaint`
methods to access that flag, and update the `SetGraphicsRendition`
methods of the two dispatchers to set the attribute on receipt of the
`SGR 2` sequence. I also had to update the existing `SGR 22` handler to
reset _Faint_ in addition to _Bold_, since they share the same reset
sequence. For that reason, I thought it a good idea to change the name
of the `SGR 22` enum to `NotBoldOrFaint`.

For the purpose of rendering, I've updated the
`TextAttribute::CalculateRgbColors` method to return a dimmer version of
the foreground color when the _Faint_ attribute is set. This is simply
achieved by dividing each color component by two, which produces a
reasonable effect without being too complicated. Note that the _Faint_
effect is applied before _Reverse Video_, so if the output it reversed,
it's the background that will be faint.

The only other complication was the update of the `Xterm256Engine` in
the VT renderer. As mentioned above, _Bold_ and _Faint_ share the same
reset sequence, so to forward that state over conpty we have to go
through a slightly more complicated process than with other attributes.
We first check whether either attribute needs to be turned off to send
the reset sequence, and then check if the individual attributes need to
be turned on again.

## Validation

I've extended the existing SGR unit tests to cover the new attribute in
the `AdapterTest`, the `ScreenBufferTests`, and the `VtRendererTest`,
and added a test to confirm the color calculations  when _Faint_ is set
in the `TextAttributeTests`.

I've also done a bunch of manual testing with all the different VT color
types and confirmed that our output is comparable to most other
terminals.
2020-07-13 17:44:09 +00:00
Mike Griese
1c8e83d52d Add support for focus mode (#6804)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Add support for "focus" mode, which only displays the actual terminal content, no tabs or titlebar. The edges of the window are draggable to resize, but the window can't be moved in borderless mode.

The window looks _slightly_ different bewteen different values for `showTabsInTitlebar`, because switching between the `NonClientIslandWindow` and the `IslandWindow` is _hard_.

`showTabsInTitlebar` | Preview
-- | --
`true` | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/86639069-f5090080-bf9d-11ea-8b29-fb1e479a078d.png)
`false` | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/86639094-fafee180-bf9d-11ea-8fc0-6804234a5113.png)

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #2238 
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

* **KNOWN ISSUE**: Upon resizing the NCIW, the top frame margin disappears, making that border disappear entirely. 6356aaf has a bunch of WIP work for me trying to fix that, but I couldn't get it quite right.

## Validation Steps Performed
* Toggled between focus and fullscreen a _bunch_ in both modes.
2020-07-13 17:40:20 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
89c4ebaafe Update JsonNew for IReference+cleaner optionals, and better Mappers (#6890)
This commit updates JsonUtilsNew to support winrt
`Windows::Foundation::IReference<T>` as an option type, and cleans up the
optional support code by removing the optional overload on
`GetValue(...)`. Instead of using an overload with a partial
specialization, we're using a constexpr if with a type trait to
determine option-type-ness.

In addition, Carlos reported an issue with deriving from `FlagMapper`
(itself templated) and referring to the base type's members without
fully qualifying them. To make derivation easier, `EnumMapper` and
`FlagMapper` now provide `BaseEnumMapper` and `BaseFlagMapper` type
aliases.

I've taken the opportunity to add a `winrt::hstring` conversion
trait.

Lastly, in casual use, I found out that I'd written the til::color
converter wrong: it supports color strings of length 7 (`#rrggbb`) and
length 4 (`#rgb`). I mistyped (and failed to test) support for 4-length
color strings by pretending they were only 3 characters long.

## References

Merged JsonUtils changes from #6004 and #6590.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Unblocks aforementioned PRs
* [x] cla
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [x] Documentation N/A
* [x] Schema N/A
* [x] Kid tested, mother approved.
2020-07-13 16:47:03 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
592c634577 Build and ship an actual binary named wt that just launches WT (#6860)
Due to a shell limitation, Ctrl+Shift+Enter will not launch Windows
Terminal as Administrator. This is caused by the app execution alias and
the actual targeted executable not having the same name.

In addition, PowerShell has an issue detecting app execution aliases as
GUI/TUI applications. When you run wt from PowerShell, the shell will
wait for WT to exit before returning to the prompt. Having a shim that
immediately re-executes WindowsTerminal and then returns handily knocks
this issue out (as the process that PS was waiting for exits
immediately.)

This could cause a regression for anybody who tries to capture the PID
of wt.exe. Our process tree is not an API, and we have offered no
consistency guarantee on it.

VALIDATION
----------

Tested manual launch in a number of different scenarios:

* [x] start menu "wtd"
* [x] start menu tile
* [x] powertoys run
* [x] powertoys run ctrl+shift (admin)
* [x] powershell inbox, "core"
* [x] cmd
* [x] run dialog
* [x] run dialog ctrl+shift (admin)
* [x] run from a lnk with window mode=maximized

Fixes #4645 (PowerShell waits for wt)
Fixes #6625 (Can't launch as admin using C-S-enter)
2020-07-10 22:41:37 +00:00
James Holderness
53b224b1c6 Add support for DA2 and DA3 device attributes reports (#6850)
This PR adds support for the `DA2` (Secondary Device Attributes) and
`DA3` (Tertiary Device Attributes) escape sequences, which are standard
VT queries reporting basic information about the terminal.

The _Secondary Device Attributes_ response is made up of a number of
parameters:
1. An identification code, for which I've used 0 to indicate that we
   have the capabilities of a VT100 (using code 0 for this is an XTerm
   convention, since technically DA2 would not have been supported by a
   VT100).
2. A firmware revision level, which some terminal emulators use to
   report their actual version number, but I thought it best we just
   hardcode a value of 10 (the DEC convention for 1.0).
3. Additional hardware options, which tend to be device specific, but
   I've followed the convention of the later DEC terminals using 1 to
   indicate the presence of a PC keyboard.

The _Tertiary Device Attributes_ response was originally used to provide
a unique terminal identification code, and which some terminal emulators
use as a way to identify themselves. However, I think that's information
we'd probably prefer not to reveal, so I've followed the more common
practice of returning all zeros for the ID.

In terms of implementation, the only complication was the need to add an
additional code path in the `OutputStateMachine` to handle the `>` and
`=` intermediates (technically private parameter prefixes) that these
sequences require. I've done this as a single method - rather than one
for each prefix - since I think that makes the code easier to follow.

VALIDATION
----------

I've added output engine tests to make sure the sequences are dispatched
correctly, and adapter tests to confirm that they are returning the
responses we expect. I've also manually confirmed that they pass the
_Test of terminal reports_ in Vttest.

Closes #5836
2020-07-10 22:27:47 +00:00
James Holderness
3388a486dc Refactor the renderer color calculations (#6853)
This is a refactoring of the renderer color calculations to simplify the
implementation, and to make it easier to support additional
color-altering rendition attributes in the future (e.g. _faint_ and
_conceal_).

## References

* This is a followup to PRs #3817 and #6809, which introduced additional
  complexity in the color calculations, and which suggested the need for
  refactoring. 

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

When we added support for `DECSCNM`, that required the foreground and
background color lookup methods to be able to return the opposite of
what was requested when the reversed mode was set. That made those
methods unnecessarily complicated, and I thought we could simplify them
considerably just by combining the calculations into a single method
that derived both colors at the same time.

And since both conhost and Windows Terminal needed to perform the same
calculations, it also made sense to move that functionality into the
`TextAttribute` class, where it could easily be shared.

In general this way of doing things is a bit more efficient. However, it
does result in some unnecessary work when only one of the colors is
required, as is the case for the gridline painter. So to make that less
of an issue, I've reordered the gridline code a bit so it at least
avoids looking up the colors when no gridlines are needed.

## Validation Steps Performed

Because of the API changes, quite a lot of the unit tests had to be
updated. For example instead of verifying colors with two separate calls
to `LookupForegroundColor` and `LookupBackgroundColor`, that's now
achieved with a single `LookupAttributeColors` call, comparing against a
pair of values. The specifics of the tests haven't changed though, and
they're all still working as expected.

I've also manually confirmed that the various color sequences and
rendition attributes are rendering correctly with the new refactoring.
2020-07-10 22:26:34 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
1bf4c082b4 Reintroduce a color compatibility hack, but only for PowerShells (#6810)
There is going to be a very long tail of applications that will
explicitly request VT SGR 40/37 when what they really want is to
SetConsoleTextAttribute() with a black background/white foreground.
Instead of making those applications look bad (and therefore making us
look bad, because we're releasing this as an update to something that
"looks good" already), we're introducing this compatibility quirk.
Before the color reckoning in #6698 + #6506, *every* color was subject
to being spontaneously and erroneously turned into the default color.
Now, only the 16-color palette value that matches the active console
background/foreground color will be destroyed, and only when received
from specific applications.

Removal will be tracked by #6807.

Michael and I discussed what layer this quirk really belonged in. I
originally believed it would be sufficient to detect a background color
that matched the legacy default background, but @j4james provided an
example of where that wouldn't work out (powershell setting the
foreground color to white/gray). In addition, it was too heavyhanded: it
re-broke black backgrounds for every application.

Michael thought that it should live in the server, as a small VT parser
that righted the wrongs coming directly out of the application. On
further investigation, however, I realized that we'd need to push more
information up into the server (so that it could make the decision about
which VT was wrong and which was right) than should be strictly
necessary.

The host knows which colors are right and wrong, and it gets final say
in what ends up in the buffer.

Because of that, I chose to push the quirk state down through
WriteConsole to DoWriteConsole and toggle state on the
SCREEN_INFORMATION that indicates whether the colors coming out of the
application are to be distrusted. This quirk _only applies to pwsh.exe
and powershell.exe._

NOTE: This doesn't work for PowerShell the .NET Global tool, because it
is run as an assembly through dotnet.exe. I have no opinion on how to
fix this, or whether it is worth fixing.

VALIDATION
----------
I configured my terminals to have an incredibly garish color scheme to
show exactly what's going to happen as a result of this. The _default
terminal background_ is purple or red, and the foreground green. I've
printed out a heap of test colors to see how black interacts with them.

Pull request #6810 contains the images generated from this test.

The only color lines that change are the ones where black as a
background or white as a foreground is selected out of the 16-color
palette explicitly. Reverse video still works fine (because black is in
the foreground!), and it's even possible to represent "black on default"
and reverse it into "default on black", despite the black in question
having been `40`.

Fixes #6767.
2020-07-10 15:25:39 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett
fc083296b9 Account for WHEEL_DELTA when dispatching VT mouse wheel events (#6843)
By storing up the accumulated delta in the mouse input handler, we can
enlighten both conhost and terminal about wheel events that are less
than one line in size. Previously, we had a workaround in conhost that
clamped small scroll deltas to a whole line, which made trackpad
scrolling unimaginably fast. Terminal didn't make this mistake, but it
also didn't handle delta accumulation . . . which resulted in the same
behavior.

MouseInput will now wait until it's received WHEEL_DELTA (well-known
constant, value 120) worth of scrolling delta before it dispatches a
single scroll event.

Future considerations may include sending multiple wheel button events
for every *multiple* of WHEEL_DELTA, but that would be a slightly larger
refactoring that I'm not yet ready to undertake.

There's a chance that we should be dividing WHEEL_DELTA by the system's
"number of lines to scroll at once" setting, because on trackpads
conhost now scrolls a little _slow_. I think the only way to determine
whether this is palatable is to just ship it.

Fixes #6184.
2020-07-09 23:24:17 +00:00
James Holderness
695ebffca1 Add support for DECSCNM in Windows Terminal (#6809)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR adds full support for the `DECSCNM` reverse screen mode in the Windows Terminal to align with the implementation in conhost.

## References

* The conhost implementation of `DECSCNM` was in PR #3817.
* WT originally inherited that functionality via the colors being passed through, but that behaviour was lost in PR #6506.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6622
* [x] CLA signed.
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated. If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #6622

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

The `AdaptDispatch::SetScreenMode` now checks if it's in conpty mode and simply returns false to force a pass-through of the mode change. And the `TerminalDispatch` now has its own `SetScreenMode` implementation that tracks any changes to the reversed state, and triggers a redraw in the renderer.

To make the renderer work, we just needed to update the `GetForegroundColor` and `GetBackgroundColor` methods of the terminal's `IRenderData` implementation to check the reversed state, and switch the colors being calculated, the same way the `LookupForegroundColor` and `LookupBackgroundColor` methods work in the conhost `Settings` class.

## Validation Steps Performed

I've manually tested the `DECSCNM` functionality for Windows Terminal in Vttest, and also with some of my own test scripts.
2020-07-09 11:25:30 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
9e26c020e4 Implement preventing auto-scroll on new output (#6062)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Updates the Terminal's scroll response to new output. The Terminal will not automatically scroll if...
- a selection is active, or
- the viewport is at the bottom of the scroll history

## References
#2529 - Spec
#3863 - Implementation

## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #980
* [X] Closes #3863
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Updates the `_scrollOffset` value properly in TerminalCore when the cursor moves. We calculate a new `_scrollOffset` based on if we are circling the buffer and how far below the mutable bottom is.

We specifically check for if a selection is active and if the viewport is at the bottom, then use that as a condition for deciding if we should update `_scrollOffset` to the new calculated value or 0 (the bottom of the scroll history).

## Validation Steps Performed
Manual testing. Though I should add automated tests.
- [X] new output
- [X] new output when circling
- [X] new output when circling and viewport is at the top
2020-07-09 11:24:20 +00:00
Michael Niksa
9e44df0c9f Cache the size viewport structure inside TextBuffer (#6841)
Looking up the size of the viewport from the underlying dimensions of
the structures seemed like a good idea at the time (so it would only be
in one place), but it turns out to be more of a perf cost than we
expected. Not necessarily on any one hot path, but if we sort by
functions in WPR, it was the top consumer on the Terminal side. This
instead saves the size as a member of the `TextBuffer` and serves that
out. It only changes when it is constructed or resized traditionally, so
it's easy to update/keep track of. It impacted conhost/conpty to a
lesser degree but was still noticeable.

## Validation Steps Performed
- Run `time cat big.txt` under WPR. Checked before and after perf
  metrics.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes perf itch
* [x] I work here
* [x] Manual test
* [x] Documentation irrelevant.
* [x] Schema irrelevant.
* [x] Am core contributor.
2020-07-09 11:18:25 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
313568d0e5 Fix the build in VS 2019 16.7 (#6838)
The main change in 16.7 is the separation of `AppContainerApplication`
into `WindowsStoreApp` and `WindowsAppContainer`. There's been a bit of
interest in splitting packaging away from containment, and this is the
first step in that direction.

We're a somewhat unique application, but as WinUI3 becomes more
prevalent we will become _less_ unique.

Some of these things, I've looked at and wondered how they ever worked.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes nothing

## Validation Steps Performed
Built locally and in CI. Tested the generated package with the package tester. Built on 16.6 and seen that it still seems to work.
2020-07-09 04:10:50 +00:00
Michael Niksa
91f921154b Cache VT buffer line string to avoid (de)alloc on every paint (#6840)
A lot of time was spent between each individual line in the VT paint
engine in allocating some scratch space to assemble the clusters then
deallocating it only to have the next line do that again. Now we just
hold onto that memory space since it should be approximately the size of
a single line wide and will be used over and over and over as painting
continues.

## Validation Steps Performed
- Run `time cat big.txt` under WPR. Checked before and after perf
  metrics.
2020-07-08 16:30:46 -07:00
Michael Niksa
99c33e084a Avoid copying the bitmap on the way into the tracing function (#6839)
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes perf itch.
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Manual perf test.
* [x] Documentation irrelevant.
* [x] Schema irrelevant.
* [x] Am core contributor.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Passes the bitmap by ref into the tracing function instead of making a copy on the way in. It's only read anyway for tracing (if enabled) so the copy was a pointless oversight.

## Validation Steps Performed
- Observed WPR trace before and after with `time cat big.txt` in WSL.
2020-07-08 22:13:40 +00:00
jtippet
182a3bb573 Make Terminal look great in High Contrast (#6833)
This PR enables `ApplicationHighContrastAdjustment::None`.  Doing this
disables a set of mitigations in XAML designed to band-aid apps that
were never explicitly designed for High Contrast (HC) modes.  Terminal
now has full control of and responsibility for its appearance in HC
mode.  This allows Terminal to look a lot better.

On paper, we should be able to set `HighContrastAdjustment="None"` on
the `<Application>` element.  But that doesn't have any effect.  I don't
know if this is a bug in `<Toolkit:XamlApplication>` or somewhere else.
So instead I set the property in codebehind, which is not as ideal, but
does at least work.  I'd love to a way to move this into App.xaml.

The Find box had a couple stray styles to override the ToggleButton's
foreground color.  With backplating removed, these styles became
actively harmful (white foreground on highlight color background), so I
just removed them.  The built-in style for ToggleButton is perfect
as-is.

Closes #5360
2020-07-08 12:08:08 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
63fbd9f1fc Allow starting selections from padding area (#6343)
WinUI's `Margin` and `Padding` work very similarly. `Margin` distances
ourselves from our parent. Whereas `Padding` distances our children from
ourselves.

Terminal's `padding` setting is actually implemented by defining
`Margin` on the SwapChainPanel. This means that the "padding" that is
created is actually belongs to SwapChainPanel's parent: Grid (not to be
confused with its parent, "RootGrid").

When a user clicks on the padded area, input goes to Grid. But there's a
twist: you can't actually hit Grid. To be able to hit Grid, you can't
just set IsHitTestVisible. You need to set it's Visibility to Visible,
and it's Background to Transparent (not null) [2].

## Validation Steps Performed

- [X] Start a selection from the padding area
- [X] Click on a SearchBox if one is available
   - The SearchBox gets first dibs on the hit test so none gets through
     to the SwapChainPanel

## References
[1] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/api/windows.ui.xaml.uielement.ishittestvisible
[2] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/uwp/xaml-platform/events-and-routed-events-overview#hit-testing-and-input-events

Closes #5626
2020-07-07 23:42:42 +00:00
Mike Griese
934ad98786 Add some logging regarding command palette usage (#6821)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Pretty straightforward. Logs three scenarios:
* The user opened the command palette (and which mode it was opened in)
* The user ran a command from the palette
* The user dismissed the palette without running an action.

We discussed this in team sync yesterday.

## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
2020-07-07 23:31:31 +00:00
Mike Griese
edd8ac8c6c Update MUX to 2.5.0-prerelease.200609001 (#6819)
See: https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/releases/tag/v2.5.0-prerelease.200609001

> ### Notable Changes:
> 
>     Resize tab view items only once the pointer has left the TabViewItem strip (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2569)
>     Align TabView visuals with Edge (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2201)
>     Fix background of MenuFlyout in white high contrast (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2446)
>     TabView: Make TabViewItem consume the TabViewItemHeaderForeground theme resource (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2348)
>     TabView: Add tooltips to its scrolling buttons. (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2369)


* [x] Related to #5360 (@jtippet confirms that this alone does not close it.)
* [x] I work here
2020-07-07 23:29:30 +00:00
Mike Griese
5bc31a1e16 Add actions missing in schema, descriptions for toggleRetroEffect (#6806)
## Summary of the Pull Request

In the wake of #6635, a couple things got missed in merges:
* `toggleRetroEffect` didn't get into the schema, nor did `renameTab` or
  `commandPalette`.
* `toggleRetroEffect` also didn't get a name

Furthermore, I thought it might be a good idea to start sticking
commands into `bindings` even without `keys`. So I tried doing that for
`opentabColorPicker` and `toggleRetroEffect`, and found immediately that
the labels for the key chord still appear even when the text is empty.
So I added some XAML magic to hide those when the text is empty.

## References
* #6762 
* #6691
* #6557 
* #6635 

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6762
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

* See also: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/uwp/data-binding/data-binding-quickstart#formatting-or-converting-data-values-for-display
  - make sure to switch to C++/WinRT at the top!

## Validation Steps Performed
Removed all my manual actions, ran the Terminal:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/86652356-f5a79400-bfa9-11ea-9131-5b7d3e835e19.png)
2020-07-07 21:46:16 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
29f0690ded Add a spec for output snapping (#2529)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This proposes a change to how Terminal will scroll in response to newly
generated output. The Terminal will scroll upon receiving new output if
the viewport is at the bottom of the scroll history and no selection is
active.

This spec also explores the possibility of making this response
configurable with a `snapOnOutput` profile setting. It also discusses
the possibility of adding a scroll lock keybinding action.

## PR Checklist
* [X] Spec for #980
2020-07-07 21:45:16 +00:00
jtippet
4faa104f6a Update colors of our custom NewTab button to match MUX's TabView (#6812)
Update colors of our custom NewTab button to match MUX's TabView button

MUX has a NewTab button, but Terminal uses a homemade lookalike.  The
version in Terminal doesn't use the same brush color resources as MUX's
button, so it looks very slightly different.  This PR updates Terminal's
button to use the exact same colors that MUX uses.  I literally copied
these brush names out of MUX source code.

## References
This is the color version of the layout fix #6766 
This is a prerequisite for fixing #5360

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The real reason that this matters is that once you flip on
`ApplicationHighContrastAdjustment::None`, the existing colors will not
work at all.  The existing brushes are themed to black foreground on a
black background when High Contrast (HC) Black theme is enabled.  The
only thing that's saving you is
`ApplicationHighContrastAdjustment::Auto` is automatically backplating
the glyphs on the buttons, which (by design) hides the fact that the
colors are poor.  The backplates are those ugly squares inside the
buttons on the HC themes.

Before I can push a PR that disables automatic backplating (set
`ApplicationHighContrastAdjustment` to `None`), we'll need to select
better brushes that work in HC mode.  MUX has already selected brushes
that work great in all modes, so it just makes sense to use their
brushes.

The one very subtle difference here is that, for non-HC themes, the
glyph's foreground has a bit more contrast when the button is in
hovered/pressed states.  Again this slight difference hardly matters
now, but using the correct brushes will become critical when we try to
remove the HC backplating.

Closes #6812
2020-07-07 13:40:01 -07:00
Mike Griese
ceeaadc311 Add some trace logging concerning which schemes are in use (#6803)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Let's try and figure out just how many people are actually using Solarized. I emailed @DHowett about this a week ago, but otherwise we don't really have any other tasks for this.

## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
2020-07-07 17:01:42 +00:00
jtippet
d350a89324 Update the shape of our custom NewTab button to match MUX's TabView button (#6766)
The MUX TabView control has a uniquely-shaped [+] button.  TerminalApp
doesn't use it: instead, it has a SplitView button that is styled to
look like MUX's official button.  However, it doesn't get the button's
shape right.  This PR updates TerminalApp's custom button to look more
like MUX's.

The difference is that MUX only rounds the top two corners, and it uses
a bigger radius.  Without matching MUX's radius, the upper-left corner
of the button makes an awkward asymmetric divot with the abutting tab.
There's also a spot in the lower-left corner that just looks like
someone accidentally spilled a few pixels on the floor.

Current appearance before this PR:
![oldlight](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/86410863-74ca5e80-bc70-11ea-8c15-4ae22998b209.png)

New appearance with this PR:
![newlight](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/86410871-772cb880-bc70-11ea-972c-13332f1a1bdb.png)

Most important deltas highlighted with red circles:
![marklight](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10259764/86410877-78f67c00-bc70-11ea-8a6d-696cfbd89b1d.png)


Note that this PR does *not* attempt to fix the colors.  The colors are
also just slightly different from what MUX uses.  I'll save that for a
separate PR, since all those screenshots would clutter this up this PR.
2020-07-06 14:13:23 +00:00
James Holderness
70a7ccc120 Add support for the "overline" graphic rendition attribute (#6754)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR adds support for the `SGR 53` and `SGR 55` escapes sequences,
which enable and disable the ANSI _overline_ graphic rendition
attribute, the equivalent of the console character attribute
`COMMON_LVB_GRID_HORIZONTAL`. When a character is output with this
attribute set, a horizontal line is rendered at the top of the character
cell.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6000
* [x] CLA signed. 
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated. 
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

To start with, I added `SetOverline` and `IsOverlined` methods to the
`TextAttribute` class, to set and get the legacy
`COMMON_LVB_GRID_HORIZONTAL` attribute. Technically there was already an
`IsTopHorizontalDisplayed` method, but I thought it more readable to add
a separate `IsOverlined` as an alias for that.

Then it was just a matter of adding calls to set and reset the attribute
in response to the `SGR 53` and `SGR 55` sequences in the
`SetGraphicsRendition` methods of the two dispatchers. The actual
rendering was already taken care of by the `PaintBufferGridLines` method
in the rendering engines.

The only other change required was to update the `_UpdateExtendedAttrs`
method in the `Xterm256Engine` of the VT renderer, to ensure the
attribute state would be forwarded to the Windows Terminal over conpty.

## Validation Steps Performed

I've extended the existing SGR unit tests to cover the new attribute in
the `AdapterTest`, the `OutputEngineTest`, and the `VtRendererTest`.
I've also manually tested the `SGR 53` and `SGR 55` sequences to confirm
that they do actually render (or remove) an overline on the characters
being output.
2020-07-06 14:11:17 +00:00
James Holderness
0651fcff14 Don't abort early in VT reset operations if one of the steps fails (#6763)
The VT reset operations `RIS` and `DECSTR` are implemented as a series
of steps, each of which could potentially fail. Currently these
operations abort as soon as an error is detected, which is particularly
problematic in conpty mode, where some steps deliberately "fail" to
indicate that they need to be "passed through" to the conpty client. As
a result, the reset won't be fully executed. This PR changes that
behaviour, so the error state is recorded for any failures, but the
subsequent steps are still run.

Originally the structure of these operations was of the form:

    bool success = DoSomething();
    if (success)
    {
        success = DoSomethingElse();
    }

But I've now changed the code so it looks more like this:

    bool success = DoSomething();
    success = DoSomethingElse() && success;

This means that every one of the steps should execute, regardless of
whether previous steps were successful, but the final _success_ state
will only be true if none of the steps has failed.

While this is only really an issue in the conhost code, I've updated
both the `AdaptDispatch` and `TerminalDispatch` classes, since I thought
it would be best to have them in sync, and in general this seems like a
better way to handle multi-step operations anyway.

VALIDATION

I've manually tested the `RIS` escape sequence (`\ec`) in the Windows
Terminal, and confirmed that it now correctly resets the cursor
position, which it wasn't doing before.

Closes #6545
2020-07-06 14:09:03 +00:00
Mike Griese
396cbbb151 Add a ShortcutAction for toggling retro terminal effect (#6691)
Pretty straightforward. `toggleRetroEffect` will work to toggle the
retro terminal effect on/off. 

* Made possible by contributions from #6551, _and viewers like you_
2020-07-01 23:17:43 +00:00
John Azariah
436fac6afa fix scheme name resolution, and schema load on WSL (#5327)
This PR fixes the scheme resolution bug outlined in #5326

The approach is as follows:

* In [SchemeManager.cs], find the first scheme parser that actually
  successfully parses the scheme, as opposed to the existing code, which
  finds the first scheme parser which _says it can parse the scheme_, as
  that logic spuriously returns `true` currently. 
* In [XmlSchemeParser.cs] and [JsonParser.cs], ensure that the contents
  of the file are read and the contents passed to XmlDocument.LoadXXX,
  as this fails with an UriException on WSL otherwise.
* Remove `CanParse` as it is superfluous. The check for a valid scheme
  parser should not just check an extension but also if the file exists
  - this is best done by the `ParseScheme` function as it already
  returns null on failure.
* Add `FileExtension` to the interface because we need it lifted now.

Closes #5326
2020-07-01 20:15:09 +00:00
Antonio Garcia
44e80d40b6 Add tooltip text to Color Buttons (#6498)
This commit adds tooltip text to every color button in the tab color
picker.
2020-07-01 19:58:53 +00:00
greg904
985f85ddca Add settings to warn about large or multiline pastes (#6631)
Before sending calling the `HandleClipboardData` member function on
the `PasteFromClipboardEventArgs` object when we receive a request
from the `TermControl` to send it the clipboard's text content, we
now display a warning to let the user choose whether to continue or
not if the text is larger than 5 KiB or contains the _new line_
character, which can be a security issue if the user is pasting the
text in a shell.

These warnings can be disabled with the `largePasteWarning` and
`multiLinePasteWarning` global settings respectively.

Closes #2349
2020-07-01 19:43:28 +00:00
James Holderness
6b43ace690 Refactor TerminalDispatch (graphics) to match AdaptDispatch (#6728)
This is essentially a rewrite of the
`TerminalDispatch::SetGraphicsRendition` method, bringing it into closer
alignment with the `AdaptDispatch` implementation, simplifying the
`ITerminalApi` interface, and making the code easier to extend. It adds
support for a number of attributes which weren't previously implemented.

REFERENCES

* This is a mirror of the `AdaptDispatch` refactoring in PR #5758.
* The closer alignment with `AdaptDispatch` is a small step towards
  solving issue #3849.
* The newly supported attributes should help a little with issues #5461
  (italics) and #6205 (strike-through).

DETAILS

I've literally copied and pasted the `SetGraphicsRendition`
implementation from `AdaptDispatch` into `TerminalDispatch`, with only
few minor changes:

* The `SetTextAttribute` and `GetTextAttribute` calls are slightly
  different in the `TerminalDispatch` version, since they don't return a
  pointless `success` value, and in the case of the getter, the
  `TextAttribute` is returned directly instead of by reference.
  Ultimately I'd like to move the `AdaptDispatch` code towards that way
  of doing things too, but I'd like to deal with that later as part of a
  wider refactoring of the `ConGetSet` interface.
* The `SetIndexedForeground256` and `SetIndexedBackground256` calls
  required the color indices to be remapped in the `AdaptDispatch`
  implementation, because the conhost color table is in a different
  order to the XTerm standard. `TerminalDispatch` doesn't have that
  problem, so doesn't require the mapping.
* The index color constants used in the 16-color `SetIndexedForeground`
  and `SetIndexedBackground` calls are also slightly different for the
  same reason.

VALIDATION

I cherry-picked this code on top of the #6506 and #6698 PRs, since
that's only way to really get the different color formats passed-through
to the terminal. I then ran a bunch of manual tests with various color
coverage scripts that I have, and confirmed that all the different color
formats were being rendered as expected.

Closes #6725
2020-07-01 11:13:42 -07:00
James Holderness
ddbe370d22 Improve the propagation of color attributes over ConPTY (#6506)
This PR reimplements the VT rendering engines to do a better job of
preserving the original color types when propagating attributes over
ConPTY. For the 16-color renderers it provides better support for
default colors and improves the efficiency of the color narrowing
conversions. It also fixes problems with the ordering of character
renditions that could result in attributes being dropped.

Originally the base renderer would calculate the RGB color values and
legacy/extended attributes up front, passing that data on to the active
engine's `UpdateDrawingBrushes` method. With this new implementation,
the renderer now just passes through the original `TextAttribute` along
with an `IRenderData` interface, and leaves it to the engines to extract
the information they need.

The GDI and DirectX engines now have to lookup the RGB colors themselves
(via simple `IRenderData` calls), but have no need for the other
attributes. The VT engines extract the information that they need from
the `TextAttribute`, instead of having to reverse engineer it from
`COLORREF`s.

The process for the 256-color Xterm engine starts with a check for
default colors. If both foreground and background are default, it
outputs a SGR 0 reset, and clears the `_lastTextAttribute` completely to
make sure any reset state is reapplied. With that out the way, the
foreground and background are updated (if changed) in one of 4 ways.
They can either be a default value (SGR 39 and 49), a 16-color index
(using ANSI or AIX sequences), a 256-color index, or a 24-bit RGB value
(both using SGR 38 and 48 sequences).

Then once the colors are accounted for, there is a separate step that
handles the character rendition attributes (bold, italics, underline,
etc.) This step must come _after_ the color sequences, in case a SGR
reset is required, which would otherwise have cleared any character
rendition attributes if it came last (which is what happened in the
original implementation).

The process for the 16-color engines is a little different. The target
client in this case (Windows telnet) is incapable of setting default
colors individually, so we need to output an SGR 0 reset if _either_
color has changed to default. With that out the way, we use the
`TextColor::GetLegacyIndex` method to obtain an approximate 16-color
index for each color, and apply the bold attribute by brightening the
foreground index (setting bit 8) if the color type permits that.

However, since Windows telnet only supports the 8 basic ANSI colors, the
best we can do for bright colors is to output an SGR 1 attribute to get
a bright foreground. There is nothing we can do about a bright
background, so after that we just have to drop the high bit from the
colors. If the resulting index values have changed from what they were
before, we then output ANSI 8-color SGR sequences to update them.

As with the 256-color engine, there is also a final step to handle the
character rendition attributes. But in this case, the only supported
attributes are underline and reversed video.

Since the VT engines no longer depend on the active color table and
default color values, there was quite a lot of code that could now be
removed. This included the `IDefaultColorProvider` interface and
implementations, the `Find(Nearest)TableIndex` functions, and also the
associated HLS conversion and difference calculations.

VALIDATION

Other than simple API parameter changes, the majority of updates
required in the unit tests were to correct assumptions about the way the
colors should be rendered, which were the source of the narrowing bugs
this PR was trying to fix. Like passing white on black to the
`UpdateDrawingBrushes` API, and expecting it to output the default `SGR
0` sequence, or passing an RGB color and expecting an indexed SGR
sequence.

In addition to that, I've added some VT renderer tests to make sure the
rendition attributes (bold, underline, etc) are correctly retained when
a default color update causes an `SGR 0` sequence to be generated (the
source of bug #3076). And I've extended the VT renderer color tests
(both 256-color and 16-color) to make sure we're covering all of the
different color types (default, RGB, and both forms of indexed colors).

I've also tried to manually verify that all of the test cases in the
linked bug reports (and their associated duplicates) are now fixed when
this PR is applied.

Closes #2661
Closes #3076
Closes #3717
Closes #5384
Closes #5864

This is only a partial fix for #293, but I suspect the remaining cases
are unfixable.
2020-07-01 11:10:36 -07:00
James Holderness
f0df154ba9 Improve conpty rendering of default colors in legacy apps (#6698)
Essentially what this does is map the default legacy foreground and
background attributes (typically white on black) to the `IsDefault`
color type in the `TextColor` class. As a result, we can now initialize
the buffer for "legacy" shells (like PowerShell and cmd.exe) with
default colors, instead of white on black. This fixes the startup
rendering in conpty clients, which expect an initial default background
color. It also makes these colors update appropriately when the default
palette values change.

One complication in getting this to work, is that the console permits
users to change which color indices are designated as defaults, so we
can't assume they'll always be white on black. This means that the
legacy-to-`TextAttribute` conversion will need access to those default
values.

Unfortunately the defaults are stored in the conhost `Settings` class
(the `_wFillAttribute` field), which isn't easily accessible to all the
code that needs to construct a `TextAttribute` from a legacy value. The
`OutputCellIterator` is particularly problematic, because some iterator
types need to generate a new `TextAttribute` on every iteration.

So after trying a couple of different approaches, I decided that the
least worst option would be to add a pair of static properties for the
legacy defaults in the `TextAttribute` class itself, then refresh those
values from the `Settings` class whenever the defaults changed (this
only happens on startup, or when the conhost _Properties_ dialog is
edited).

And once the `TextAttribute` class had access to those defaults, it was
fairly easy to adapt the constructor to handle the conversion of default
values to the `IsDefault` color type. I could also then simplify the
`TextAttribute::GetLegacyAttributes` method which does the reverse
mapping, and which previously required the default values to be passed
in as a parameter 

VALIDATION

I had to make one small change to the `TestRoundtripExhaustive` unit
test which assumed that all legacy attributes would convert to legacy
color types, which is no longer the case, but otherwise all the existing
tests passed as is. I added a new unit test verifying that the default
legacy attributes correctly mapped to default color types, and the
default color types were mapped back to the correct legacy attributes.

I've manually confirmed that this fixed the issue raised in #5952,
namely that the conhost screen is cleared with the correct default
colors, and also that it is correctly refreshed when changing the
palette from the properties dialog. And I've combined this PR with
#6506, and confirmed that the PowerShell and the cmd shell renderings in
Windows Terminal are at least improved, if not always perfect.

This is a prerequisite for PR #6506
Closes #5952
2020-07-01 11:08:30 -07:00
pi1024e
02d5f90837 Replace old C headers (xxx.h) with modern ones (cxxx) (#5080) 2020-07-01 11:00:24 -07:00
uzxmx
b24579d2b0 Add support for OSC 52 (copy-to-clipboard) (#5823)
With this commit, terminal will be able to copy text to the system
clipboard by using OSC 52 MANIPULATE SELECTION DAATA.

We chose not to implement the clipboard querying functionality offered
by OSC 52, as sending the clipboard text to an application without the
user's knowledge or consent is an immense security hole.

We do not currently support the clipboard specifier Pc to specify which
clipboard buffer should be filled

# Base64 encoded `foo`
$ echo -en "\e]52;;Zm9v\a"

# Multiple lines
# Base64 encoded `foo\r\nbar`
$ echo -en "\e]52;;Zm9vDQpiYXI=\a"

Closes #2946.
2020-06-30 01:55:40 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
bbf2c705d2 Update Cascadia Code to 2007.01 (#6721) 2020-06-29 17:56:32 -07:00
Michael Niksa
c4885f1e6c Restore simple text runs, correct for crashes (#6695)
Restores the simple text run analysis and skipping of most of the
shaping/layout steps. Corrects one of the fast-path steps to ensure that
offsets and clusters are assigned.

## References
- Bug #6488 
- Bug #6664
- Simple run PR #6206 
- Simple run revert PR #6665
- Recycle glyph runs PR #6483

The "correction" functions, by which box drawing analysis is one of
them, is dependent on the steps coming before it properly assigning the
four main vectors of the text layout glyphs: indices, advances, offsets,
and clusters. When the fast path is identified by the code from #6206,
only two of those are fully updated: indices and advances. The offsets
doesn't tend to cause a problem because offsets are rarely used so
they're pretty much always 0 already (but this PR enforces that they're
zero for the simple/fast path.) The clusters, however, were not mapped
for the fast path. This showed itself in one of two ways:
1. Before the recycled runs PR #6483, the cluster map had a 0 in every
   field for the stock initialized vector.
2. After the recycled runs PR #6483, the cluster map had the previous
   run's mapping in it.

This meant that when we reached the steps where glyph runs were
potentially split during the correction phase for box drawing
characters, unexpected values were present to map the glyph indices to
clusters and were corrected, adjusted, or split in an unexpected
fashion. 

For instance, the index out of range bug could appear when the default 0
values appended to the end of the clusters vector were decremented down
to a negative value during the run splitter as the true DWrite cluster
mapper doesn't generate that sort of pattern in the slow path case
without also breaking the run itself.

The resolution here is therefore to ensure that all of the fields
related to glyph layout are populated even in the fast path. This
doesn't affect the slow path because that one always populated all
fields by asking DWrite to do it. The fast path just skips a bunch of
DWrite steps because it can implicitly identify patterns and save a
bunch of time.

I've also identified a few vectors that weren't cleared on reset/reuse
of the layout. I'm clearing those now so the `.resize()` operations
performed on them to get to the correct lengths will fill them with
fresh and empty values instead of hanging on to ones that may have been
from the previous. This should be OK memory perf wise because the act of
`.clear()` on a vector shouldn't free anything, just mark it invalid.
And doing `.resize()` from an empty one should just default construct
them into already allocated space (which ought to be super quick).

## Validation
* [x] Far.exe doesn't crash and looks fine
* [x] "\e[30;47m\u{2500} What \u{2500}\e[m" from #6488 appears
  appropriately antialiased
* [x] Validate the "\e[30;47m\u{2500} What \u{2500}\e[m" still works
  when `FillGeometry` is nerfed as a quick test that the runs are split
  correctly.
* [x] Put `u{fffd} into Powershell Core to make a replacement char in
  the output. Then press enter a few times and see that shrunken initial
  characters on random rows. Verify this is gone.

Closes #6668
Closes #6669

Co-Authored-By: Chester Liu <skyline75489@outlook.com>
2020-06-29 20:27:31 +00:00
Mike Griese
aa1ed0a19c Add support for the Command Palette (#6635)
## Summary of the Pull Request

![command-palette-001](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/85313480-b6dbef00-b47d-11ea-8a8f-a802d26c2f9b.gif)


This adds a first iteration on the command palette. Notable missing features are:
* Commandline mode: This will be a follow-up PR, following the merge of #6537
* nested and iterable commands: These will additionally be a follow-up PR.

This is also additionally based off the addenda in #6532. 

This does not bind a key for the palette by default. That will be done when the above follow-ups are completed.

## References
* #2046 - The original command palette thread
* #5400 - This is the megathread for all command palette issues, which is tracking a bunch of additional follow up work 
* #5674 and #6532 - specs
* #6537 - related

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #2046
  - incidentally also closes #6645
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - delaying this until it's more polished.


## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

* There's a lot of code for autogenerating command names. That's all in `ActionArgs.cpp`, because each case is so _not_ boilerplate, unlike the rest of the code in `ActionArgs.h`.

## Validation Steps Performed

* I've been playing with this for months.
* Tests
* Selfhost with the team
2020-06-26 20:38:02 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
2fc1ef04ce Hardcode the paths to Windows PowerShell and CMD (#6684)
Occasionally, we get users with corrupt PATH environment variables: they
can't lauch PowerShell, because for some reason it's dropped off their
PATH. We also get users who have stray applications named
`powershell.exe` just lying around in random system directories.

We can combat both of these issues by simply hardcoding where we expect
PowerShell and CMD to live. %SystemRoot% was chosen over %WINDIR%
because apparently (according to Stack Overflow), SystemPath is
read-only and WINDIR isn't.

Refs #6039, #4390, #4228 (powershell was not found)
Refs #4682, Fixes #6082 (stray powershell.exe)
2020-06-26 17:33:38 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
fefd1408f2 When we add a new tab in compact mode, re-enforce Compact mode (#6670)
This workaround was suggested by @chingucoding in
microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2711

Fixes #6570

## References

microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2711
#6570

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes an issue
* [x] CLA
* [x] Tested
* [x] Docs not required
* [x] Schema not required
2020-06-25 21:21:48 +00:00
Mike Griese
a3a9df82b5 Add setTabColor and openTabColorPicker actions (#6567)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds a pair of `ShortcutAction`s for setting the tab color.
* `setTabColor`: This changes the color of the current tab to the provided color, or can be used to clear the color.
* `openTabColorPicker`: This keybinding immediately activates the tab color picker for the currently focused tab.

## References

## PR Checklist
* [x] scratches my own itch
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [x] https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal/pull/69

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

## Validation Steps Performed
* hey look there are tests
* Tested with the following:
```json

        // { "command": "setTabColor", "keys": [ "alt+c" ] },
        { "keys": "ctrl+alt+c", "command": { "action": "setTabColor", "color": "#123456" } },
        { "keys": "alt+shift+c", "command": { "action": "setTabColor", "color": null} },
        { "keys": "alt+c", "command": "openTabColorPicker" },
```
2020-06-25 13:06:21 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
9215b5282d Implement Shift+MultiClick Selection Expansion (#6322)
This pull request implements shift+double/triple click. Proper behavior
(as described in #4557) is to only expand one selection point, not both.

Adding the `bool targetStart` was a bit weird. I decided on this being
the cleanest approach though because I still want `PivotSelection` to be
its own helper function. Otherwise, the concept of "pivoting" gets kinda
messy.

## Validation Steps Performed
Manual testing as described on attached issue.
Tests were added for Shift+Click and pivoting the selection too.

Closes #4557
2020-06-25 00:47:13 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
cffd4eb8e9 Revert "Skip ... analysis when the ... text is simple (6206)" (#6665)
This reverts commit 94eab6e391.

We'll reintroduce this again after making sure it plays nicely with
recycling and box drawing glyphs.

Fixes #6488
Fixes #6664
2020-06-24 15:24:18 -07:00
Rushil Kasetty
4027ba37a6 Add keybinding to rename tab (#6557)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
Add keybinding for renaming a tab
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [X] Fulfills format requirements set by #6567 
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [X] Tests passed
* [X] Requires documentation to be updated
* [X] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #6567 and here (#6557)

This no longer c loses #6256, as the spec changed. 
<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
2020-06-24 20:07:41 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
d8810f2730 version: bump to 1.2 on master 2020-06-23 18:12:00 -07:00
Dustin Howett
0845b3c22f Merged PR 4838632: Merge OSS up to 58f5d7c7
Related work items: MSFT:27172323
2020-06-23 21:40:35 +00:00
greg904
58f5d7c72e Update _TerminalCursorPositionChanged to use ThrottledFunc (#6492)
* Update _TerminalCursorPositionChanged to use ThrottledFunc.
* Rename previous ThrottledFunc to ThrottledArgFunc because now
  ThrottledFunc is for functions that do not take an argument.
* Update ThrottledFunc and ThrottledArgFunc to accept a CoreDispatcher
  on which the function should be called for convenience.
* Don't use coroutines/winrt::fire_and_forget in
  ThrottledFunc/ThrottledArgFunc because they are too slow (see PR).

_AdjustCursorPosition went from 17% of samples to 3% in performance
testing.
2020-06-23 14:05:40 -07:00
Mingjie Zhao
b24dbf7c77 Replace std::map with std::unordered_map (#6640)
Replace std::map with std::unordered_map when the order doesn't matter
and hash functions are provided. Simple optimizations, but I expect the
performance should be strictly better, especially for
CodepointWidthDetector.hpp.
2020-06-23 20:49:07 +00:00
pi1024e
ff23be04fb Optimize booleans (#6548)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
Many places in this codebase has an equality comparison to the boolean FALSE. This adds unneeded complexity as C and C++ has a NOT operand for use of these in if statements. This makes the code more readable in those areas.

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [X] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [X] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
One boolean being compared to FALSE was only used once, with the boolean name being "b", so it is better off not existing at all.

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
Unit Testing passed, compiler refactoring
2020-06-22 21:51:34 +00:00
Mike Griese
81eb13542a Spec for unified keybindings and commands, and synthesized action names (#6532)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This is another iteration on the Command Palette spec, from #5674. These were some ideas that were tossed around by @DHowett, @cinnamon-msft and myself, formalized here. I proposed this as an addendum to the original spec, since I think the first made sense atomically, and this only makes sense as a set of changes to the original. I didn't want to go hacking up the original doc to add this set of changes. 

**There are two proposals in this spec - they should be viewed as two atomic units. They can be accepted or rejected independently. I'm suggesting we approve both. They work _together_. I'm realizing now that this is worded confusingly, and it's on me to fix that.**

## PR Checklist
* [x] Another spec in the #2046 / #5400 saga
* [x] I work here
* [x] _is a doc_

> ## Abstract
> 
> This document is intended to serve as an addition to the [Command Palette Spec].
> While that spec is complete in it's own right, subsequent discussion revealed
> additional ways to improve the functionality and usability of the command
> palette. This document builds largely on the topics already introduced in the
> original spec, so readers should first familiarize themselves with that
> document.
> 
> One point of note from the original document was that the original specification
> was entirely too verbose when defining both keybindings and commands for
> actions. Consider, for instance, a user that wants to bind the action "duplicate
> the current pane". In that spec, they need to add both a keybinding and a
> command:
> 
> ```json
> {
>     "keybindings": [
>         { "keys": [ "ctrl+alt+t" ], "command": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"auto", "splitMode": "duplicate" } },
>     ],
>     "commands": [
>         { "name": "Duplicate Pane", "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"auto", "splitMode": "duplicate" }, "icon": null },
>     ]
> }
> ```
> 
> These two entries are practically the same, except for two key differentiators:
> * the keybinding has a `keys` property, indicating which key chord activates the
>   action.
> * The command has a `name` property, indicating what name to display for the
>   command in the Command Palette.
> 
> What if the user didn't have to duplicate this action? What if the user could
> just add this action once, in their `keybindings` or `commands`, and have it
> work both as a keybinding AND a command?
>
2020-06-22 15:41:45 -05:00
greg904
073e732301 Double-click a tab to rename it (#6628)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request

When the user double clicks on a tab, show the tab rename box
as if they right clicked on the tab and clicked on "Rename".

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6600
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated. If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

I added a handler for the `DoubleTapped` event on the tab view item
when we are constructing it for the tab (in `Tab::_MakeTabViewItem`).

The code for that handler was copied the "rename tab menu item" click
handler.

I did not extract the code into a member function because it is very
short (only 2 lines of code) and only used twice so it is not worth
it IMO.

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
2020-06-22 16:17:25 +00:00
Michael Niksa
e7d3dc5da2 Recycle assorted rendering components to accelerate drawing (#6483)
This saves an awful lot of construction/destruction and memory
allocation, especially with text that changes a lot (see: cacafire).

Three things:
1. Recycling the text layouts. This holds onto the `CustomTextLayout` so
   all the things that don't change related to drawing targets and
   whatnot aren't freed and recreated every frame.
2. Reordering the runs in place. This saves a vector
   allocation/copy/delete every time OrderRuns is called. They can be
   rearranged in place.
3. Only clip once per row. This reduces the clip push/pop to only one
   time per row. Since we're always redrawing an entire row at a time,
   this saves a lot of alloc/free of the clip frame, dramatically
   reduces queued commands, and makes less work on the flush since
   clipping requires staging the drawing and then bringing it back to
   the main surface.
2020-06-22 16:13:09 +00:00
greg904
26d6a37800 Always use the dark window borders (#6624) 2020-06-22 08:38:07 -07:00
Michael Niksa
951f389210 Use D2DDeviceContext and friends over D2DRenderTarget (#6527)
I was told that the DeviceContext version supercedes the RenderTarget
one. This moves us to it so we can gain access to a higher level of
control over the various pieces in our pipeline as we continue to evolve
the renderer.

The underlying motivation here is to potentially use a
`ID2D1CommandList` to batch our commands and run them all later outside
the lock. That can only really be done with this more granular level of
control over the pipeline. So this moves to that in a single step that
is easily findable in history should we have problems

I discussed this with @NiklasBorson of the Direct2D/DirectWrite team as
well as with @DHowett before doing it.

## Validation
- [x] Checked docs to make sure that these work on Windows 7 with
  Platform Update
- [x] Manual smoke test real quick
- [ ] Try running on Win7 + Platform Update after change
- [x] Probably do more than just a smoke test manually or otherwise

Closes #6525
2020-06-19 22:14:01 +00:00
Leonard Hecker
15f2535752 Improve bitmap::_calculateArea performance (#6572)
`bitmap::_calculateArea` performance can be improved by leveraging the
optimized `find_first`/`find_next` methods instead of iterating through
the bitmap manually.
2020-06-19 22:09:30 +00:00
Michael Niksa
b91430b64d Enable hot reload of renderer settings that aren't already hot reload capable (#6551)
## Summary of the Pull Request

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #3927
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Tested manually.
* [x] Requires documentation to be updated: (generate doc bug here)
* [x] Am core contributor.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- I found four settings that weren't hot reloadable with the 3927 comment above them:
1. Experimental retro terminal effect
2. Experimental software rendering
3. Experimental full repaint rendering
4. Antialiasing settings for text

I made them all hot reloadable by telling the `TermControl` to propagate them on settings change to the `DxEngine`.
Then I set up the `DxEngine` inside the setters to only set them if they changed. And if they do change, to trigger a full repaint and/or a complete drop and recreate of the entire DX device chain (as would happen if it were lost for another reason like a user-mode graphics failure, disconnected display, etc.)
I made the boolean an atomic because the settings can be coming in off of another thread (the XAML eventing one) and the renderer is picking the status up on its thread at the top of the BeginPaint frame.

## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Opened it up and toggled all the settings while staring at PowerShell
- [x] Opened it up and toggled all the settings while staring at something intensive like a `cacafire` fire
2020-06-19 21:09:37 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
dc5baab3fe Add schema check to PR template (#6599)
This adds a check for updating the schema, and rewords the documentation checkbox to match the wording of the others.
2020-06-19 12:06:23 -07:00
Leonard Hecker
4f55568a17 Improved ATTR_ROW::ReplaceAttrs performance (#6573)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Improve `ATTR_ROW::ReplaceAttrs` performance by only reserving the necessary capacity instead of resizing the new run.
That way `TextAttributeRun`s are only instantiated once instead of twice.

## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Performance could be further improved by directly moving `TextAttributeRun`s into the new vector, but I considered this out of scope for this PR.

## Validation Steps Performed

CPU usage when running `cacafire` is slightly reduced.
2020-06-19 15:55:17 +00:00
Kayla Cinnamon
acd3ba7bd9 Update PR template with link to docs (#6583) 2020-06-19 08:19:28 -07:00
Kayla Cinnamon
e337faaaf8 Add 1.1 blog post to 2.0 roadmap (#6581) 2020-06-19 08:18:58 -07:00
Devon DeJohn
1fdceb0ea9 doc: copyedit the roadmap a little bit (#6587) 2020-06-18 22:17:48 -07:00
Leonard Hecker
4eaa0b83c7 Use early returns in TermControl::_KeyHandler (#6575)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR changes `TermControl::_KeyHandler` to use early returns, which you can think of as "guard clauses".
This has the benefit of a reduced nesting level, easier to understand control flow and opens op the way to more complex conditions.

## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

## Validation Steps Performed

Everything still works as expected.
2020-06-18 22:24:12 +00:00
Leonard Hecker
78ca722028 Fixed #6377: TerminalCore::_altGrAliasing is undefined by default (#6571)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Fixes #6377. `TerminalCore` does not initialize `_altGrAliasing`. The impact is minimized in WT because it defaults to `true` in higher layers. It's not initialized when WPF is driving.

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6377
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx
2020-06-18 22:09:45 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
10bc1a6532 Introduce JsonUtilsNew as documented in #5875 (#6355)
Read the [JsonUtils Spec] for more details.

This pull request introduces the next version of JsonUtils. It is in a
separate file for ease of review and testing.

JsonUtilsNew will be renamed in a subsequent commit that rewrites our
JSON deserializers.

### Implementer's Notes

I went with telescoping exceptions for the key parsing code, because
it's totally possible that you can be five keys deep and encounter a
type error. This lets us encode information about all failures in the
chain instead of just the topmost one.

The original JsonUtilsNew code changed to use `decay` everywhere because
the tests wouldn't compile. We want to treat `GetValue<const guid>` _the
same as_ `GetValue<guid>`, and this lets us do so. `decay` is awesome.

I've been developing this with a shim that redirects `JsonUtils.h` to
`JsonUtilsNew.h`. I am not comfortable deleting the original until we've
moved off of it, and that _will_ be the subject of a followup PR.

## Validation Steps Performed

So many tests.

[JsonUtils Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/doc/cascadia/Json-Utility-API.md

Refs #2550
2020-06-18 00:27:42 +00:00
Leon Liang
6485a2b440 Spec: Advanced Tab Switcher (#3753)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
This is the spec for the Advanced Tab Switcher. This would allow the user to navigate through a vertical list of tabs through a UI, similar to those found in VSCode and Visual Studio.

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References
#1502: Feature Request: Advanced Tab Switcher
#973: Ctrl+Tab toggling between two tabs

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Spec for #1502
* [x] CLA signed.
2020-06-17 17:30:24 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
ffaba38fd4 Remove the WinTelnetEngine (#6526)
Nobody was using it.

Discussed in #2661.
2020-06-17 16:29:49 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
c1076a823d Fix openSettings misspelling in defaults (#6520)
Fixes #6486.
2020-06-15 15:35:15 -07:00
Mike Griese
888e72417d Only snap on key _downs_ (#6517)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Prior to #6309, we'd only snap on input for non-modifier key_down_ events. #6423 fixed this for modifier keys, but didn't fix this for keyups.

## References
* #6423 was an incomplete fix to this problem, which caused this regression

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6481
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
2020-06-15 19:55:20 +00:00
Mike Griese
332d1744d9 Fix sending a NUL on alt key up (#6516)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Make sure to set the scancode for the manual alt-up's we're sending. If you don't, then terminalInput in the conpty is going to treat that keypress as an actual NUL, and send that to the connected client.

## References
* regressed in #6421 

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6513
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Validation Steps Performed
Tested `showkeys -a`
2020-06-15 19:54:51 +00:00
Mike Griese
6d2fc5d1b9 Extract ActionAndArgs::FromJson into its own class (#6351)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Pulls the `ActionAndArgs` deserializing into its own class, separate from `AppKeyBindings`. Some 2.0 features are going to need to re-use these actions in their json, so we'll want one unified way of deserializing them.

## References

* Done primarily as part of the work on #2046/#5400/#5674 
* Also related: #1571/#5888 
* Will aggressively conflict with any open PRs that introduced keybindings (looking at #6299)

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes nothing, this is code refactoring
* [x] I work here
* [x] Current tests passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
2020-06-15 13:33:30 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
5e2c4c66e3 Reintroduce the check for VT_INPUT_MODE in AdaptDispatch (#6485)
This commit reverts the removal of the "SSH hack" in #5383. It was
originally added as a solution to #4911, when we realized that SSH would
request the SS3 cursor key encoding but we weren't equipped to handle
it.

A number of folks have filed issues that, in summary, say "when I use
SSH, I can't select/copy/paste text". It turns out that SSH will _also_
pass through requests for mouse input. Terminal dutifully responds to
those requests, of course, by disabling mouse selection/copy/paste. SSH
is **NOT** actually in VT_INPUT_MODE, so it will never receive the mouse
messages.

It's important to note that even with #376 fixed, we are still required
to keep this check. With the closure of #376, we'll be able to convert
VT mouse input back into Win32 mouse input for Win32 applications . . .
but SSH also doesn't know how to handle Win32 mouse input.

Fixes #6476.
Fixes #6196.
Fixes #5704.
Fixes #5608.
2020-06-15 13:04:38 +00:00
greg904
c0ffc9b6dc Clear cached runs after translate_y (#6501)
"While re-reading the code, I found out that I forgot to do clear cached runs
after translate_y in c360b7588ff8d389b49a4ed60cdee51401a5e172."
2020-06-14 00:17:26 -07:00
greg904
c360b7588f Add fast path to til::bitmap::translate using bitshifts (#6493)
This commit adds a fast path to `til::bitmap::translate`: use bit shifts
when the delta is vertical.

Performance while printing the content of a big file, with the patch
from #6492 which hasn't been merged yet, in Release mode:

Before:
* translate represents 13.08% of samples in InvalidateScroll

After:
* translate represents  0.32% of samples in InvalidateScroll

## Validation

Tests passed.
2020-06-13 23:45:10 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
19fcbce459 Add keybinding arg to openSettings (#6299)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds the `target` keybinding arg to `openSettings`. Possible values include: `defaultsFile`, `settingsFile`, and `allFiles`.

## References
#5915 - mini-spec

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #2557 
* [x] Tests added/passed

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Implemented as discussed in the attached spec. A new enum will be added for the SettingsUI when it becomes available.

## Validation Steps Performed
Added the following to my settings.json:
```json
{ "command": "openSettings", "keys":... },
{ "command": { "action": "openSettings" }, "keys":... },
{ "command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "settingsFile" }, "keys":... },
{ "command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "defaultsFile" }, "keys":... },
{ "command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "allFiles" }, "keys":... }
```
2020-06-12 21:19:18 +00:00
greg904
25df527743 Throttle scrollbar updates in TermControl to ~one per 8ms (#4608)
In addition to the below (original) description, this commit introduces
a ThrottledFunc template that can throttle _any_ function. It applies
that type to muffle updates to the scrollbar.

---

Redo #3531 but without the bug that it caused (#3622) which is why it
was reverted.

I'm sorry if I explain this badly. If you don't understand a part, make
sure to let me know and I will explain it better.

### Explanation

How it worked before: `Terminal` signals that viewport changed ->
`TermControl::_TerminalScrollPositionChanged` gets called on the
terminal thread -> it dispatches work for later to be ran the UI thread
to updates the scrollbar's values

Why it's bad:
* If we have many viewport changes, it will create a long stack of
  operations to run. Instead, we should just update the scroll bar with
  the most recent information that we know.
* Imagine if the rate that the work gets pushed on the UI thread is
  greater than the rate that it can handle: it might freeze?
* No need to be real time, we can wait just a little bit (8ms) to
  accumulate viewport changes before we actually change the scroll bar's
  value because it appears to be expensive (see perf below).

Now: `Terminal` signals that viewport changed ->
`TermControl::_TerminalScrollPositionChanged` gets called on the
terminal thread -> it tells the `ScrollBarUpdater` about a new update ->
the `ScrollBarUpdater` only runs one job (I don't know if that's the
right term) on the UI thread at a time. If a job is already running but
hasn't updated the scroll bar yet, it changes the setting in the already
existing job to update the scroll bar with the new values. A job "waits"
some time before doing the update to throttle updates because we don't
need real time scroll bar updates. -> eventually, it updates the scroll
bar If the user scrolls when a scroll bar update is pending, we keep the
scroll bar's Maximum and Minimum but let the user choose its new Value
with the `CancelPendingValueChange` method.

### Note

Also I changed a little bit the code from the Terminal to notify the
TermControl less often when possible.

I tried to scroll with the scroll bar, with the mouse wheel. I tried to
scroll while content is being outputted.

I tried to reproduce the crash from #2248 without success (good).

Co-authored-by: Leonard Hecker <leonard@hecker.io>

Closes #3622
2020-06-12 12:51:37 -07:00
Mike Griese
e8ece1645c Pass <Alt> to the application (#6461)
For mysterious reasons lost to the sands of time, XAML will _never_ pass
us a VK_MENU event. This is something that'll probably get fixed in
WinUI 3, but considering we're stuck on system XAML for the time being,
the only way to work around this bug is to pass the event through
manually. This change generalizes the F7 handler into a "direct key
event" handler that uses the same focus and tunneling method to send
different key events, and then uses it to send VK_MENU.

## Validation Steps Performed

Opened the debug tap, verified that I was seeing alt key ups.
Also used some alt keybindings to make sure I didn't break them.

Closes #6421
2020-06-11 15:41:16 -07:00
Mike Griese
827cc42a45 Finalize Command Palette Spec (#5674)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR aims to move the command palette spec out of the draft state and into a finalized state for inclusion in the 2.0 version of the Windows Terminal. 

Notably, I've added sections regarding the ability to run `wt` commandlines using the Command Palette UI, something we hadn't considered in the original draft, because `wt` commandlines didn't land for like _4 months_ after this first draft.

## References
* #2046 - the original command palette thread
* #2193 - the original draft PR
* #5400 - the new command palette megathread for WT 2.0, which I'll be updating with follow-up tasks as we work on implementing this.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Specs #2046
* [x] I work here
* [x] Is documentation

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

_read the spec_
2020-06-11 21:33:20 +00:00
Mike Griese
db518c0b06 Fix 3 different bugs in the WPF control (#6464)
* [wpf] WM_KEYUP crashes on x64 #6444
  - Turns out that doing the `(uint)lParam` cast worked fine for the
    keydowns, because the value of lParam usually didn't have super
    high-order bits set. That's not the case for keyups, where the 30th
    bit is _always_ set. This is fixed by explicitly getting the byte
    with the scancode in it.
* [wpf] WM_KEYUP generates wrong value in Win32 input mode #6445
  - This was fixed by basically the same thing as the above.
* [wpf] WPF control crashes on startup trying to render cursor #6446
  - This was a regression from #6337. I forgot to initialize the brush
    used to paint the cursor, because the UWP version always uses color
    (but the WPF one relies on the text foreground color).
* Also adds a minor change to the WPF test app, so that the user can
  actually exit `win32-input-mode`.

* #6337 regressed #6446 
* #6309 regressed the other two.

Closes #6444
Closes #6445
Closes #6446
2020-06-11 18:05:43 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
bcdccc533e Add Mini-Spec for openSettings (#5915)
The spec introduces a keybinding argument of 'target' to be able to open a specific settings file. When the Settings UI gets implemented, it will also become an option.

Alternative designs were presented but the 'target' model was decided on.
2020-06-11 10:12:08 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett
60630cf7c4 Fix the x86 build and re-enable x86 CI (#6467)
This was a miss.
2020-06-11 17:04:42 +00:00
WSLUser
7fc735525d Deps: Bump Newtonsoft.Json from 10.0.3 to 12.0.3 (#6369)
Bump Newtonsoft.Json from 10.0.3 to 12.0.3

## References
Part of #5297

## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes (none)
* [x] CLA signed
* [ ] Tests added/passed N/A
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated N/A
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

## Validation Steps Performed
CI builds successfully
2020-06-10 23:54:02 +00:00
greg904
30a6c1e10a Open the system menu when user right clicks the drag bar (#6443)
Related to #1375 ("Click/Right click icon should display
Minimize/Maximize/Close menu")
2020-06-10 22:56:36 +00:00
greg904
a921bbfebb Reduce latency with DXGI 1.3 GetFrameLatencyWaitableObject (#6435)
This pull request reduces input lag, especially with selection, by using
`IDXGISwapChain2::GetFrameLatencyWaitableObject`.

This is based on the [DXGI 1.3 documentation].

Excerpt from the [DXGI 1.3 improvement list]:
> The following functionality has been added in Microsoft DirectX
Graphics Infrastructure (DXGI) 1.3, which is included starting in
Windows 8.1.

Before, during rendering:
1. render frame
2. call `Present` on swap chain:
   2.a. blocks until it can present
   2.b. meanwhile, selection/text in terminal might have changed, but
     we're still using the frame that we rendered before blocking
   2.c. presents

After, during rendering:
1. block until we can present
2. render frame with latest data
3. call `Present` on swap chain:
  3.a. present without blocking

[DXGI 1.3 documentation]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/uwp/gaming/reduce-latency-with-dxgi-1-3-swap-chains
[DXGI 1.3 improvement list]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/direct3ddxgi/dxgi-1-3-improvements:
2020-06-10 22:35:14 +00:00
Michael Niksa
0c93b2ebbe Improve perf by avoiding vector reallocation in renderer clusters and VT output graphics options (#6420)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Caches vectors in the class and uses a new helper to opportunistically shrink/grow as viewport sizes change in order to save performance on alloc/free of commonly used vectors.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Scratches a perf itch.
* [x] I work here.
* [x] wil tests added
* [x] No add'l doc.
* [x] Am core contributor.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Two fixes:
1. For outputting lots of text, the base renderer class spent a lot of time allocating and freeing and reallocating the `Cluster` vector that adapts the text buffer information into render clusters. I've now cached this vector in the base render class itself and I shrink/grow it based on the viewport update that happens at the top of every frame. To prevent too much thrashing in the downward/shrink direction, I wrote the `til::manage_vector` helper that contains a threshold to only shrink if it asks for small enough of a size relative to the existing one. I used 80% of the existing size as the threshold for this one.
2. For outputting lots of changing colors, the VT graphics output engine spent a bunch of time allocating and reallocating the vector for `GraphicsOptions`. This one doesn't really have a predictable size, but I never expect it to get extremely big. So I just held it in the base class.

## Validation Steps Performed
* [x] Ran the til unit test
* [x] Checked render cluster vector time before/after against `big.txt` from #1064
* [x] Checked VT graphics output vector time before/after against `cacafire`

Case | Before | After
---|---|---|
`big.txt` | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/84088632-cbaa8400-a9a1-11ea-8932-04b2e12a0477.png) | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/84088996-b6822500-a9a2-11ea-837c-5e32a110156e.png)
`cacafire` | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/84089153-22648d80-a9a3-11ea-8567-c3d80efa16a6.png) | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/84089190-34463080-a9a3-11ea-98e5-a236b12330d6.png)
2020-06-10 22:02:05 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
8dcfd61278 WpfTest: Add an x86/Win32 build, make DPI aware (#6455)
This matches more closely how Visual Studio uses the WPF control.
It comes in the form of _another platform_ (sorry), `DotNet_x86Test`.
2020-06-10 21:08:16 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
9ce884c4fb Tie up some A11y loose threads (#6417)
This pull request moves WindowUiaProvider back into Win32 interactivity
and deletes all mention of it from Windows Terminal. Terminal does not
have a single toplevel window that requires Console-like UIA, as each
Xaml control inside it is in charge of its own destiny.

I've also merged `IUiaWindow` and `IConsoleWindow` back together, as
well as `WindowUiaProviderBase` and `WindowUiaProvider`.

Things look a lot more like they did before we tore them apart.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #3564
* [x] CLA
* [x] Tests added/passed (manual)
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already

## Validation

Carlos validated conhost and terminal on this branch.
2020-06-10 15:15:26 +00:00
Mike Griese
7b791f572d Don't send a manual F7 keyup (#6442)
## Summary of the Pull Request

When someone asked "Do we need to send a F7 keyup too" in #6309, the right answer was actually _no_. Turns out that while XAML will eat the F7 key**down**, it _won't_ eat the F7 key**up**. 

## References

* regressed in #6309

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6438 
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tested manually
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Validation Steps Performed

* Checked this with the debug tap
2020-06-09 23:16:38 +00:00
Mike Griese
e03e46b69e Don't snap on input nor dismiss selection for just a modifier key (#6431)
Does what it says on the label. Pure modifier keys weren't making it
this far at all prior to #6309. This PR changes these methods to make
sure that we only dismiss a selection or snap on input when the key
pressed isn't a modifier key.

## References

* regressed in #6309

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6423
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Validation Steps Performed

* Tried to repro this in the Terminal, couldn't anymore.
2020-06-09 21:49:39 +00:00
greg904
f9b1238f30 Set tab title as early as possible (#6433)
When opening a new tab, it takes a few milliseconds before title to
appears. This PR makes it instantaneous.

* Updated the Terminal so that it can load the title from the settings
  before it is initialized.
* Load terminal settings in TermControl constructor before the terminal
  is initialized (see above).
* Update Tab so that it sets the TabViewItem's title in the constructor
  (in Tab::_MakeTabViewItem) instead of waiting for the VT sequence to
  set the title (from what I understand).

NOTE 1: there is a similar problem with the tabview icon which is not
fixed by this PR.

NOTE 2: This is only a problem with animations disabled because
otherwise the title fades in so there is enough time for it to be set
when it becomes visible.

## Validation

I ran the terminal and opened a new tab. The title appears instantly.
2020-06-09 21:47:13 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
48b99faed1 wpf: add a .NET Core WPF Test project for the WPF Control (#6441)
This commit introduces a new project that lets you F5 a working instance
of the Wpf Terminal Control.

To make the experience as seamless as possible, I've introduced another
solution platform called "DotNet_x64Test". It is set to build the WPF
projects for "Any CPU" and every project that PublicTerminalCore
requires (including itself) for "x64". This is the only way to ensure
that when you press F5, all of the native and managed dependencies get
updated.

It's all quite cool when it works.
2020-06-09 13:41:42 -07:00
Kayla Cinnamon
8b201c1eb0 Upload Windows Terminal 2.0 roadmap (#6419)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
Upload the roadmap for Windows Terminal 2.0 and link to it on the README.

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
2020-06-09 20:27:00 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
968462fffd Remove parentheses from Preview and Dev build (#6418)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Remove parentheses from the Preview and Dev build. Now they're called Windows Terminal Preview and Windows Terminal Dev Build respectively.

Also removed them from other identifiers of Terminal for consistency.

## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #5974
2020-06-09 18:32:27 +00:00
Mike Griese
f32761849f Add support for win32-input-mode to conhost, ConPTY, Terminal (#6309)
Adds support for `win32-input-mode` to conhost, conpty, and the Windows
Terminal.

* The shared `terminalInput` class supports sending these sequences when
  a VT client application requests this mode.
* ConPTY supports synthesizing `INPUT_RECORD`s from the input sent to it
  from a terminal
* ConPTY requests this mode immediately on startup (if started with a
  new flag, `PSEUDOCONSOLE_WIN32_INPUT_MODE`)
* The Terminal now supports sending this input as well, when conpty asks
  for it.

Also adds a new ConPTY flag `PSEUDOCONSOLE_WIN32_INPUT_MODE` which
requests this functionality from conpty, and the Terminal requests this
by default.

Also adds `experimental.input.forceVT` as a global setting to let a user
opt-out of this behavior, if they don't want it / this ends up breaking
horribly.

## Validation Steps Performed
* played with this mode in vtpipeterm
* played with this mode in Terminal
* checked a bunch of scenarios, as outlined in a [comment] on #4999

[comment]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4999#issuecomment-628718631

References #4999: The megathread
References #5887: The spec

Closes #879
Closes #2865
Closes #530 
Closes #3079
Closes #1119
Closes #1694 
Closes #3608 
Closes #4334
Closes #4446
2020-06-08 22:31:28 +00:00
Mike Griese
55d8df4628 Remove the shell extension from directory backgrounds (#6415)
We're removing this because of MSFT:24623699, which prevents us from being able to do the right thing when we're called on the background of a directory for a range of OS builds. 

#6414 will track re-adding this to the Terminal when the original issue is closed.

* [x] closes #6245
* I work here
2020-06-08 21:35:39 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
e3ee5838a7 Move all wildcards into targets or expand them (#6406)
Wildcards are not allowed in toplevel ItemGroups in vcxproj; they must
be generated by targets.

We mostly use wildcards for pulling in PRI files that are dumped on disk
by the translation tool. We don't want to check those in, so we can't
expand references to them.

To that end, I've introduced a new target that will take a list of
folders containing resw files and expand wildcards under them.

All[1] other wildcards have been moved into their respective targets
_or_ simply expanded.

[1]: Nothing has complained about the resource wildcards in
CascadiaResources.build.items, so I haven't exploded it yet.

Fixes #6214.
2020-06-08 14:01:47 -07:00
James Holderness
ccea66710c Improve the legacy color conversions (#6358)
This PR provides a faster algorithm for converting 8-bit and 24-bit
colors into the 4-bit legacy values that are required by the Win32
console APIs. It also fixes areas of the code that were incorrectly
using a simple 16-color conversion that didn't handle 8-bit and 24-bit
values.

The faster conversion algorithm should be an improvement for issues #783
and #3950.

One of the main points of this PR was to fix the
`ReadConsoleOutputAttribute` API, which was using a simplified legacy
color conversion (the original `TextAttribute:GetLegacyAttributes`
method), which could only handle values from the 16-color table. RGB
values, and colors from the 256-color table, would be mapped to
completely nonsensical values. This API has now been updated to use the
more correct `Settings::GenerateLegacyAttributes` method.

But there were also a couple of other places in the code that were using
`GetLegacyAttributes` when they really had no reason to be working with
legacy attributes at all. This could result in colors being downgraded
to 4-bit values (often badly, as explained above), when the code was
already perfectly capable of displaying the full 24-bits.

This included the fill colors in the IME composer (in `ConsoleImeInfo`),
and the construction of the highlighting colors in the color
search/selection handler (`Selection::_HandleColorSelection`). I also
got rid of some legacy attribute code in the `Popup` class, which was
originally intended to update colors below the popup when the settings
changed, but actually caused more problems than it solved.

The other major goal of this PR was to improve the performance of the
`GenerateLegacyAttributes` method, since the existing implementation
could be quite slow when dealing with RGB values.

The simple cases are handled much the same as they were before. For an
`IsDefault` color, we get the default index from the
`Settings::_wFillAttribute` field. For an `IsIndex16` color, the index
can just be returned as is.

For an `IsRgb` color, the RGB components are compressed down to 8 bits
(3 red, 3 green, 2 blue), simply by dropping the least significant bits.
This 8-bit value is then used to lookup a representative 16-color value
from a hard-coded table. An `IsIndex256` color is also converted with a
lookup table, just using the existing 8-bit index.

The RGB mapping table was calculated by taking each compressed 8-bit
color, and picking a entry from the _Campbell_ palette that best
approximated that color. This was done by looking at a range of 24-bit
colors that mapped to the 8-bit value, finding the best _Campbell_ match
for each of them (using a [CIEDE2000] color difference calculation), and
then the most common match became the index that the 8-bit value would
map to.

The 256-color table was just a simpler version of this process. For each
entry in the table, we take the default RGB palette value, and find it's
closest match in the _Campbell_ palette.

Because these tables are hard-coded, the results won't adjust to changes
in the palette. However, they should still produce reasonable results
for palettes that follow the standard ANSI color range. And since
they're only a very loose approximation of the colors anyway, the exact
value really isn't that important.

That said, I have tried to make sure that if you take an RGB value for a
particular index in a reasonable color scheme, then the legacy color
mapped from that value should ideally match the same index. This will
never be possible for all color schemes, but I have tweaked a few of the
table entries to improve the results for some of the common schemes.

One other point worth making regarding the hard-coded tables: even if we
wanted to take the active palette into account, that wouldn't actually
be possible over a conpty connection, because we can't easily know what
color scheme the client application is using. At least this way the
results in conhost are guaranteed to be the same as in the Windows
Terminal.

[CIEDE2000]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_difference#CIEDE2000

## Validation Steps Performed

This code still passes the `TextAttributeTests` that check the basic
`GetLegacyAttribute` behaviour and verify the all legacy attributes
roundtrip correctly. However, some of the values in the `RgbColorTests`
had to be updated, since we're now intentionally returning different
values as a result of the changes to the RGB conversion algorithm.

I haven't added additional unit tests, but I have done a lot of manual
testing to see how well the new algorithm works with a range of colors
and a variety of different color schemes. It's not perfect in every
situation, but I think it works well enough for the purpose it serves.

I've also confirmed that the issues reported in #5940 and #6247 are now
fixed by these changes. 

Closes #5940 
Closes #6247
2020-06-08 19:05:06 +00:00
Dustin Howett
4a1f2d3c09 Merge remote-tracking branch 'openconsole/inbox' 2020-06-05 16:25:45 -07:00
Dustin Howett
2aaad9688a Reflect OS build fixes back from f90f3bf99
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os OS official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp 272dfa1c4ad5e4202c4c56f3db7a445dc0b003cf
2020-06-05 23:25:23 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
2d18874c8e Make the conversion from WORD to TextAttribute explicit (#6380)
In Windows, we build with /Zc:wchar_t- (which makes wchar_t an unsigned
short typedef.) This causes build breaks when we compare two wchar_t
values (or a wchar_t and an enum class that's of type wchar_t) and the
compiler decides that it might want to _promote them to TextAttribute_
before doing the comparison.
2020-06-05 23:20:32 +00:00
Dustin Howett
935702cde9 Merged PR 4770883: Migrate OSS changes up to f90f3bf99
Dustin Howett (1):
      Merge remote-tracking branch 'openconsole/inbox' into HEAD

James Holderness (1):
      Improve support for VT character sets (CC-4496)

Related work items: MSFT:26791619
2020-06-05 21:40:03 +00:00
Mike Griese
f90f3bf998 Update the tab's close button color to match the tab text color (#5789)
## Summary of the Pull Request

When we select a color for the tab, we update the foreground color of the text so that it maintains acceptable contrast with the new tab color. However, we weren't also updating the foreground color of the close button.

This is understandable though, because apparently this wasn't fixable until MUX 2.4 arrived. I'm not a XAML expert, but I know that setting this key only works when we're using MUX 2.4, so I'm assuming something about the TabView implementation changed in that release. _This PR is marked as a draft until #5778 is merged, then I'll re-target to master._

## References
* #5778 - PR to move to MUX 2.4
* This bug was introduced with the tab color picker in #3789

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5780
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Validation Steps Performed
A light tab color:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81303943-00918700-9042-11ea-86e6-7bdfe343c4ca.png)

A dark tab color:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81303953-04250e00-9042-11ea-8db2-be97af519fae.png)
2020-06-05 19:12:28 +00:00
Dustin Howett
b47df4b19d Last round of master spelling fixes 2020-06-05 12:03:20 -07:00
Dustin Howett
b822cfb178 spelling II 2020-06-05 11:58:25 -07:00
Dustin Howett
026ba34de1 spelling I 2020-06-05 11:57:17 -07:00
Mike Griese
bb4c73cc79 Add support for compact tab sizing (#5787)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Really couldn't be more starightforward. MUX 2.4 added support for "compact" sized tabs. This PR (targeting the 2.4 PR currently, will move to `master` when that merges) enables users to specify `"tabWidthMode": "compact"` in their global settings to get this behavior.

## References
* #5778 - PR to move to MUX 2.4
* [microsoft-ui-xaml#2016](https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/pull/2016) - the MUX PR for compact tab sizing.
* #597 - Tab sizing options?

## PR Checklist
* [x] I don't think we have an issue for this, though I could be wrong.
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

In this screenshot, I'm hovering over tab 2, but the ubuntu tab is focused:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81302365-e6ef4000-903f-11ea-9ce3-5f5ce92e5ba4.png)

In this screenshot, tab 2 is focused:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81302383-ea82c700-903f-11ea-9820-92348d5adc64.png)
2020-06-05 18:51:04 +00:00
Michael Niksa
c3ea7310c1 fix spell things I forced into master. 2020-06-05 11:28:19 -07:00
Mike Griese
038d6e5faf First draft of a spec for panes with non-terminal content (#1080)
Co-authored-by: Michael Niksa <miniksa@microsoft.com>

putting outdated draft spec into drafts folder and closing PR. CI has no function on docs.
2020-06-05 11:14:01 -07:00
Michael Niksa
b051e78d40 Spec for tab tear off and default app (#2080)
docs have no build, cleaning out draft spec from PR queue
2020-06-05 11:08:32 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
1711c76234 Move to Microsoft.UI.Xaml 2.4.0 (#5778)
This brings support for "Compact" tab sizing, which compresses all inactive tabs to just the size of their icons plus the close button. Neat!

It also just keeps us generally up-to-date and good citizens.
2020-06-05 17:07:03 +00:00
Leonard Hecker
e455d4b159 Allow Ctrl+Alt <> AltGr aliasing to be disabled (#6212)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Some people wish to use Ctrl+Alt combinations without Windows treating those as an alias for AltGr combinations. This PR adds a new `altGrAliasing` setting allowing one to control this behavior.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6211
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [x] Manual testing
* [x] Requires documentation to be updated: https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal/issues/50
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

## Validation Steps Performed

* Choose a German keyboard layout
* Using `showkey -a` ensured that both `Ctrl+Alt+Q/E` and `AltGr+Q/E` produce `@/€`
* Added `"altGrAliasing": false` to the WSL profile
* Using `showkey -a` ensured `Ctrl+Alt+Q/E` now produces `^[^Q/E` while `AltGr+Q/E` continues to produce `@/€`
2020-06-05 16:11:41 +00:00
Dustin Howett
f1c9fbd080 Merge remote-tracking branch 'openconsole/inbox' into HEAD 2020-06-04 15:10:11 -07:00
Dustin Howett
efce279c5c Reflect OS build fixes on 7b489128ac back to inbox
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os OS official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp 677d15a4e298a0e1e3ce093bc1dff8d832e3c2b1

Related work items: #26765368
2020-06-04 22:09:17 +00:00
James Holderness
96a77cb74b Improve support for VT character sets (#4496)
This PR improves our VT character set support, enabling the [`SCS`]
escape sequences to designate into all four G-sets with both 94- and
96-character sets, and supports invoking those G-sets into both the GL
and GR areas of the code table, with [locking shifts] and [single
shifts]. It also adds [`DOCS`] sequences to switch between UTF-8 and the
ISO-2022 coding system (which is what the VT character sets require),
and adds support for a lot more characters sets, up to around the level
of a VT510.

[`SCS`]: https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/SCS.html
[locking shifts]: https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/LS.html
[single shifts]: https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/SS.html
[`DOCS`]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_2022#Interaction_with_other_coding_systems

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

To make it easier for us to declare a bunch of character sets, I've made
a little `constexpr` class that can build up a mapping table from a base
character set (ASCII or Latin1), along with a collection of mappings for
the characters the deviate from the base set. Many of the character sets
are simple variations of ASCII, so they're easy to define this way.

This class then casts directly to a `wstring_view` which is how the
translation tables are represented in most of the code. We have an array
of four of these tables representing the four G-sets, two instances for
the active left and right tables, and one instance for the single shift
table.

Initially we had just one `DesignateCharset` method, which could select
the active character set. We now have two designate methods (for 94- and
96- character sets), and each takes a G-set number specifying the target
of the designation, and a pair of characters identifying the character
set that will be designated (at the higher VT levels, character sets are
often identified by more than one character).

There are then two new `LockingShift` methods to invoke these G-sets
into either the GL or GR area of the code table, and a `SingleShift`
method which invokes a G-set temporarily (for just the next character
that is output).

I should mention here that I had to make some changes to the state
machine to make these single shift sequences work. The problem is that
the input state machine treats `SS3` as the start of a control sequence,
while the output state machine needs it to be dispatched immediately
(it's literally the _Single Shift 3_ escape sequence). To make that
work, I've added a `ParseControlSequenceAfterSs3` callback in the
`IStateMachineEngine` interface to decide which behavior is appropriate.

When it comes to mapping a character, it's simply an array reference
into the appropriate `wstring_view` table. If the single shift table is
set, that takes preference. Otherwise the GL table is used for
characters in the range 0x20 to 0x7F, and the GR table for characters
0xA0 to 0xFF (technically some character sets will only map up to 0x7E
and 0xFE, but that's easily controlled by the length of the
`wstring_view`).

The `DEL` character is a bit of a special case. By default it's meant to
be ignored like the `NUL` character (it's essentially a time-fill
character). However, it's possible that it could be remapped to a
printable character in a 96-character set, so we need to check for that
after the translation. This is handled in the `AdaptDispatch::Print`
method, so it doesn't interfere with the primary `PrintString` code
path.

The biggest problem with this whole process, though, is that the GR
mappings only really make sense if you have access to the raw output,
but by the time the output gets to us, it would already have been
translated to Unicode by the active code page. And in the case of UTF-8,
the characters we eventually receive may originally have been composed
from two or more code points.

The way I've dealt with this was to disable the GR translations by
default, and then added support for a pair of ISO-2022 `DOCS` sequences,
which can switch the code page between UTF-8 and ISO-8859-1. When the
code page is ISO-8859-1, we're essentially receiving the raw output
bytes, so it's safe to enable the GR translations. This is not strictly
correct ISO-2022 behavior, and there are edge cases where it's not going
to work, but it's the best solution I could come up with.

## Validation Steps Performed

As a result of the `SS3` changes in the state machine engine, I've had
to move the existing `SS3` tests from the `OutputEngineTest` to the
`InputEngineTest`, otherwise they would now fail (technically they
should never have been output tests).

I've added no additional unit tests, but I have done a lot of manual
testing, and made sure we passed all the character set tests in Vttest
(at least for the character sets we currently support). Note that this
required a slightly hacked version of the app, since by default it
doesn't expose a lot of the test to low-level terminals, and we
currently identify as a VT100.

Closes #3377
Closes #3487
2020-06-04 19:40:15 +00:00
Dustin Howett
b1715479bd Merged PR 4764832: Migrate OSS changes up to 7b489128ac
Related work items: #26765368
2020-06-04 19:21:33 +00:00
Mike Griese
7b489128ac Add a test to ensure support for trailing commas in settings.json (#6312)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds support for trailing commas in our json files. 

## References

* Enabled due to the excellent work over in https://github.com/open-source-parsers/jsoncpp/pull/1098

## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
2020-06-04 16:57:06 +00:00
Mike Griese
1fcd95704d Draw the cursor underneath text, and above the background (#6337)
## Summary of the Pull Request

![textAboveCursor003](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/83681722-67a24d00-a5a8-11ea-8d9b-2d294065e4e4.gif)

This is the plan that @miniksa suggested to me. Instead of trying to do lots of work in all the renderers to do backgrounds as one pass, and foregrounds as another, we can localize this change to basically just the DX renderer. 
1. First, we give the DX engine a "heads up" on where the cursor is going to be drawn during the frame, in `PrepareRenderInfo`.
  - This function is left unimplemented in the other render engines.
2. While printing runs of text, the DX renderer will try to paint the cursor in `CustomTextRenderer::DrawGlyphRun` INSTEAD of `DxEngine::PaintCursor`. This lets us weave the cursor background between the text background and the text. 

## References

* #6151 was a spec in this general area. I should probably go back and update it, and we should probably approve that first.
* #6193 is also right up in this mess

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #1203
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

* This is essentially `"cursorTextColor": "textForeground"` from #6151.
* A follow up work item is needed to add support for the current behavior, (`"cursorTextColor": null`), and hooking up that setting to the renderer.
2020-06-04 12:58:22 +00:00
Mike Griese
e1888b0a29 Spec for Improved keyboard handling in Conpty (#5887)
## Summary of the Pull Request

We have a number of bugs in the Terminal that all have the same singular root cause - VT input does not carry the same fidelity that Win32 input does. For Win32 applications there are certain keystrokes that simply cannot be represented with VT sequences. 

This is my proposal for how we'll handle all these cases. I'm proposing a _new VT sequence_, which will enable the Terminal to send input with all of the information that an `INPUT_RECORD` might have, to conpty. There, conpty will be able to send input to the client application with the same fidelity they're used to, enabling these keys to work for those applications once again. 

## PR Checklist
* [x] Specs #4999
* [x] I work here
* [x] is a spec

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
_read the spec_
2020-06-04 12:42:33 +00:00
Mike Griese
52c0145c64 Add a helper to skip nuget restore during local builds (#6339)
Running `nuget restore` on every build is pretty unnecessary - usually, you _know_ when you need to run it. For the inner dev loop, this is a few seconds on every `bx` build. 

This adds a environment variable you can set to skip the `nuget restore` part of a `bcz` build.

Add the following to your `.razzlerc.cmd`:
```cmd
set _SKIP_NUGET_RESTORE=1
```

and `bcz` (and the other helpers) _won't_ perform a nuget restore on every build.
2020-06-04 07:39:30 -05:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
fe86844996 doc: Propose a JsonUtils replacement by writing documentation (#5875) 2020-06-03 22:54:54 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
18e75bb954 Replace manual get/set code in GlobalAppSettings with GETSET_PROPERTY (#5931)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This pull request removes all of the custom `Get` and `Set` implementations from GlobalAppSettings and replaces them with `GETSET_PROPERTY`. This will be required if we ever convert it to a WinRT class, but for now it's simply niceness-improving.

## References

Required #5847 to land.

## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes norhing
* [x] CLAd
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already
2020-06-03 22:51:46 +00:00
Michael Niksa
9b075e985a Fix line drawing during IME operations. (#6223)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Restores proper line drawing during IME operations in `conhost`

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #803
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Tested manually.
* [x] Check the performance of this and see if it's worse-enough to merit a more confusing algorithm. It was worse for the majority case so I scoped it.
* [x] No doc, it should have worked this way.
* [x] Am core contributor.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- Changed `ConsoleImeInfo::s_ConvertToCells` to be less confusing. It's doing about the same thing, but it's way easier to read now and the compiler/linker/optimizer should just be the same.
- Edited `Renderer::_PaintBufferOutputHelper` to check each attribute for line drawing characters as the right half of a two-col character might have different line drawing characters than the left-half.

## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Manual operation of IME in conhost with Japanese IME.
- [x] Manual operation of IME in conhost with Chinese IME.
- [x] Manual operation of IME in conhost with Chinese (Traditional) IME.
- [x] Manual operation of IME in conhost with and Korean IME. - @leonMSFT says Korean doesn't work this way. But Korean is broken worse in that it's not showing suggestions at all. Filing new bug. #6227 
- [x] Validated against API-filling calls through `SetConsoleTextAttribute` per @j4james's sample code
2020-06-03 22:21:04 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
413b658805 Remove more serializers missed in 6394e5d70 (#6321)
Every time somebody sees these they think they have to write new ones for their new things.
2020-06-03 16:08:20 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett
eccfb537ad tools: add a powershell script to generate CPWD from the UCD (#5946)
This commit introduces Generate-CodepointWidthsFromUCD, a powershell
(7+) script that will parse a UCD XML database in the UAX 42 format from
https://www.unicode.org/Public/UCD/latest/ucdxml/ and generate
CodepointWidthDetector's giant width array.

By default, it will emit one UnicodeRange for every range of non-narrow
glyphs with a different Width + Emoji + Emoji Presentation class;
however, it can be run in "packing" and "full" mode.

* Packing mode: ignore the width/emoji/pres class and combine adjacent
  runs that CPWD will treat the same.
     * This is for optimizing the number of individual ranges emitted
       into code.
* Full mode: include narrow codepoints (helpful for visualization)

It also supports overrides, provided in an XML document of the same format
as the UCD itself. Entries in the overrides files are applied after the
entire UCD is read and will replace any impacted ranges.

The output (when packing) looks like this:

```c++
// Generated by Generate-CodepointWidthsFromUCD -Pack:True -Full:False
// on 05/17/2020 02:47:55 (UTC) from Unicode 13.0.0.
// 66182 (0x10286) codepoints covered.
static constexpr std::array<UnicodeRange, 23> s_wideAndAmbiguousTable{
    UnicodeRange{ 0xa1, 0xa1, CodepointWidth::Ambiguous },
    UnicodeRange{ 0xa4, 0xa4, CodepointWidth::Ambiguous },
    UnicodeRange{ 0xa7, 0xa8, CodepointWidth::Ambiguous },
    .
    .
    .
    UnicodeRange{ 0x1f210, 0x1f23b, CodepointWidth::Wide },
    UnicodeRange{ 0x1f37e, 0x1f393, CodepointWidth::Wide },
    UnicodeRange{ 0x100000, 0x10fffd, CodepointWidth::Ambiguous },
};
```

The output (when overriding) looks like this:

```c++
// Generated by Generate-CodepointWidthsFromUCD.ps1 -Pack:True -Full:False -NoOverrides:False
// on 5/22/2020 11:17:39 PM (UTC) from Unicode 13.0.0.
// 321205 (0x4E6B5) codepoints covered.
// 240 (0xF0) codepoints overridden.
static constexpr std::array<UnicodeRange, 23> s_wideAndAmbiguousTable{
    UnicodeRange{ 0xa1, 0xa1, CodepointWidth::Ambiguous },
    ...
    UnicodeRange{ 0xfe20, 0xfe2f, CodepointWidth::Narrow }, // narrow combining ligatures (split into left/right halves, which take 2 columns together)
    ...
    UnicodeRange{ 0x100000, 0x10fffd, CodepointWidth::Ambiguous },
};
```
2020-06-03 07:16:14 +00:00
Mike Griese
f5dad2f586 Fix a crash with this method when running unpackaged (#6314)
## Summary of the Pull Request

I was debugging the terminal unpackaged, and noticed that this method crashes immediately. I'm gonna bet that this functionality only works when the app is installed as a package. Wrapping this whole method up in one big ol' `try/catch` seems to fix the immediate crash.

## References

* Introduced in #4908 

## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

We _could_ display a warning if the user has this property set and is running the terminal unpackaged, to clue them in that it won't work? I'm willing to file a follow-up for that, but I think we should fix the crash _now_.

## Validation Steps Performed
* Ran the terminal successfully unpackaged.
2020-06-03 00:17:52 +00:00
Mike Griese
88db0e6102 Add support for --title to the wt.exe commandline args (#6296)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds support for setting the terminal `title` with the commandline argument `--title <title>`.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6183
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - probably does, yea

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

* I wasn't sure how we felt about `-t` being the short version of this argument, so I left it out. If we're cool with that, adding it wouldn't be hard.

## Validation Steps Performed

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/83450866-afe03480-a41b-11ea-84e7-9134474fdd7a.png)
2020-06-02 18:52:08 +00:00
Mike Griese
5e51ba4d1f DEPS: Update CLI11 to 1.9 (#6307)
Updates CLI11 to 1.9. Doesn't look like any of the tests broke.

* [x] I work here
* [x] Ran existing tests
2020-06-02 18:51:17 +00:00
Anurag Thakur
a34f1e2ad4 Animate Hover state change of CaptionButtons (#6303)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
As discussed in #6293 , this PR adds a fade animation to button background when pointer hover ends
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6293
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Added storyboarded coloranimations to the visualstategroup of captionbuttons
<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
Tested manually
2020-06-02 18:50:18 +00:00
Mike Griese
7a258f934b DEPS: Update jsoncpp to 1.9.3 (#6308)
Updates jsoncpp to 1.9.3. Doesn't look like any of the tests broke.

* [x] I work here
* [x] Ran existing tests

I'll file a follow-up PR for adding trailing comma support, as mentioned in https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4232#issuecomment-634126486
2020-06-02 18:50:06 +00:00
Michael Niksa
48b3262eaa Update wil. Fixes GDI handle leak (#6229)
## Summary of the Pull Request
When resizing the window title, a GDI object would be leaked. This has to do with our island message handler using `wil` to track these objects and `wil` having a bug.

## References
microsoft/wil#100

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5949 
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Tested manually
* [x] Doc not required.
* [x] Am core contributor.

## Validation Steps Performed
* [x] Added the GDI Objects column to Task Manager, set the Terminal to use the `titleWidth` size tabs, then changed the title a bunch with PowerShell. Confirmed repro before (increasing GDI count). Confirmed it's gone after (no change to object count).
2020-06-01 22:29:05 +00:00
Mike Griese
8987486e85 Add support for --fullscreen, --maximized (#6139)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds two new flags to the `wt.exe` alias:

* `--maximized,-M`: Launch the new Terminal window maximized. This flag cannot be combined with `--fullscreen`.
* `--fullscreen,-F`: Launch the new Terminal window fullscreen. This flag cannot be combined with `--maximized`.

## References
* This builds on the work done in #6060.
* The cmdline args megathread: #4632

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5801
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

* I had to move the commandline arg parsing up a layer from `TerminalPage` to `AppLogic`, because `AppLogic` controls the Terminal's settings, including launch mode settings. This seems like a reasonable change, to put both the settings from the file and the commandline in the same place.
  - **Most of the diff is that movement of code**

* _"What happens when you try to pass both flags, like `wtd -M -F new-tab`?"_:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/82679939-3cffde00-9c11-11ea-8d88-03ec7db83e59.png)

## Validation Steps Performed
* Ran a bunch of commandlines to see what happened.
2020-06-01 21:57:30 +00:00
James Holderness
d92c8293ce Add support for VT52 emulation (#4789)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR adds support for the core VT52 commands, and implements the `DECANM` private mode sequence, which switches the terminal between ANSI mode and VT52-compatible mode.

## References

PR #2017 defined the initial specification for VT52 support.
PR #4044 removed the original VT52 cursor ops that conflicted with VT100 sequences.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #976
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #2017

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Most of the work involves updates to the parsing state machine, which behaves differently in VT52 mode. `CSI`, `OSC`, and `SS3` sequences are not applicable, and there is one special-case escape sequence (_Direct Cursor Address_), which requires an additional state to handle parameters that come _after_ the final character.

Once the parsing is handled though, it's mostly just a matter of dispatching the commands to existing methods in the `ITermDispatch` interface. Only one new method was required in the interface to handle the _Identify_ command.

The only real new functionality is in the `TerminalInput` class, which needs to generate different escape sequences for certain keys in VT52 mode. This does not yet support _all_ of the VT52 key sequences, because the VT100 support is itself not yet complete. But the basics are in place, and I think the rest is best left for a follow-up issue, and potentially a refactor of the `TerminalInput` class.

I should point out that the original spec called for a new _Graphic Mode_ character set, but I've since discovered that the VT terminals that _emulate_ VT52 just use the existing VT100 _Special Graphics_ set, so that is really what we should be doing too. We can always consider adding the VT52 graphic set as a option later, if there is demand for strict VT52 compatibility. 

## Validation Steps Performed

I've added state machine and adapter tests to confirm that the `DECANM` mode changing sequences are correctly dispatched and forwarded to the `ConGetSet` handler. I've also added state machine tests that confirm the VT52 escape sequences are dispatched correctly when the ANSI mode is reset.

For fuzzing support, I've extended the VT command fuzzer to generate the different kinds of VT52 sequences, as well as mode change sequences to switch between the ANSI and VT52 modes.

In terms of manual testing, I've confirmed that the _Test of VT52 mode_ in Vttest now works as expected.
2020-06-01 21:20:40 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
44dcc861ad Adds Alt+Click to auto split pane (#5928)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Users can now open an auto split pane with the mouse.
When opening the dropdown, alt+invoke the profile of choice and it should open in an auto sized pane.

## References
#5025 - further discussion there as to whether this actually closes it.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Had to do a special check for debugTap because that's triggered by holding both alts.

## Validation Steps Performed
alt+click/enter on a new profile. Looks great!
2020-06-01 20:26:21 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
9ed776bf3e Allow the default profile to be specified by name (#5706)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This looks like a big diff, but there's a bunch of existing code that
just got moved around, and there's a cool new Utils template.

The tests all pass, and this passed manual validation. I tried weird
things like "making a profile named `{                            }`"
(w/ enough spaces to look like a guid), and yeah it doesn't let you
specify that one as a name, but _why would you do that?!_

Okay, this pull request abstracts the conversion of a profile name into
an optional profile guid out of the "New Terminal Tab Args" handler and
into a common space for all of CascadiaSettings to use.

It also cleans up the conversion of indices and names into optional
GUIDs and turns _those_ into further helpers.

It also introduces a cool new template for running value_or multiple
times on a chain of optionals. CoalesceOptionals is a "choose first,
with fallback" for N>1 optionals.

On top of all this, I've built support for an "unparsed default GUID":
we load the user's defaultProfile as a string, and as part of settings
validation we unpack that string using the helpers outlined above.

## References

Couples well with #5690.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Incidentally fixes #2876
* [x] Core Contributor
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [x] Requires documentation to be updated (done)
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already

## Validation Steps Performed

Added additional test collateral to make sure that this works.
2020-06-01 20:26:00 +00:00
Josh Elster
fc8fff17db Add startup task, setting to launch application on login (#4908)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR adds a new boolean global setting, startOnUserLogin, along with associated AppLogic to request enabling or disabling of the StartupTask. Added UAP5 extensions to AppX manifests. 
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

#2189 

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #2189
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [x] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #2189

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Please note, I'm a non-practicing C++ developer, there are a number of things I wasn't sure how to handle in the appropriate fashion, mostly around error handling and what probably looks like an incredibly naive (and messy) way to implement the async co_await behavior. 

Error handling-wise, I found (don't ask me how!) that if you somehow mismatch the startup task's ID between the manifest and the call to `StartupTask::GetAsync(hstring taskId)`, you'll get a very opaque WinRT exception that boils down to a generic invalid argument message. This isn't likely to happen in the wild, but worth mentioning...

I had enough trouble getting myself familiarized with the project, environment, and C++/WinRT in general didn't want to try to tackle adding tests for this quite yet since (as I mentioned) I don't really know what I'm doing. I'm happy to give it a try with perhaps a bit of assistance in getting started 😃 

Further work in this area of the application outside of this immediate PR might need to include adding an additional setting to contain launch args that the startup task can pass to the app so that users can specify a non-default profile to launch on start, window position (e.g., #653).

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed

✔️ Default settings:
Given the user does not have the `startOnUserLogin` setting in their profile.json,
When the default settings are opened (via alt+click on Settings), 
Then the global settings should contain the `"startOnUserLogin": false` token

✔️ Applying setting on application launch
Given the `startOnUserLogin` is `true` and 
  the `Windows Terminal` startup task is `disabled` and 
  the application is not running
When the application is launched
Then the `Windows Terminal` entry in the user's Startup list should be `enabled`

✔️ Applying setting on settings change
Given the `startOnUserLogin` is `true` and
  the `Windows Terminal` startup task is `enabled` and
  the application is running
When the `startOnUserLogin` setting is changed to `false` and
  the settings file is saved to disk
Then the `Windows Terminal` startup task entry should be `disabled`

✔️ Setting is ignored when user has manually disabled startup
Given the `startOnUserLogin` is `true` and
  the application is not running and
  the `Windows Terminal` startup task has been set to `disabled` via user action
When the application is launched
Then the startup task should remain disabled and
  the application should not throw an exception

#### note: Task Manager does not seem to re-scan startup task states after launch; the Settings -> Apps -> Startup page also requires closing or moving away to refresh the status of entries
2020-06-01 20:24:43 +00:00
Chester Liu
94eab6e391 Skip glyph shaping analysis when the entire text is simple (#6206)
## Summary of the Pull Request

As the title suggests, this PR will make CustomTextLayout skip glyph shaping analysis when the entire text is detected as simple.

## References

My main reference is [DirectX Factor - Who’s Afraid of Glyph Runs?](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/msdn-magazine/2013/november/directx-factor-who%e2%80%99s-afraid-of-glyph-runs)

And also #2959

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes @skyline75489's continuous drive for perf gainz. 
* [x] CLA signed. 
* [x] Manual tests.
* [x] Nah on docs.
* [x] Discussed with core contributors in this PR.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

This can be seen as a followup of #2959. The idea is the same: make use of simple text (which makes up I think 95% of all terminal text) as much as possible.

The performance boost is huge. Cacafire is actually on fire this time (and remember I'm using 4K!). The frame rate is also boosted since more CPU time can be used for actual drawing.

Before:

![图片](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4710575/82913277-b21c3c00-9fa0-11ea-8785-a14b347bbcbd.png)

After:

![图片](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4710575/82912969-4afe8780-9fa0-11ea-8795-92617dde822f.png)

## Validation Steps Performed

Manually validated.
2020-06-01 18:36:28 +00:00
Malcolm Smith
601286ac69 Find icon from shortcut target if shortcut doesn't specify it (#6277)
Implements what I was suggesting in #6266 where if a shortcut doesn't
specify an icon, the shortcut target full path is used before searching
for a matching executable in the path.

## References

Found due to not getting the right icon in conhost from the Yori
installer.  It's fixed in the installer from
5af366b6a5
for all current users of conhost though, so this PR is just trying to
minimize surprises for the next guy.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

I know conhost and shortcut settings aren't really the team's focus
which is why I'm doing this.  I understand though if there's a better
way or there are factors that I hadn't considered.  Note that the path
searching code is used when programs are launched without using a
shortcut, and it will match if the working directory of the shortcut is
the directory containing the executable.

## Validation Steps Performed

Created a shortcut that didn't specify an icon to a binary that wasn't
in the path, and verified that the icon in the upper left of the console
window could resolve correctly when opening the shortcut.  I'm not aware
of a way to get into this path (of launching via a shortcut to a command
line process) without replacing the system conhost, which is what I did
to verify it.  In order to diagnose it, I used hardcoded DebugBreak()
since even ImageFileExecutionOptions didn't like running against conhost-
is there are better way to debug and test these cases without being so
invasive on the system?

Closes #6266
2020-06-01 17:19:05 +00:00
alexzshl
af56088cb6 Fix syntax errors in font weight options (#6248) 2020-05-28 22:28:13 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett
ba03068940 Reintroduce accidentally removed uap7 namespace (#6243) 2020-05-28 15:18:35 -07:00
Mike Griese
d91e755fe7 Add missing namespaces to the Preview, Release manifests (#6241) 2020-05-28 15:02:40 -07:00
Michael Niksa
e390111dfb Give cursor radio buttons their own sequential IDs in propsheet (#6231)
For a radio button group to work properly, they need sequential IDs.
This moves the cursor radio buttons on the `conhost` property sheet to
be sequential.

## References
- Introduced with #2663
- Found while investigating #4186

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes unfiled issue found while investigating #4186
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Manual test.
* [x] No documentation required.
* [x] Am core contributor.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- `CheckRadioButton` takes a contiguous group of IDs. It will set one
  item in the list and then uncheck the rest. When a new one was added
  to the group, it was added to the end of the segment in the IDs file,
  but not immediately after the existing radio buttons. This means it
  accidentally turned off all the other buttons in the middle.
- To resolve this, I moved all the cursor buttons into their own
  sequential group number and I deprecated the old values.

## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Ensured that the "Discard Old Duplicates" value was set in the
  registry, walked through debugger as `conhost` packed the `TRUE` value
  into the property sheet blob, walked through the property sheet
  `console.dll` as it unpacked the `TRUE`, then observed that the
  checkbox was actually set instead of getting unset by the
  `CheckRadioButton` call that went from 107 to 119 and accidentally
  unchecked number 112, `IDD_HISTORY_NODUP` even though I swear it was
  just set.
2020-05-28 14:16:10 -07:00
Mike Griese
c30aff0c49 Make the Shell Extension methods STDMETHODIMP (#6238)
These methods need to be declared STDMETHODIMP so the x86 build will pass.
2020-05-28 14:09:52 -07:00
Mike Griese
f17b6c7d0d Enable tab renaming at runtime from the UI (#5775)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds support for setting, from the UI, a runtime override for the tab title text. The user can use this to effectively "rename" a tab.

If set, the tab will _always_ use the runtime override string. If the user has multiple panes with different titles in a pane, then the tab's override text will be used _regardless_ of which pane was focused when the tab was renamed.

The override text can be removed by just deleting the entire contents of the box. Then, the tab will revert to using the terminal's usual title. 

## References
* Wouldn't be possible without the context menu from #3789
* Focus doesn't return to the active terminal after hitting <kbd>enter</kbd>/<kbd>esc</kbd>, but that's tracked by #5750 

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #1079
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated

## TODO
* [x] `Tab::SetTabText` might be able to be greatly simplified/removed?
* [x] I'm _pretty sure_ if they set an override title, we won't bubble that up to set the window title.
* [x] I'm unsure how this behaves when the terminal's title changes _while_ the TextBox is visible. I don't think it should change the current contents of the box, but it might currently.
* [ ] **for discussion**: If the user doesn't actually change the text of the tab, then we probably shouldn't set the override text, right? 
  - EX: if they open the box and the text is "cmd", and immediately hit <kbd>enter</kbd>, then run `title foo`, should the text change to "foo" or stay "cmd"?

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81230615-713f9180-8fb7-11ea-8945-6681eec02a4f.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81230640-7ac8f980-8fb7-11ea-9e6b-22f0e0ed128a.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81230665-86b4bb80-8fb7-11ea-90f0-16d4ffb60d89.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81230686-9207e700-8fb7-11ea-94a9-f3f5a59be139.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81230732-a350f380-8fb7-11ea-9901-6dd4f36154f1.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81230746-a8ae3e00-8fb7-11ea-94fa-d2578f9241a7.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81230787-bc59a480-8fb7-11ea-8edf-2bd7fad343fc.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/81230851-dc896380-8fb7-11ea-98c1-918b943543e4.png)
2020-05-28 21:06:17 +00:00
Mike Griese
807d2cf2d2 Add support for fullscreen launchMode (#6060)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds `"launchMode": "fullscreen"`, which does what it says on the box.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #288
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

It's important to let the winow get created, _then_ fullscreen it, because otherwise, when the user exits fullscreen, the window is sized to like, 0x0 or something, and that's just annoying.
2020-05-28 16:53:01 +00:00
Mike Griese
1fc0997969 Add a context menu entry to "Open Windows Terminal here" (#6100)
## Summary of the Pull Request

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/82586680-94447680-9b5d-11ea-9cf1-a85d2b32db10.png)

I went with the simple option - just open the Terminal with the default profile in the selected directory. I'd love to add another entry for "Open Terminal here with Profile...", but that's going to be follow-up work, once we sort out pulling the Terminal Settings into their own dll.

## References
* I'm going to need to file a bunch of follow-ups on this one.
  - We should add another entry to let the user select which profile
  - We should add the icon - I've got to do it in `dllname.dll,1` format, which is annoying.
  - These strings should be localized.
  - Should this only appear on <kbd>Shift</kbd>+right click? Probably! However, I don't know how to do that.
* [A Win7 Explorer Command Sample](https://github.com/microsoft/Windows-classic-samples/tree/master/Samples/Win7Samples/winui/shell/appshellintegration/ExplorerCommandVerb) which hasn't aged well
* [cppwinrt tutorial](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/uwp/cpp-and-winrt-apis/author-coclasses) on using COM in cppwinrt
* [This is PowerToys' manifest](d2a60c7287/installer/MSIX/appxmanifest.xml (L53-L65)) and then [their implementation](d16ebba9e0/src/modules/powerrename/dll/PowerRenameExt.cpp) which were both helpful
* [This ](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/desktop/modernize/desktop-to-uwp-extensions#instructions) was the sample I followed for how to actually set up the manifest, with the added magic that [`desktop5` lets you specify "Directory"](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/schemas/appxpackage/uapmanifestschema/element-desktop5-itemtype)

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #1060
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

This adds a COM class that implements `IExplorerCommand`, which is what lets us populate the context menu entry. We expose that type through a new DLL that is simply responsible for the shell extension, so that explorer doesn't need to load the entire Terminal just to populate that entry.

The COM class is tied to the application through some new entries in the manifest. The Clsid values are IMPORTANT - they must match the UUID of the implementation type. However, the `Verb` in the manifest didn't seem important.
2020-05-28 15:42:13 +00:00
Josh Soref
cc472c267b ci: spelling: update to 0.0.16a; update advice (#5922)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request

Updates the check spelling action to [0.0.16-a](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/releases/tag/0.0.16-alpha)
* update advice -- [sample](57fc13f6c6 (commitcomment-39489723)) -- I really do encourage others to adjust it as desired
* rename `expect` (there are consumers who were not a fan of the `whitelist` nomenclature)
* prune stale items
* some `patterns` improvements to reduce the number of items in `expect`


<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
⚠️ Anyone with an inflight addition of a new file to the `whitelist` directory will be moderately unhappy as the action would only use items from there if it didn't find `expect` (and this PR includes the rename).

## References

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Runs should be ~30s faster.

I was hoping to be able to offer the ability to talk to the bot, but sadly that feature is still not quite ready -- and I suspect that I may want to let projects opt in/out of that feature.

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed

* I added a commit with misspellings: 57fc13f6c6   and ran the command it suggested (in bash). 
* The commit [itself passes its own testing](78df00dcf6) ✔️ 

The commands were never `cmd`/`psh` friendly. This iteration is designed to make it easier for a bot to parse and eventually do the work in response to a GitHub request, sadly that feature is behind schedule.
2020-05-28 08:01:52 -05:00
James Holderness
fa7c1abdf8 Fix SGR indexed colors to distinguish Indexed256 color (and more) (#5834)
This PR introduces a new `ColorType` to allow us to distinguish between
`SGR` indexed colors from the 16 color table, the lower half of which
can be brightened, and the ISO/ITU indexed colors from the 256 color
table, which have a fixed brightness. Retaining the distinction between
these two types will enable us to forward the correct `SGR` sequences to
conpty when addressing issue #2661. 

The other benefit of retaining the color index (which we didn't
previously do for ISO/ITU colors) is that it ensures that the colors are
updated correctly when the color scheme is changed.

## References

* This is another step towards fixing the conpty narrowing bugs in issue
  #2661.
* This is technically a fix for issue #5384, but that won't be apparent
  until #2661 is complete.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #1223
* [x] CLA signed. 
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

The first part of this PR was the introduction of a new `ColorType` in
the `TextColor` class. Instead of just the one `IsIndex` type, there is
now an `IsIndex16` and an `IsIndex256`. `IsIndex16` covers the eight
original ANSI colors set with `SGR 3x` and `SGR 4x`, as well as the
brighter aixterm variants set with `SGR 9x` and `SGR 10x`. `IsIndex256`
covers the 256 ISO/ITU indexed colors set with `SGR 38;5` and `SGR
48;5`.

There are two reasons for this distinction. The first is that the ANSI
colors have the potential to be brightened by the `SGR 1` bold
attribute, while the ISO/ITO color do not. The second reason is that
when forwarding an attributes through conpty, we want to try and
preserve the original SGR sequence that generated each color (to the
extent that that is possible). By having the two separate types, we can
map the `IsIndex16` colors back to ANSI/aixterm values, and `IsIndex256`
to the ISO/ITU sequences.

In addition to the VT colors, we also have to deal with the legacy
colors set by the Windows console APIs, but we don't really need a
separate type for those. It seemed most appropriate to me to store them
as `IsIndex256` colors, since it doesn't make sense to have them
brightened by the `SGR 1` attribute (which is what would happen if they
were stored as `IsIndex16`). If a console app wanted a bright color it
would have selected one, so we shouldn't be messing with that choice.

The second part of the PR was the unification of the two color tables.
Originally we had a 16 color table for the legacy colors, and a separate
table for the 256 ISO/ITU colors. These have now been merged into one,
so color table lookups no longer need to decide which of the two tables
they should be referencing. I've also updated all the methods that took
a color table as a parameter to use a `basic_string_view` instead of
separate pointer and length variables, which I think makes them a lot
easier and safer to work with. 

With this new architecture in place, I could now update the
`AdaptDispatch` SGR implementation to store the ISO/ITU indexed colors
as `IsIndex256` values, where before they were mapped to RGB values
(which prevented them reflecting any color scheme changes). I could also
update the `TerminalDispatch` implementation to differentiate between
the two index types, so that the `SGR 1` brightening would only be
applied to the ANSI colors.

I've also done a bit of code refactoring to try and minimise any direct
access to the color tables, getting rid of a lot of places that were
copying tables with `memmove` operations. I'm hoping this will make it
easier for us to update the code in the future if we want to reorder the
table entries (which is likely a requirement for unifying the
`AdaptDispatch` and `TerminalDispatch` implementations). 

## Validation Steps Performed

For testing, I've just updated the existing unit tests to account for
the API changes. The `TextColorTests` required an extra parameter
specifying the index type when setting an index. And the `AdapterTest`
and `ScreenBufferTests` required the use of the new `SetIndexedXXX`
methods in order to be explicit about the index type, instead of relying
on the `TextAttribute` constructor and the old `SetForeground` and
`SetBackground` methods which didn't have a way to differentiate index
types.

I've manually tested the various console APIs
(`SetConsoleTextAttribute`, `ReadConsoleOutputAttribute`, and
`ReadConsoleOutput`), to make sure they are still setting and reading
the attributes as well as they used to. And I've tested the
`SetConsoleScreenBufferInfoEx` and `GetConsoleScreenBufferInfoEx` APIs
to make sure they can read and write the color table correctly. I've
also tested the color table in the properties dialog, made sure it was
saved and restored from the registry correctly, and similarly saved and
restored from a shortcut link.

Note that there are still a bunch of issues with the color table APIs,
but no new problems have been introduced by the changes in this PR, as
far as I could tell.

I've also done a bunch of manual tests of `OSC 4` to make sure it's
updating all the colors correctly (at least in conhost), and confirmed
that the test case in issue #1223 now works as expected.
2020-05-27 22:34:45 +00:00
Mike Griese
e7c22fbadb Replace everything in TerminalSettings with GETSET_PROPERTY (#6110)
This is mostly a codehealth thing - we made these handy macros for just defining basic `{ get; set; }` properties, but we never used them in TerminalSettings, because that file was written before the macros were.

This cleans up that class.

* [x] I work here.
2020-05-27 21:46:39 +00:00
Michael Niksa
1ea08892f8 Add stdexcept header explicitly to u8u16test tool (#6226)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds implicit stdexcept header include to u8u16test tool.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes regression introduced when moving from VS 16.5 to VS 16.6 (which the CI did of its own accord)
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Built it.
* [x] No doc.
* [x] Am core contributor.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
In VS 16.5, the <stdexcept> header was pulled in by `<string>` or  `<string_view>` or `<array>` or `<algorithm>` implicitly. In VS 16.6, that's gone. No one wrote it in the header because it was just automatically there in the past. Now I wrote it in the header.

## Validation Steps Performed
* [x] Built it on my machine after upgrading to VS `16.6.0`.
* [x] Built it in CI.
2020-05-27 12:06:35 -07:00
Alex Hicks
f1b67b3683 Fix #6079, allow pasting from Explorer's 'Copy Address' (#6146)
Fixes #6079 by implementing support for IStorageItem clipboard contents. Manually tested, seems to work for both types of address-copying from Explorer (as well as normal text).

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #6079
* Not sure what tests would be useful here, it's mostly to do with what Explorer's doing

Not enormously familiar with C++ or this codebase, so happy to make changes as requested.

## Validation Steps Performed

Ran the terminal, pasted from several different sources (explorer's various copy functions + plaintext)
2020-05-27 17:42:49 +00:00
Sascha Greuel
0582a6576a Add winget instructions to README.md (#6169)
Added install instructions for winget

resolves #6159
2020-05-27 16:34:32 +00:00
James Holderness
8752054f5b Make sure cursor visibility is restored after using an IME (#6207)
## Summary of the Pull Request

When using an _Input Method Editor_ in conhost for East Asian languages, the text cursor is temporarily hidden while the characters are being composed. When the composition is complete, the cursor visibility is meant to be restored, but that doesn't always happen if the IME composition is cancelled. This PR makes sure the cursor visibility is always restored, regardless of how the IME is closed.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #810
* [x] CLA signed.
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

The original implementation hid the cursor whenever `ConsoleImeInfo::WriteCompMessage` was called (which could be multiple times in the course of a composition), and then only restored the visibility when `ConsoleImeInfo::WriteResultMessage` was called. If a composition is cancelled, though, `WriteResultMessage` would never be called, so the cursor visibility wouldn't be restored.

I've now made the `SaveCursorVisibility` and `RestoreCursorVisibility` methods public, so they can instead be called from the `ImeStartComposition` and `ImeEndComposition` functions. This makes sure `RestoreCursorVisibility` is always called, regardless of how the composition ended, and `SaveCursorVisibility` is only called once at the start of the composition (which isn't essential, but seems cleaner to me).

## Validation Steps Performed

I've manually tested opening and closing the IME, both while submitting characters and while cancelling a composition, and in all cases the cursor visibility was correctly restored.
2020-05-27 16:31:09 +00:00
Mike Griese
2af722b43d Make sure to update the maximize button's visual state on launch (#5988)
## Summary of the Pull Request
This is an enormously trivial nit - when we launch maximized, we don't draw the maximize button in the "restore" state.

This PR changes the terminal to manually update the Maximize button on launch, once the titlebar is added to the UI tree.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #3440
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
2020-05-21 23:27:33 +00:00
Mike Griese
c373ebcd8d Get rid of the padding above the tab row when maximized (#5881)
## Summary of the Pull Request

When we maximize the window, shrink the caption buttons (the min, max, close buttons) down to 32px tall, to be the same height as the `TabRowControl`. This way, the tabs will be flush with the top of the display.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #2541
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

I tried for a couple hours this morning to do this as a `VisualState`. First I tried doing it as one on the TabRow, which I had very little success with. Then, I eventually realized that the TabRow wasn't even responsible for the padding there, it was being created by the fact that the caption buttons were too tall. Again, I tried to use the existing `VisualState`s they have defined for this, but I couldn't figure out how to do that.

I think the visual state solution would be _cleaner_, so if someone knows how to do that instead, please let me know. 

## Validation Steps Performed

* Maximized/restored the Terminal on my display with the taskbar on the bottom
* Maximized/restored the Terminal on my display with the taskbar on the top
2020-05-21 22:26:37 +00:00
Matt Wojciakowski
a472d21d89 Update to point to live docs (#6011)
included a link to the repo, but live docs is a better reading experience
2020-05-21 05:41:55 -07:00
Michael Niksa
8265d941b7 Add font weight options (#6048)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds the ability to specify the font weight in the profiles, right next to the size and the font face.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #1751 
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Tested manually, see below.
* [x] Added documentation to the schema 
* [x] Requires docs.microsoft.com update, filed as https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal/issues/26
* [x] I'm a core contributor.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- Weights can be specified according to the OpenType specification values. We accept either the friendly name or the numerical value that applies to each weight.
- Weights are carried through per-profile and sent into the renderer.
- Weights are carried through to the TSF/IME overlay.
- The names are restricted to the set seen at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/api/windows.ui.text.fontweights.
- There are alternate names at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/dwrite/ne-dwrite-dwrite_font_weight for the same values (ultra-black is just an alias for extra-black at 950).

## Validation Steps Performed
- Cascadia Code normal
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/82480181-46117380-9a88-11ea-9436-a5fe4ccd4350.png)

- Cascadia Code bold
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/82480202-4f9adb80-9a88-11ea-9e27-a113b41387f5.png)

- Segoe UI Semilight
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/82480306-73f6b800-9a88-11ea-93f7-d773ab7ccce8.png)

- Segoe UI Black
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/82480401-9688d100-9a88-11ea-957c-0c8e03a8cc29.png)

- Segoe UI 900 (value for Black)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18221333/82480774-26c71600-9a89-11ea-8cf6-aaeab1fd0747.png)
2020-05-20 20:17:17 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
99a6fa4421 Add Carlos Zamora to spell checker (#6009) 2020-05-19 16:37:38 -07:00
James Holderness
5d6fdf3897 Correct the default 6x6x6 palette entries (#5999)
There is a range of 216 colors in the default 256-color table that is
meant to be initialized with a 6x6x6 color cube, with each color
component iterating over the values `00`, `5F`, `87`, `AF`, `D7`, and
`FF`. A few of the entries incorrectly had the _red_ component has `DF`,
when it should have been `D7`.  This PR corrects those entries. It also
removes a bit of unnecessary whitespace in the first 100 entries.

## Validation Steps Performed

I have a visual test script that renders the full 256-color palette,
using both the indexed color sequence (`SGR 38;5`) and the equivalent
rgb representation (`SGR 38;2`) side by side. Although the difference
was subtle when it was incorrect, I can now see that it has been fixed.

Closes #5994
2020-05-19 20:02:38 +00:00
Kayla Cinnamon
c78f264b4b Update README with v1 announcements (#5993)
We have some goodies that have been announced at Build 2020 that need to be in the README. 😊
2020-05-19 09:19:04 -07:00
裴孟齐
c1df53f014 doc: fix a typo in user-docs/index.md (#5961) 2020-05-18 09:29:30 -07:00
shivam284
cacfbb5db2 doc: correct Help Wanted link in CONTRIBUTING.md (#5967) 2020-05-18 09:28:31 -07:00
Josh Soref
ef45b0c358 ci: Update spelling patterns to cover cascadia commit ID (#5955)
Thankfully this is a pattern file, so it won't conflict w/ the 0.0.16 update.
2020-05-17 15:13:48 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
ba1a298d6b Partially regenerate codepoint widths from Emoji 13.0 (#5934)
This removes all glyphs from the emoji list that do not default to
"emoji presentation" (EPres). It removes all local overrides, but retains
the comments about the emoji we left out that are Microsoft-specific.

This brings us fully in line with the most popular Terminals on OS X,
except that we squash our emoji down to fit in one cell and they let
them hang over the edges and damage other characters. Oh well.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Late Friday evening, I tested my emoji test file on iTerm2. In so doing, I realized
that @j4james and @leonMSFT were right the entire time in #5914: Emoji
that require `U+FE0F` must not be double-width by default.

I finally banged up a powershell script that parses the UCD and emits a codepoint
width table. Once checked in, this will be definitive.

Refs #900, #5914.
Fixes #5941.
2020-05-17 13:32:43 -07:00
Dan Thompson
e1c139128e Make bcz not run personal PowerShell profile script (-NoProfile) (#5945)
The `bcz.cmd` script calls a powershell helper script (bx.ps1), but
(previous to this change) did not pass `-NoProfile`, which means that
powershell.exe would load and run one's personal profile script, which
can only slow things down, and worse, can change default behaviors (such
as turning on strict mode by default, which will cause scripts that
don't run cleanly with strict mode to generate lots of errors--such as
bx.ps1).

This change amends the powershell.exe command line to pass -NoProfile,
as well as to set the execution policy and ensure that interactive
prompts can't inadvertently show up (normal best practices for use of
powershell in build scripts).

This change will speed things up (probably negligibly, but still) and
(more importantly) prevent non-determinism and errors that could result
from running people's profile scripts when running the helper bx.ps1.
2020-05-16 17:40:10 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
b46d393061 Switch the Cascadia projects to til::color where it's easily possible to do so (#5847)
This pull request moves swaths of Cascadia to use `til::color` for color
interop. There are still some places where we use `COLORREF`, such as in
the ABI boundaries between WinRT components.

I've also added two more til::color helpers - `with_alpha`, which takes
an existing color and sets its alpha component, and a
`Windows::UI::Color` convertor pair.

Future direction might include a `TerminalSettings::Color` type at the
idl boundary so we can finally stop using UInt32s (!) for color.

## Validation Steps Performed
Tested certain fragile areas:
* [x] setting the background with OSC 11
* [x] setting the background when acrylic is in use (which requires
  low-alpha)
2020-05-15 22:43:00 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
6394e5d70b Remove the JSON reserializers (except for AKB) (#5918)
The AKB serializer is used in the tracelogging pipeline.

Chatted with @zadjii-msft about ganking the deserializers. The form
they'll take in the future is probably very different from this.

We'll need to have some better tracking of the _source_ or _pass_ a
setting was read during so that we can accurately construct an internal
settings attribution model. Diffing was very extremely cool, but we
didn't end up needing it.

This apparently drops our binary size by a whopping _zero bytes_ because
the optimizer was smarter than us and actually totally deleted it.
2020-05-15 14:51:57 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
71e29b1617 Update Cascadia Code to 2005.15 (#5930) 2020-05-15 13:47:09 -07:00
Ryan Punt
122e4b8124 doc: add a link to default keybindings (#4614) 2020-05-14 16:53:34 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
c39f9c6626 CodepointWidthDetector: reclassify U+25FB, U+25FC as Narrow (#5914)
This seems to be in line with the emoji-sequences table in the latest
version of the Unicode standard: those glyphs require U+FE0F to activate
their emoji presentation. Since we don't support composing U+FE0F, we
should not present them as emoji by default.

Fixes #5910.

Yes, I hate this.
2020-05-14 23:49:08 +00:00
Igal Tabachnik
99037c968d doc: add a tip about launching WT with a Win+Number shortcut (#5909) 2020-05-14 16:48:03 -07:00
Mike Griese
2453e8e1ed Rename propsheet/TerminalPage to propsheet/TerminalPropsheetPage (#5882)
My workflow is to use Sublime's <kbd>Ctrl+P</kbd> shortcut to navigate to files by name. However, the propsheet version of the files _always_ comes up before the `TerminalApp` one does. This results in me having to close the file and re-open the right one.

This PR renames the propsheet one, so it's unambiguous which one I'm opening.

It's really the most trivial nit.
2020-05-14 01:49:20 +00:00
Mike Griese
1422714af6 Manually close tabs when they're closed while dragging them (#5883)
## Summary of the Pull Request

When we're dragging the tab around, if you execute a `ClosePane`/`CloseTab`, then we should make sure to actually activate a new tab, so that focus doesn't just fall into the void.

## References

* This is almost exactly #5799, but with rearranging tabs

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5559
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
We suppress `_OnTabItemsChanged` events during a rearrange, so if a tab is closed while we're rearranging tabs, the we don't fire the `SelectionChanged` event that we usually do during a close that would select the new tab.

## Validation Steps Performed
* Tested manually
  - Confirmed that tragging a tab out, closing it, then dragging it back in does nothing.
2020-05-14 01:47:32 +00:00
Mike Griese
b4c33dd842 Fix an accidental regression from #5771 (#5870)
This PR reverts a relatively minor change that was made incorrectly to
ConPTY in #5771.

In that PR, I authored two tests. One of them actually caught the bug
that was supposed to be fixed by #5771. The other test was simply
authored during the investigation. I believed at the time that the test
revealed a bug in conpty that was fixed by _removing_ this block of
code. However, an investigation itno #5839 revealed that this code was
actually fairly critical. 

So, I'm also _skipping_ this buggy test for now. I'm also adding a
specific test case to this bug.

The problem in the bugged case of `WrapNewLineAtBottom` is that
`WriteCharsLegacy` is wrapping the bottom row of the ConPTY buffer,
which is causing the cursor to automatically move to the next line in
the buffer. This is because `WriteCharsLegacy` isn't being called with
the `WC_DELAY_EOL_WRAP` flag. So, in that test case, 
* The client emits a wrapped line to conpty
* conpty fills the bottom line with that text, then dutifully increments
  the buffer to make space for the cursor on a _new_ bottom line.
* Conpty reprints the last `~` of the wrapped line
* Then it gets to the next line, which is being painted _before_ the
  client emits the rest of the line of text to fill that row.
* Conpty thinks this row is empty, (it is) and manually breaks the row. 

However, the test expects this row to be emitted as wrapped. The problem
comes from the torn state in the middle of these frames - the original
line probably _should_ remain wrapped, but this is a sufficiently rare
case that the fix is being punted into the next release. 

It's possible that improving how we handle line wrapping might also fix
this case - currently we're only marking a row as wrapped when we print
the last cell of a row, but we should probably mark it as wrapped
instead when we print the first char of the _following_ row. That work
is being tracked in #5800

### The real bug in this PR

The problem in the `DeleteWrappedWord` test is that the first line is
still being marked as wrapped. So when we get to painting the line below
it, we'll see that there are no characters to be printed (only spaces),
we emit a `^[20X^[20C`, but the cursor is still at the end of the first
line. Because it's there, we don't actually clear the text we want to
clear.

So DeleteWrappedWord, #5839 needs the `_wrappedRow = std::nullopt;`
statement here.

## References
* I guess just look at #5800, I put everything in there.

## Validation Steps Performed
* Tested manually that this was fixed for the Terminal
* ran tests

Closes #5839
2020-05-12 15:02:15 -07:00
Mike Griese
88ed94d2ac Implement drag-drop paste for text (#5865)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Implements drag-dropping text onto a `TermControl`, in addition to the already supported drag-drop of files.

## References
* [StandardDataFormats](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/api/windows.applicationmodel.datatransfer.standarddataformats?view=winrt-18362)
* [StandardDataFormats::Text](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/api/windows.applicationmodel.datatransfer.standarddataformats.text?view=winrt-18362#Windows_ApplicationModel_DataTransfer_StandardDataFormats_Text)
* [GetTextAsync](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/api/windows.applicationmodel.datatransfer.datapackageview.gettextasync?view=winrt-18362)

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5863
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Oh I also changed "Copy path to file" to "Paste path to file". I thought that actually made more sense here

## Validation Steps Performed
* Tested manually that text and files still work.
2020-05-12 14:46:47 -07:00
Leon Liang
cf62922ad8 Revert some emoji back to narrow width
A couple of codepoints, namely the card suites, male and female signs,
and white and black smiling faces were changed to have a two-column
width as part of #5795 since they were specified as emoji in Unicode's
emoji list v13.0[1]. 

These particular glyphs also show up in some of the most fundamental
code pages, such as CP437[2] and WGL4[3]. We should
not be touching the width of the glyphs in these codepages, as suddenly
changing a long-time-running narrow glyph to use two-columns all of a
sudden will surely break (and has already broken) things.

[1] https://www.unicode.org/Public/13.0.0/ucd/emoji/emoji-data.txt
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_page_437
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Glyph_List_4

Closes #5822
2020-05-12 19:38:11 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
f9ec9b7f2e Bump Cascadia Code to v2004.30 (#5867) 2020-05-12 12:33:00 -07:00
Thomas
c13d6f804a doc: fix broken link within documentation (#5859) 2020-05-12 11:27:36 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
a99c812794 Teach TerminalPage to handle exceptions that happen during paste (#5856)
Terminal should try not to join the choir invisible when the clipboard
API straight up horks it.

This accounts for ~3% of the crashes seen in 1.0RC1 and ~1% of the
crashes seen all-up in the last 14 days.

## Repro (prior to this commit)
Set `"copyOnSelect": true`.

Copy something small.

Hold down <kbd>Ctrl+Shift+V</kbd>

Double-click like your life depends on it. Double-click like you're
playing cookie clicker again. 2013 called, it wants its cookies back.

Fixes #4906.
2020-05-12 11:23:58 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
fcd5bb39f0 Stop trying to set selection endpoints when there's no selection (#5855)
It turns out that we weren't really adequately guarding calls to
SetSelectionEnd and friends.

We're clearing the active selection when the window resizes, but we're
doing so by nulling out the std::optional<Selection> it lives in. Later,
though, when we set the selection endpoint we're using "_selection->".

Optional's operator-> has undefined behavior when the optional doesn't
have a value in it.

In our case, it looks like it was returning whatever the value was prior
to it being emptied out. PivotSelection would attempt to access an
out-of-bounds coordinate when the buffer got smaller during a resize.

The solution is to guard both levels of selection endpoint manipulation
in a check for an active selection.

Apparently, this accounts for somewhere between 7% and 14% of our
crashes on 1.0RC1.

Repro was:
Use Win+Arrow to snap the window while in the middle of a selection.
2020-05-12 11:23:10 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
e088f73671 InteractivityWin32: Add a dependency on Dx (#5851)
#5743 introduced a dependency from _any consumer of the DX header_ to a header generated from an IDL file.

Fixes #5819.
2020-05-11 15:09:14 -07:00
Michael Niksa
d01317c9db Add renderer settings to mitigate blurry text for some graphics devices
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds user settings to adjust rendering behavior to mitigate blurry text on some devices.

## References
- #778 introduced this, almost certainly.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5759, mostly
* [x] I work here.
* [ ] We need community verification that this will help.
* [x] Updated schema and schema doc.
* [x] Am core contributor. Discussed in Monday sync meeting and w/ @DHowett-MSFT. 

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
When we switched from full-screen repaints to incremental rendering, it seems like we exposed a situation where some display drivers and hardware combinations do not handle scroll and/or dirty regions (from `IDXGISwapChain::Present1`) without blurring the data from the previous frame. As we're really close to ship, I'm offering two options to let people in this situation escape it on their own. We hope in the future to figure out what's actually going on here and mitigate it further in software, but until then, these escape hatches are available.

1. `experimental.rendering.forceFullRepaint` - This one restores the pre-778 behavior to the Terminal. On every single frame paint, we'll invalidate the entire screen and repaint it.
2. `experimental.rendering.software` - This one uses the software WARP renderer instead of using the hardware and display driver directly. The theory is that this will sidestep any driver bugs or hardware variations.

One, the other, or both of these may be field-applied by users who are experiencing this behavior. 

Reverting #778 completely would also resolve this, but it would give back our largest performance win in the whole Terminal project. We don't believe that's acceptable when seemingly a majority of the users are experiencing the performance benefit with no detriment to graphical display.

## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Flipped them on and verified with the debugger that they are being applied to the rendering pipeline
- [ ] Gave a private copy to community members in #5759 and had them try whether one, the other, or both resolved their issue.
2020-05-11 14:54:03 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
177fd74584 dx: when filling an HWND target, use the actual background color (#5848)
There is no guarantee that the HWND's backing color matches our expected
backing color.

This repairs the gutter in the WPF terminal.
2020-05-11 13:54:29 -07:00
James Holderness
e7a2732ffb Refactor the SGR implementation in AdaptDispatch (#5758)
This is an attempt to simplify the SGR (Select Graphic Rendition)
implementation in conhost, to cut down on the number of methods required
in the `ConGetSet` interface, and pave the way for future improvements
and bug fixes. It already fixes one bug that prevented SGR 0 from being
correctly applied when combined with meta attributes.

* This a first step towards fixing the conpty narrowing bugs in issue
  #2661
* I'm hoping the simplification of `ConGetSet` will also help with
  #3849.
* Some of the `TextAttribute` refactoring in this PR overlaps with
  similar work in PR #1978. 

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

The main point of this PR was to simplify the
`AdaptDispatch::SetGraphicsRendition` implementation. So instead of
having it call a half a dozen methods in the `ConGetSet` API, depending
on what kinds of attributes needed to be set, there is now just one call
to get current attributes, and another call to set the new value. All
adjustments to the attributes are made in the `AdaptDispatch` class, in
a simple switch statement.

To help with this refactoring, I also made some change to the
`TextAttribute` class to make it easier to work with. This included
adding a set of methods for setting (and getting) the individual
attribute flags, instead of having the calling code being exposed to the
internal attribute structures and messing with bit manipulation. I've
tried to get rid of any methods that were directly setting legacy, meta,
and extended attributes.

Other than the fix to the `SGR 0` bug, the `AdaptDispatch` refactoring
mostly follows the behaviour of the original code. In particular, it
still maps the `SGR 38/48` indexed colors to RGB instead of retaining
the index, which is what we ultimately need it to do. Fixing that will
first require the color tables to be unified (issue #1223), which I'm
hoping to address in a followup PR.

But for now, mapping the indexed colors to RGB values required adding an
an additional `ConGetSet` API to lookup the color table entries. In the
future that won't be necessary, but the API will still be useful for
other color reporting operations that we may want to support. I've made
this API, and the existing setter, standardise on index values being in
the "Xterm" order, since that'll be essential for unifying the code with
the terminal adapter one day.

I should also point out one minor change to the `SGR 38/48` behavior,
which is that out-of-range RGB colors are now ignored rather than being
clamped, since that matches the way Xterm works.

## Validation Steps Performed

This refactoring has obviously required corresponding changes to the
unit tests, but most were just minor updates to use the new
`TextAttribute` methods without any real change in behavior. However,
the adapter tests did require significant changes to accommodate the new
`ConGetSet` API. The basic structure of the tests remain the same, but
the simpler API has meant fewer values needed to be checked in each test
case. I think they are all still covering the areas there were intended
to, though, and they are all still passing.

Other than getting the unit tests to work, I've also done a bunch of
manual testing of my own. I've made sure the color tests in Vttest all
still work as well as they used to. And I've confirmed that the test
case from issue #5341 is now working correctly.

Closes #5341
2020-05-08 16:04:16 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
f701bd40c5 dx: fix a missing stdcall that was blowing up the x86 build (#5818) 2020-05-08 16:02:16 -07:00
Leon Liang
7ae34336da Make most emojis full-width (#5795)
The table that we refer to in `CodepointWidthDetector.cpp` to determine
whether or not a codepoint should be rendered as Wide vs Narrow was
based off EastAsianWidth[1].  If a codepoint wasn't included in this
table, they're considered Narrow. Many emojis aren't specified in the
EAW list, so this PR supplements our table with emoji codepoints from
emoji-data[2] in order to render most, if not all, emojis as full-width. 

There are certain codepoints I've added to the comments (in case we want
to add them officially to the table in the future) that Microsoft
decided to give an emoji presentation even if it's specified as
Narrow/Ambiguous in the EAW list and are _not_ specified in the Unicode
emoji list. These include all of the Mahjong Tiles block, different
direction pencils (✎✐), different pointing index fingers (☜, ☞) among
others. I have no idea if I've captured all of them, as I don't know of
an easy way to detect which are Microsoft specific emojis.

## Validation Steps Performed
I have looked at so many emojis that I dream emoji.

These screenshots aren't encompassing _all_ emoji but I've tried to grab
a couple from all across the codepoint ranges:

Before:
![before](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/57155886/81445092-2051a980-912d-11ea-9739-c9f588da407d.png)

After:
![after](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/57155886/81445107-2778b780-912d-11ea-9615-676c2150e798.png)

[1] http://www.unicode.org/Public/UCD/latest/ucd/EastAsianWidth.txt
[2] https://www.unicode.org/Public/13.0.0/ucd/emoji/emoji-data.txt

Closes #900
2020-05-08 22:31:09 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
75752aed80 Trigger scroll on scrolled selection (#5798)
## Summary of the Pull Request
We accidentally missed switching one `TriggerRedrawAll` to `TriggerScroll`. This does that.

## References
#5185 - applies logic from this PR

## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #5756

## Validation Steps Performed
Followed bug repro steps.
2020-05-08 14:48:23 -07:00
Mike Griese
38472719d5 Fix wrapped lines in less in Git for Windows (#5771)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR resolves an issue with the Git for Windows (MSYS) version of `less`. It _doesn't_ use VT processing for emitting text tothe buffer, so when it hits `WriteCharsLegacy`, `WC_DELAY_EOL_WRAP` is NOT set.

When this happens, `less` is writing some text that's longer than the width of the buffer to the last line of the buffer. We're hitting the 
```c++
    Status = AdjustCursorPosition(screenInfo, CursorPosition, WI_IsFlagSet(dwFlags, WC_KEEP_CURSOR_VISIBLE), psScrollY);
```
call in `_stream.cpp:560`.

The cursor is _currently_ at `{40, 29}`, the _start_ of the run of text that wrapped. We're trying to adjust it to `{0, 30}`, which would be the start of the next line of the buffer. However, the buffer is only 30 lines tall, so we've got to `IncrementCircularBuffer` first, so we can move the cursor there.

When that happens, we're going to paint frame. At the end of that frame, we're going to try and paint the cursor position. The cursor is still at `{40, 29}` here, so unfortunately, the `cursorIsInDeferredWrap` check in `XtermEngine::PaintCursor` is `false`. That means, conpty is going to try to move the cursor to where the console thinks the cursor actually is at the end of this frame, which is `{40, 29}`.

If we're painting the frame because we circled the buffer, then the cursor might still be in the position it was before the text was written to the buffer to cause the buffer to circle. In that case, then we DON'T want to paint the cursor here either, because it'll cause us to manually break this line. That's okay though, the frame will be painted again, after the circling is complete.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5691
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

I suppose that's the detailed description above

## Validation Steps Performed
* ran tests
* checked that the bug was actually fixed in the Terminal
2020-05-08 21:22:09 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
e3fdb1a1a3 build: merge the signing steps and wildcard them (#5817)
This allows me to make the build pipeline, instead of the release
engineer, put the version number in the package name.

It also lets us sign multiple packages (if we ever produce more than
one.)
2020-05-08 14:11:10 -07:00
Michael Niksa
70867df077 Scale box drawing glyphs to fit cells for visual bliss (#5743)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Identifies and scales glyphs in the box and line drawing ranges U+2500-U+259F to fit their cells.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #455
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Manual tests. This is all graphical.
* [x] Metric ton of comments
* [x] Math spreadsheet included in PR.
* [x] Double check RTL glyphs.
* [x] Why is there the extra pixel?
* [x] Scrolling the mouse wheel check is done.
* [x] Not drawing outline?
* [x] Am core contributor. Roar.
* [x] Try suppressing negative scale factors and see if that gets rid of weird shading.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

### Background
- We want the Terminal to be fast at drawing. To be fast at drawing, we perform differential drawing, or only drawing what is different from the previous frame. We use DXGI's `Present1` method to help us with this as it helps us compose only the deltas onto the previous frame at drawing time and assists us in scrolling regions from the previous frame without intervention. However, it only works on strictly integer pixel row heights.
- Most of the hit testing and size-calculation logic in both the `conhost` and the Terminal products are based on the size of an individual cell. Historically, a cell was always dictated in a `COORD` structure, or two `SHORT` values... which are integers. As such, when we specify the space for any individual glyph to be displayed inside our terminal drawing region, we want it to fall perfectly inside of an integer box to ensure all these other algorithms work correctly and continue to do so.
- Finally, we want the Terminal to have font fallback and locate glyphs that aren't in the primary selected font from any other font it can find on the system that contains the glyph, per DirectWrite's font fallback mechanisms. These glyphs won't necessarily have the same font or glyph metrics as the base font, but we need them to fit inside the same cell dimensions as if they did because the hit testing and other algorithms aren't aware of which particular font is sourcing each glyph, just the dimensions of the bounding box per cell.

### How does Terminal deal with this?
- When we select a font, we perform some calculations using the design metrics of the font and glyphs to determine how we could fit them inside a cell with integer dimensions. Our process here is that we take the requested font size (which is generally a proxy for height), find the matching glyph width for that height then round it to an integer. We back convert from that now integer width to a height value which is almost certainly now a floating point number. But because we need an integer box value, we add line padding above and below the glyphs to ensure that the height is an integer as well as the width. Finally, we don't add the padding strictly equally. We attempt to align the English baseline of the glyph box directly onto an integer pixel multiple so most characters sit crisply on a line when displayed. 
- Note that fonts and their glyphs have a prescribed baseline, line gap, and advance values. We use those as guidelines to get us started, but then to meet our requirements, we pad out from those. This results in fonts that should be properly authored showing gaps. It also results in fonts that are improperly authored looking even worse than they normally would.

### Now how does block and line drawing come in?
- Block and Line drawing glyphs are generally authored so they will look fine when the font and glyph metrics are followed exactly as prescribed by the font. (For some fonts, this still isn't true and we want them to look fine anyway.)
- When we add additional padding or rounding to make glyphs fit inside of a cell, we can be adding more space than was prescribed around these glyphs. This can cause a gap to be visible.
- Additionally, when we move things like baselines to land on a perfect integer pixel, we may be drawing a glyph lower in the bounding box than was prescribed originally.

### And how do we solve it?
- We identify all glyphs in the line and block drawing ranges.
- We find the bounding boxes of both the cell and the glyph.
- We compare the height of the glyph to the height of the cell to see if we need to scale. We prescribe a scale transform if the glyph wouldn't be tall enough to fit the box. (We leave it alone otherwise as some glyphs intentionally overscan the box and scaling them can cause banding effects.)
- We inspect the overhang/underhang above and below the boxes and translate transform them (slide them) so they cover the entire cell area.
- We repeat the previous two steps but in the horizontal direction.

## Validation Steps Performed
- See these commments:
   - https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/455#issuecomment-620248375
   - https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/455#issuecomment-621533916
   - https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/455#issuecomment-622585453

Also see the below one with more screenshots:
   - https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/5743#issuecomment-624940567
2020-05-08 14:09:32 -07:00
Mike Griese
d77745d035 Manually select a new tab when we're in fullscreen mode (#5809)
If we're fullscreen, the TabView isn't `Visible`. If it's not `Visible`,
it's _not_ going to raise a `SelectionChanged` event, which is what we
usually use to focus another tab. Instead, we'll have to do it manually
here.

So, what we're going to try to do is move the focus to the tab to the
left, within the bounds of how many tabs we have.

EX: we have 4 tabs: [A, B, C, D]. If we close:
* A (`tabIndex=0`): We'll want to focus tab B (now in index 0)
* B (`tabIndex=1`): We'll want to focus tab A (now in index 0)
* C (`tabIndex=2`): We'll want to focus tab B (now in index 1)
* D (`tabIndex=3`): We'll want to focus tab C (now in index 2)

`_UpdatedSelectedTab` will do the work of setting up the new tab as the
focused one, and unfocusing all the others.

Also, we need to _manually_ set the SelectedItem of the tabView here. If
we don't, then the TabView will technically not have a selected item at
all, which can make things like ClosePane not work correctly.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5799
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Validation Steps Performed

Played with it a bunch
2020-05-08 11:53:34 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
28dc8196ab Add an AppDescription for the Preview package (#5794) 2020-05-07 11:34:43 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
9a927f3a0f Add a new appxmanifest for preview (#5774)
## Summary of the Pull Request
This adds a new appxmanifest for 'Windows Terminal (Preview)' and links the resources.

Code-wise, split up `WindowsTerminalReleaseBuild` into...
- WindowsTerminalOfficialBuild: [true, false]
- WindowsTerminalBranding: [Dev, Preview, Release]

Added a comment about that in release.yml

## Validation Steps Performed
used msbuild to build...
- [X] Dev
- [X] Preview
- [X] Release
then checked the msix for the correct name/icon.
2020-05-07 16:00:56 +00:00
uSlackr
1d72e771b5 Update docs to mention commandline args (#5765) 2020-05-06 12:08:18 -07:00
Dustin Howett
25f650578e Merge remote-tracking branch 'openconsole/inbox' 2020-05-05 16:03:37 -07:00
Michael Niksa
92812bf316 Merged PR 4645239: [Git2Git] Merged PR 4644345: conhost: disable the DX renderer in inbox builds
[Git2Git] Merged PR 4644345: conhost: disable the DX renderer in inbox builds

We're going to be taking on some changes to the Dx renderer that are at
the very least annoying and at the very most inconsequential to the
inbox console. This commit removes support for the DX renderer from the
inbox console.

SizeBench reports that ConRenderDx contributes 55.1kb to the conhost
image (as its third largest constituent library), so this should net us
a couple pleasant WPG improvements down the line.

Related work items: #26291552 Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os OS official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp 6e36786d447b7975298ba31ccd77c5c649fbfbe6

Related work items: #26291552
2020-05-05 23:03:07 +00:00
Dustin Howett
ce91c164c2 Merge remote-tracking branch 'openconsole/inbox' 2020-05-05 15:47:32 -07:00
Michael Niksa
8e67bb2d4f Merged PR 4641914: [Git2Git] Git Train: Merge of building/rs_onecore_dep_uxp/200504-1008 into official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os OS official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp bbdf04608ba96c3f8ee06cf100428cde01f3df79
[Git2Git] Git Train: Merge of building/rs_onecore_dep_uxp/200504-1008 into official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os OS official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp bbdf04608ba96c3f8ee06cf100428cde01f3df79

Related work items: #26071826
2020-05-05 22:47:08 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
9e1d2d2e63 res: on second thought, tuck the lozenge in at smaller sizes (#5757) 2020-05-05 15:13:25 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
0eaa7214ae Switch to the new lozenge-style dev icons and add preview icons (#5755)
This commit also introduces a copy of the svg source for the icon.

The icons were generated with a powershell script, which will be the
subject of a future checkin.

Below, peep the asset size ramps. The text is hidden at sizes <32px because it would be illegible. Click for full size, as they do not necessarily fit in the GitHub box.

![montage](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/14316954/81114789-8c3ad480-8ed7-11ea-8963-67ba195f25b8.png)

![montage](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/14316954/81114796-8f35c500-8ed7-11ea-881f-c69fc9468914.png)
2020-05-05 21:29:09 +00:00
Mike Griese
7a251d85f7 Don't set the new tab button colors for now (#5749)
This is actually related to another issue we have, #3917. I think if the system is set to "Dark" theme, but the app is set to light theme, then the brush lookup in `_ClearNewTabButtonColor` still returns to us the dark theme brushes.

Fortunately, since we're not actually setting the color of the new tab button anymore, we can just remove the call to that method now, and loop back on it later.

## References
* regressed in #3789 
* related to #3917

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5741
2020-05-05 13:33:07 -07:00
uSlackr
fb08b6bf49 Add File Explorer tip to User Docs (#5752) 2020-05-05 09:50:27 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
046fed3d97 Make sure we don't try to remove tabs when they don't exist (#5742)
This was an oversight.

Fixes #5738.
2020-05-05 09:16:09 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
7d54bc5ecb version: bump to 1.1 on master 2020-05-04 18:52:44 -07:00
Mike Griese
9fe624ffbc Make sure that EraseAll moves the Terminal viewport (#5683)
The Erase All VT sequence (`^[[2J`) is supposed to erase the entire
contents of the viewport. The way it usually does this is by shifting
the entirety of the viewport contents into scrollback, and starting the
new viewport below it. 

Currently, conpty doesn't propagate that state change correctly. When
conpty gets a 2J, it simply erases the content of the connected
terminal's viewport, by writing over it with spaces. Conpty didn't
really have a good way of communicating "your viewport should move", it
only knew "the buffer is now full of spaces".

This would lead to bugs like #2832, where pressing <kbd>ctrl+L</kbd> in
`bash` would delete the current contents of the viewport, instead of
moving the viewport down.

This PR makes sure that when conpty sees a 2J, it passes that through
directly to the connected terminal application as well. Fortunately, 2J
was already implemented in the Windows Terminal, so this actually fixes
the behavior of <kbd>ctrl+L</kbd>/`clear` in WSL in the Terminal.

## References

* #4252 - right now this isn't the _most_ optimal scenario, we're
  literally just printing a 2J, then we'll perform "erase line" `height`
  times. The erase line operations are all redundant at this point - the
  entire viewport is blank, but conpty doesn't really know that.
  Fortunately, #4252 was already filed for me to come through and
  optimize this path.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #2832
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Validation Steps Performed
* ran tests
* compared <kbd>ctrl+L</kbd> with its behavior in conhost
* compared `clear` with its behavior in conhost
2020-05-05 01:36:30 +00:00
Mike Griese
9166a14f4b Fix a few minor typos from #3789 (#5740)
I never got to fixing these in the original #3789 PR, but I messed up that branch way too many times already that I figured I'd just do it in post.

* [x] Fixes the typo bot in `master`
* [x] I work here
2020-05-04 16:47:29 -05:00
Georgi Baychev
624a553d23 Add support for setting a tab's color at runtime w/ context menu (#3789)
This commit introduces a context menu for Tab and a new item,
"Color...", which will display a color picker.

A flyout menu, containing a custom flyout, is attached to each tab. The
flyout displays a palette of 16 preset colors and includes a color
picker. When the user selects or clears color, an event is fired, which
is intercepted by the tab to which the flyout belongs.

The changing of the color is achieved by putting the selected color in
the resource dictionary of the tab, using well-defined dictionary keys
(e.g. TabViewItemHeaderBackground). Afterwards the visual state of the
tab is toggled, so that the color change is visible immediately.

Custom-colored tabs will be desaturated (somewhat) by alpha blending
them with the tab bar background.

The flyout menu also contains a 'Close' flyout item.

## Validation Steps Performed
I've validated the behavior manually: start the program via the start
menu. Right click on the tab -> Choose a tab color.

The color flyout is going to be shown. Click a color swatch or click
'Select a custom color' to use the color picker. Use the 'Clear the
current color' to remove the custom color.

Closes #2994. References #3327.
2020-05-04 20:57:12 +00:00
Mike Griese
6ce3357bab Add support for displaying the version with wt --version (#5501)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Here's 3000 words:

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/80125877-e2af2700-8557-11ea-809a-63e50d76fe2b.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/80125882-e5aa1780-8557-11ea-8f73-2e50c409b76d.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/80125886-e8a50800-8557-11ea-8d28-6d1694c57c0c.png)

## References
* #4632 

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5494
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
2020-05-04 20:56:15 +00:00
Mike Griese
48617b7e06 Add a note that the user needs to hide dynamic profiles (#5684)
Add a note that the user needs to hide dynamic profiles, not just delete them.

* [x] I work here
* [x] Is documentation.
* related to discussion in #3231
2020-05-04 15:04:09 -05:00
Moshe Schorr
9c52920612 Fix RTL regression (fixes #4779) (#5734)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
This fixes the RTL regression caused in #4747. We create the rectangle taking the direction (through the BiDi Level) into account, and then the rendering works again. The GlyphRun shaping could still probably use some work to be a polished thingy, and there are still issues with RTL getting chopped up a lot when there's font fallback going on, but this fixes the regression, and it's now functional again.

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References
#4779 #4747 

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #4779
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The baseline is actually direction dependent. So when it was being initialized, the unconditional baseline as left broke it, setting the box off to right of the text. We just check if the `GlyphRun->bidiLevel` is set, and if so, we adjust it so that the baseline lines up with the right, not with the left.

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/16987694/80968891-681cbc00-8e21-11ea-9e5c-9b7cf6d78d53.png)
2020-05-04 16:14:44 +00:00
Anthony Vanelverdinghe
8a15b2f69b doc: fix typo in UsingCommandlineArguments.md (#5714) 2020-05-02 23:33:10 -07:00
Kayla Cinnamon
6cbc2e5fa4 remove decreaseFontSize from schema (#5712)
It was replaced with adjustFontSize in 0.11.
2020-05-02 20:23:13 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
44689b93a2 Remove the (Preview) tag from the primary App Name (#5679)
This is part of the v1 polish.
2020-05-01 16:30:16 +00:00
Eric Tian
b6e46c0dc1 Add tooltip text to New Tab/Min/Max/Close (#5484)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
Tooltip texts is an important element of each software! Added tooltip text to close button, minimize, restore down, and new tab. Moved from original.

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References
Connected to #5355 

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #5355 
* [X] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [X] No Docs
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #5355 

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
I'm pretty sure most ppl know what a tooltip text is, but for those who don't, it's a text that tells you what a button does when you over the button with your mouse.
2020-04-30 22:45:56 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
d57ef135cc On second thought, embed the third-party notices in the package (#5673)
This commit introduces a NOTICE.html file that will be embedded into the
package. It will be stamped down with the real notices during a branded
release build (as part of the build pipeline.)

It, in part, reverts some of the really good work in determining the
commit hash at build time. That work will be preserved in history.

This is more compliant with our duties to the OSS we consume.
2020-04-30 15:06:13 -07:00
Mike Griese
7612044363 Implement a pair of shims for cls, Clear-Host in conpty mode (#5627)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR implements a pair of shims for `cmd` and `powershell`, so that their `cls` and `Clear-Host` functions will clear the entire terminal buffer (like they do in conhost), instead of just the viewport. With the conpty viewport and buffer being the same size, there's effectively no way to know if an application is calling these API's in this way with the intention of clearing the buffer or the viewport. We absolutely have to guess. 

Each of these shims checks to see if the way that the API is being called exactly matches the way `cmd` or `powershell` would call these APIs. If it does, we manually write a `^[[3J` to the connected terminal, to get he Terminal to clear it's own scrollback.

~~_⚠️ If another application were trying to clear the **viewport** with an exactly similar API call, this would also cause the terminal scrollback to get cleared ⚠️_~~

* [x] Should these shims be restricted to when the process that's calling them is actually `cmd.exe` or `powershell.exe`? Can I even do this? I think we've done such a good job of isolating the client process information from the rest of the host code that I can't figure out how to do this.
  - YES, this can be done, and I did it.
* [ ] **TODO**: _While I'm here_, should I have `DoSrvPrivateEraseAll` (the implementation for `^[[2J`, in `getset.cpp`) also manually trigger a EraseAll in the terminal in conpty mode?

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #3126
* [x] Actually closes #1305 too, which is really the same thing, but probably deserves a callout
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Validation Steps Performed
* ran tests
* checked `cls` in the Terminal
* checked `Clear-Host` in the Terminal
* Checked running `powershell clear-host` from `cmd.exe`
2020-04-30 21:53:31 +00:00
Mike Griese
b6a21de802 Intentionally leak our Application, so that we DON'T crash on exit (#5629)
We've got a weird crash that happens terribly inconsistently, but pretty
readily on migrie's laptop, only in Debug mode. Apparently, there's some
weird ref-counting magic that goes on during teardown, and our
Application doesn't get closed quite right, which can cause us to crash
into the debugger. This of course, only happens on exit, and happens
somewhere in the `...XamlHost.dll` code.

Crazily, if we _manually leak the `Application`_ here, then the crash
doesn't happen. This doesn't matter, because we really want the
Application to live for _the entire lifetime of the process_, so the only
time when this object would actually need to get cleaned up is _during
exit_. So we can safely leak this `Application` object, and have it just
get cleaned up normally when our process exits.

* [x] I discussed this with @DHowett-MSFT and we both agree this is mental
* [x] I'm pretty sure there's not an actual bug on our repo for this
* [x] I verified on my machine where I can crash the terminal 100% of the time on exit in debug, this fixes it
* [x] I verified that it doesn't introduce a _new_ crash in Release on my machine
2020-04-30 14:36:02 -05:00
Mike Griese
4286877864 Don't remove spaces when printing a new bottom line with a background color (#5550)
Turns out we're still being a bit too aggressive when removing spaces.
If there are spaces at the end of the first run painted to a bottom
line, _and the bottom line was a different color than the previous_,
then we can't trim those spaces off the string. We still need to emit
those to make sure the terminal has colored spaces in it as well.

## References

* there's like 80 PRs in the last month for this function

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5502
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed

## Validation Steps

* [x] ran the tests
* [x] checked that vtpipeterm still worked
* [x] Checked that the bug was fixed in the Terminal
2020-04-30 15:01:03 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
3246c4250a Bundle the entire CRT with our branded Release packages (#5661)
For our release builds, we're just going to integrate the UWPDesktop CRT
into our package and delete the package dependencies.  It's very
difficult for users who do not have access to the store to get our
dependency packages, and we want to be robust and deployable everywhere.
Since these libraries can be redistributed, it's easiest if we simply
redistribute them.

Our package grows by ~550kb per architecture (compressed) because of
this. I've added validation that we don't have both the libs _and_ the
dependencies in the same package.

Fixes #3097.

## Validation

The script does it!
2020-04-30 07:08:43 +00:00
Leon Liang
17bd8b5750 Grab the write lock before updating the font (#5654)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Based on the discussion in #5479, it seems that the crash is caused by a race condition due to not obtaining the write lock before calling `TriggerFontChange`.

I'm not totally sure if my approach is the right one, but I've taken the lock out of `_RefreshSize` since it seems like all calls of `_RefreshSize` come after a `TriggerFontChange`/`UpdateFont`. Then I just 
made sure all calls of `TriggerFontChange`/`UpdateFont` are preceded with a `LockForWriting`.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5479
* [x] CLA signed.
* [x] Tests added/passed

## Validation Steps Performed
Scrolling to change my font size does not kill the Terminal anymore! 🙌
2020-04-30 00:05:29 +00:00
pi1024e
fb22eae072 Add explicit identifier to some constructors (#5652)
If a class has a constructor which can be called with a single argument,
then this constructor becomes conversion constructor because such a
constructor allows conversion of the single argument to the class being
constructed. To ensure these constructors are passed the argument of its
type, I labeled them explicit.

In some header files, there were constructors that took a value that
could involve implicit conversions, so I added explicit to ensure that
does not happen.
2020-04-29 16:50:47 -07:00
Mike Griese
10fa3108e1 Hide the commandline on a resize to prevent a crash when snapping the window (#5620)
Hide any commandline (cooked read) we have before we begin a resize, and
show it again after the resize. 

## References

* I found #5618 while I was working on this.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #1856
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Basically, during a resize, we try to restore the viewport position
correctly, and part of that checks where the current commandline ends.
However, when we do that, the commandline's _current_ state still
reflects the _old_ buffer size, so resizing to be smaller can cause us
to throw an exception, when we find that the commandline doesn't fit in
the new viewport cleanly.

By hiding it, then redrawing it, we avoid this problem entirely. We
don't need to perform the check on the old commandline contents (since
they'll be empty), and we'll redraw it just fine for the new buffer size

## Validation Steps Performed
* ran tests
* checked resizing, snapping in conhost with a cooked read
* checked resizing, snapping in the Terminal with a cooked read
2020-04-29 23:47:56 +00:00
Mike Griese
ea02128f11 Remove the title tag from the generated HTML (#5595)
Web apps apparently will paste the <title> as plaintext before the
actual HTML content from the clipboard. Since this seems to be
widespread behavior across web apps, this isn't just a bug in _some
app_, this is a bug on us. We shouldn't emit the title. 

This PR removes the title tag from the generated HTML.

Closes #5347
2020-04-29 16:41:56 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
e3a99f6879 Remove "Getting Started" from the about dialog (#5656)
This is some fit/finish polish for v1.
2020-04-29 16:37:00 -07:00
Chester Liu
e8a68114e8 Reserve textClusterColumns vector for performance (#5645)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request

In tonight's episode of "Can we be even faster?", we will... you know what, just take a look at the code.

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [ ] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

It is actually a quite common technique seen inside the codebase to first reserve the spaces before pushing something into vectors. I don't know why it is not used here.

Before:
![before](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4710575/80594408-84051400-8a55-11ea-9c04-c0a808061976.png)

After:

![after](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4710575/80594402-80718d00-8a55-11ea-8639-6c038b4bfcf8.png)

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
2020-04-29 20:12:05 +00:00
Chester Liu
da7610117a Added even more quick exit in InsertAttrRuns (#5644)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request

In tonight's episode of "I wanna my CPU back", we'll see a quite familiar face whose name is Mr.AttrRow.

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

#2937

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [ ] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

I knew this is possible a long time ago. Just didn't got the chance to actually implement this. I understand that you guys are busy preparing the v1.0 release. So if this is a bad time, this can wait.

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed

Manually tested. If all goes well, nothing will be broken.
2020-04-29 20:08:37 +00:00
Mike Griese
1ce86f8f1a Clamp the new rows scrolling value to a positive number (#5630)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR clamp the "new rows" scrolling value to a positive number. We can't create a negative number of new rows. It also adds a test.

## References

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5540
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

The origin of this bug is that as newlines are emitted, we'll accumulate an enormous scroll delta into a selection region, to the point of overflowing a `SHORT`. When the overflow occurs, the `Terminal` would fail to send a `NotifyScroll()` to the `TermControl` hosting it.

For this bug to repro, we need to:
- Have a sufficiently large buffer, because each newline we'll accumulate a delta of (0, ~bufferHeight), so (bufferHeight^2 + bufferHeight) > SHRT_MAX
- Have a selection

## Validation Steps Performed
* Dustin verified this actually
* Created a new insane test case
2020-04-29 19:28:59 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
6d4107206a Notify UIA when Search finds something (#5478)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Before this, if the Search Box was open, new selections would not notify automation clients. This was because the UiaEngine (responsible for notifying automation clients) would remain disabled. Now we're enabling it before the early exit in TermControl's FocusHandler

## PR Checklist
* [X] Will close issue #5421 upon verification

## Validation Steps Performed
Verified using NVDA.
Narrator's behavior is not impacted, for some reason.
2020-04-29 10:36:45 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
db5d2fe0a5 Add and enforce minimum width (#5599)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Enforces a minimum width of 460 wide. This allows tabs to always be seen (albeit partially).

NOTE: A minimum height was originally added to allow the About menu to be seen. This minimum height was removed from this PR because we don't foresee a circumstance where your Terminal is in that state, and you can't just resize it to make the content fit properly.

## References
#4990 may be fixed/affected by this?

## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #4976 
* [X] Will close issue #5418 upon verification

## Validation Steps Performed
Here's some images of what the terminal looks like when it's at its minimum size:

### 100% scaling

#### 100% scaling: one tab
![100% scaling: one tab](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11050425/80408686-76e0fd00-887c-11ea-8283-35871d24652a.png)

#### 100% scaling: two tabs
![100% scaling: two tabs](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11050425/80408695-79435700-887c-11ea-9670-116cde320e07.png)

#### 100% scaling: 3 tabs (scrolling enabled)
![100% scaling: 3 tabs (scrolling enabled)](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11050425/80408701-7c3e4780-887c-11ea-8ede-8b69d20d6f66.png)


### 200% scaling

#### 200% scaling: one tab
![200% scaling: one tab](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11050425/80408783-9a0bac80-887c-11ea-8b62-bd064f89403d.png)

#### 200% scaling: two tabs
![200% scaling: two tabs](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11050425/80408793-9c6e0680-887c-11ea-9301-344189281006.png)

#### 200% scaling: 3 tabs (scrolling enabled)
![200% scaling: 3 tabs (scrolling enabled)](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11050425/80408799-9ed06080-887c-11ea-892a-ee8e329080c5.png)
2020-04-28 23:24:21 +00:00
Leonard Hecker
9247ff081b Fix Ctrl+Alt not being treated as a substitute for AltGr anymore (#5552)
This PR fixes #5525 by re-adding range checks that were erroneously removed in
a9c9714.

## Validation Steps Performed

* Enabled a German keyboard layout
* Entered `<`, `+`, `7`, `8`, `9`, `0` while holding either Alt+Ctrl or AltGr and...
* Ensuring that both produce `|`, `~`, `{`, `[`, `]`, `}`

Closes #5525
2020-04-28 15:27:43 -07:00
Leon Liang
e358b96746 Add a Third-Party notices link to the about dialog (#5508)
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR will add a link to the version of `NOTICE.md` in GitHub at the commit that the build was on. It uses the same approach for generating our settings files, where we'll create a header file with the commit hash assigned to a `wstring_view` during build time.

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5139
* [x] CLA signed.
* [x] Tests added/passed

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
The link is there and goes to the expected `NOTICE.md`.
2020-04-28 20:22:44 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
9e23ee7fd6 doc: clean up the schema (#5304)
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR performs a number of miscellaneous clean-up tasks on our schema:
- [X] allow null for some settings
- [X] update some default values to be more useful
- [X] consistently use " instead of '
- [X] remove colorTable
- [X] provide missing description for `backgroundImageOpacity`
- [X] update cursorShape to have options match order displayed in vs code
- [X] if a setting has multiple options, provide a list of those options with a short description on each
   - this one I only did a few times
- [X] remove a little bit of ambiguity on some descriptions

## PR Checklist
Closes #5279

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Validation was performed for...
- [X] Global Settings
- [X] Profile Settings
- [x] Keybinding Actions


## Validation Steps Performed
I linked VS Code to the my version of the schema. Defined all settings from scratch in settings.json. Anytime I found something off, I updated the schema and saw if it looks right.
2020-04-28 12:14:30 -07:00
Leon Liang
64f8bbf5ff Adjust TSFInputControl alignment (#5609)
This PR fixes a couple of issues with TSFInputControl alignment:

1. The emoji picker IME in particular would show up overlapping the
   current buffer row because I stupidly didn't realize that
   `TextBlock.ActualHeight` is 0 right after initialization and before
   it has any text. So, the emoji picker will show up on the bottom of
   the 0 height TextBlock, which overlaps the current buffer row. This
   isn't a problem with CJK because inputting text _causes_ the IME to
   show up, so by the time the IME shows up, the TextBlock has text and
   accordingly has a height.
2. It turns out the emoji picker IME doesn't follow the `TextBlock`
   bottom, unlike Chinese and Japanese IME, so if a user were to compose
   near the edge of the screen and let the `TextBlock` start line
   wrapping, the emoji IME doesn't follow the bottom of the `TextBlock`
   as it grows. This means that the `TextBlock` position doesn't update
   in the middle of composition, and the `LayoutRequested` event that it
   fires at the beginning of composition is the only chance we get to
   tell the emoji IME where to place itself. It turns out when we reset
   `TextBlock.Text`, the ActualHeight doesn't get immediately reset back
   to the min size. So if a user were to bring up the emoji IME before
   `ActualHeight` is reset, the IME will show up way below the current
   buffer row.
3. We don't currently `TryRedrawCanvas` when the window position changes
   (resizing, dragging the window around), so sometimes dragging or
   resizing the Terminal doesn't update the position of the IME. Ideally
   it should be listening to some "window position changed" event, but
   alas we don't have that and it would be much harder than this
   incoming fix. We'll just track the window bounds as part of
   `TryRedrawCanvas` and redraw if it changes. For the most part, this
   will allow the IME to update to where the new window position is, but
   it'll only be called if we receive a `LayoutRequested` event.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5470
* [x] CLA signed.
* [x] Tests added/passed

## Validation Steps Performed
I play with it for quite a bit.
2020-04-28 18:50:33 +00:00
Chester Liu
97d6456476 Improve cluster construction performance (#5584)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request

A tiny performance fix in `renderer.cpp`.

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [X] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx

<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

The cluster construction code is intensively called during rendering. Even though a single `back()` is fast, but accumulated `back()`s still take a noticiable amount of CPU cycles.


Before:

![perf1](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4710575/80323322-4342aa80-885d-11ea-92fb-06998dcef327.png)

After:

![图片](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4710575/80323336-52c1f380-885d-11ea-8244-4d8d432f7c52.png)

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed

Manually validated.
2020-04-28 15:41:44 +00:00
Mike Griese
d6cae40d26 Add a warning about using the globals property (#5597)
This property was deprecated in 0.11. We probably should have also added a warning
message to help the community figure out that this property is gone and won't work
anymore.

This PR adds that warning.

* I'm not going to list the enormous number of duped threads _wait yes I am_
    * #5581
    * #5547
    * #5555
    * #5557
    * #5573 
    * #5532
    * #5527
    * #5535 
    * #5510
    * #5511
    * #5512
    * #5513
    * #5516
    * #5515
    * #5521 
    * This literally isn't even all of them 

* [x] Also mainly related to #5458
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
2020-04-27 22:20:18 +00:00
Rafael Kitover
b4c9c0cfeb Improve default foregrounds for Tango schemes (#5598)
Followup to ea61aa3b.

The default foreground in the iTerm2 defaults for the Tango Dark color
scheme is too bright, use the value for ANSI 7 (white) instead.

References #5305

Sorry, I should have really done this in the original PR.

Signed-off-by: Rafael Kitover <rkitover@gmail.com>
2020-04-27 15:20:02 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
8004223500 Actually check the elevation status when disabling tab rearrange (#5542)
Fixes #5564.
2020-04-27 09:17:19 -07:00
Marius Strom
37ff3f9f87 Updating to change from requestedTheme to theme (#5556)
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
Simple fix to update the example documentation with the recent changes to 0.11.
2020-04-27 08:57:46 -05:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
7eb0a26b91 Remove a stray __stdcall that was breaking the x86 build (#5554) 2020-04-24 16:46:01 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
214163ebb7 Replace the HRGN-based titlebar cutout with an overlay window (#5485)
Also known as "Kill HRGN II: Kills Regions Dead (#5485)"

Copying the description from @greg904 in #4778.

--- 8< ---
My understanding is that the XAML framework uses another way of getting
mouse input that doesn't work with `WM_SYSCOMMAND` with `SC_MOVE`. It
looks like it "steals" our mouse messages like `WM_LBUTTONDOWN`.

Before, we were cutting (with `HRGN`s) the drag bar part of the XAML
islands window in order to catch mouse messages and be able to implement
the drag bar that can move the window. However this "cut" doesn't only
apply to input (mouse messages) but also to the graphics so we had to
paint behind with the same color as the drag bar using GDI to hide the
fact that we were cutting the window.

The main issue with this is that we have to replicate exactly the
rendering on the XAML drag bar using GDI and this is bad because:
1. it's hard to keep track of the right color: if a dialog is open, it
   will cover the whole window including the drag bar with a transparent
   white layer and it's hard to keep track of those things.
2. we can't do acrylic with GDI

So I found another method, which is to instead put a "drag window"
exactly where the drag bar is, but on top of the XAML islands window (in
Z order). I've found that this lets us receive the `WM_LBUTTONDOWN`
messages.
--- >8 ---

Dustin's notes: I've based this on the implementation of the input sink
window in the UWP application frame host.

Tested manually in all configurations (debug, release) with snap,
drag, move, double-click and double-click on the resize handle. Tested
at 200% scale.

Closes #4744
Closes #2100
Closes #4778 (superseded.)
2020-04-24 15:22:40 -07:00
Mike Griese
79959dbbbf doc: add disabledProfileSources to the schema (#5549) 2020-04-24 15:15:27 -07:00
Michael Niksa
98ac196cec Lock when changing selection endpoint on wheel/auto-scroll (#5551)
Takes the lock inside two routines in `TermControl` that were changing
the selection endpoint while a rendering frame was still drawing,
resulting in several variants of graphical glitches from double-struck
selection boxes to duplicated line text.

## References
- Introduced with #5185

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5471 
* [x] Already signed life away to company.
* [x] Manual tests passed since it's visual.
* [x] No extra doc besides the comments.
* [x] Am core contributor: Roar.

The renderer base and specific renderer engine do a lot of work to
remember the previous selection and compensate for scrolling regions and
deltas between frames. However, all that work doesn't quite match up
when the endpoints are changed out from under it. Unfortunately,
`TermControl` doesn't have a robust history of locking correctly in step
with the renderer nor does the renderer's `IRenderData` currently
provide any way of 'snapping' state at the beginning of a frame so it
could work without a full lock. So the solution for now is for the
methods that scroll the display in `TermControl` to take the lock that
is shared with the renderer's frame painter so they can't change out of
sync.

## Validation Steps Performed
- Opened terminal with Powershell core.
  Did ls a bunch of times.
  Clicked to make selection and held mouse button while wheeling around.
- Opened terminal with Powershell core.;
  Did ls a bunch of times.
  Clicked to make selection and dragged mouse outside the window to make
  auto scroll happen.
- Opened terminal with Powershell core.
  Did ls a bunch of times.
  Clicked to make selection and released. Wheeled around like a crazy
  person to make sure I didn't regress that.
2020-04-24 15:14:43 -07:00
Mike Griese
757db46aa6 Remove last lingering references to profiles.json (#5534)
Literally just <kbd>ctrl+f</kbd> find-and-replace all the old `profiles.json` that are sitting around in the repo with `settings.json`. I didn't touch the specs, since it seemed better to leave them in the state that they were originally authored in.

* [x] closes #5522
* [x] I work here.
* [x] This is docs.
2020-04-24 21:29:33 +00:00
Mike Griese
c803893c22 Use grayscale AA always on non-opaque backgrounds (#5277)
## Summary of the Pull Request

When we're on acrylic, we can't have cleartype text unfortunately. This PR changes the DX renderer to force cleartype runs of text that are on a non-opaque background to use grayscale AA instead.

## References

Here are some of the URLS I was referencing as writing this:

* https://stackoverflow.com/q/23587787
* https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/direct2d/supported-pixel-formats-and-alpha-modes#cleartype-and-alpha-modes
* https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20150129-00/?p=44803
* https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/d2d1/ne-d2d1-d2d1_layer_options
* https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/direct2d/direct2d-layers-overview#d2d1_layer_parameters1-and-d2d1_layer_options1
* https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/dcommon/ne-dcommon-d2d1_alpha_mode?redirectedfrom=MSDN#cleartype-and-alpha-modes
* https://stackoverflow.com/a/26523006

Additionally:
* This was introduced in #4711 

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5098
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Basically, if you use cleartype on a light background, what you'll get today is the text foreground color _added_ to the background. This will make the text look basically invisible. 

So, what I did was use some trickery with `PushLayer` to basically create a layer where the text would be forced to render in grayscale AA. I only enable this layer pushing business when both:
  * The user has enabled cleartype text
  * The background opacity < 1.0

This plumbs some information through from the TermControl to the DX Renderer to make this smooth.

## Validation Steps Performed

Opened both cleartype and grayscale panes SxS, and messed with the opacity liberally.
2020-04-24 17:16:34 +00:00
Mike Griese
fa58d87761 Add descriptions for backgroundImageAlignment, backgroundImageOpacity (#5533)
These were already in the `SettingsSchema.md`, so I just updated the `profiles.schema.json` to have the descriptions as well.

* [x] closes #5520
* [x] I work here.
* [x] This is docs.
2020-04-24 12:15:35 -05:00
dotnetCarpenter
22d2096bdc Lower case modifiers in doc (#5536) 2020-04-24 09:12:22 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
a76cee1d98 Include Cascadia Mono in-package, switch to it by default (#5505)
It was brought to our attention that shipping a font with ligatures as our default
font could be an accessibility issue for the visually-impaired. Unfortunately, we
don't have a renderer setting to disable ligatures (#759). Fortunately however, we
DO already have a version of Cascadia that doesn't have ligatures.

If we ship that and set it as our default font, we'll at least let people _opt_ to
have ligatures enabled by switching from `Cascadia Mono` to `Cascadia Code`.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes internal discussion
* [x] CLA signed
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [x] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already.
2020-04-23 22:12:36 +00:00
James Holderness
7bf6163e63 Make sure background color is opaque when attrs are reversed (#5509)
In order to support a transparent background for the acrylic effect, the
renderer sets the alpha value to zero for the default background color.
However, when the _reversed video_ attribute is set, the background is
actually filled with the foreground color, and will not be displayed
correctly if it is made transparent. This PR addresses that issue by
making sure the rendered background color is opaque if the reversed
video attribute is set.

## References

* This is not a major issue at the moment, since the _reverse video_
  attribute is not typically forwarded though conpty, but that will
  change once #2661 is fixed.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5498
* [x] CLA signed.
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not
  checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a
  different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #5498

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

This simply adds an additional check in `Terminal::GetBackgroundColor`
to make sure the returned color is opaque if the _reverse video_
attribute is set. At some point in the future this check may need to be
extended to support the `DECSCNM` reverse screen mode, but for now
that's not an issue.

## Validation Steps Performed

I've run the test case from issue #5498, and confirmed that it now works
as expected. I've also got an experimental fix for #2661 that I've
tested with this patch, and that now displays _reverse video_ attributes
correctly too.

Closes #5498
2020-04-23 14:35:12 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
6ac6c87553 Re-enable Ctrl-C if the application that spawned us disabled it (#5472)
If Terminal is spawned by a shortcut that requests that it run in a new process group
while attached to a console session, that request is nonsense. That request will, however,
cause WT to start with Ctrl-C disabled. This wouldn't matter, because it's a Windows-subsystem
application. Unfortunately, that state is heritable. In short, if you start WT using cmd in
a weird way, ^C stops working inside the terminal. Mad.

Fixes #5460.
2020-04-23 08:00:42 -07:00
Michael Niksa
8ea9b327f3 Adjusts High DPI scaling to enable differential rendering (#5345)
## Summary of the Pull Request
- Adjusts scaling practices in `DxEngine` (and related scaling practices in `TerminalControl`) for pixel-perfect row baselines and spacing at High DPI such that differential row-by-row rendering can be applied at High DPI.

## References
- #5185 

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5320, closes #3515, closes #1064
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Manually tested.
* [x] No doc.
* [x] Am core contributor. Also discussed with some of them already via Teams.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

**WAS:**
- We were using implicit DPI scaling on the `ID2D1RenderTarget` and running all of our processing in DIPs (Device-Independent Pixels). That's all well and good for getting things bootstrapped quickly, but it leaves the actual scaling of the draw commands up to the discretion of the rendering target.
- When we don't get to explicitly choose exactly how many pixels tall/wide and our X/Y placement perfectly, the nature of floating point multiplication and division required to do the presentation can cause us to drift off slightly out of our control depending on what the final display resolution actually is.
- Differential drawing cannot work unless we can know the exact integer pixels that need to be copied/moved/preserved/replaced between frames to give to the `IDXGISwapChain1::Present1` method. If things spill into fractional pixels or the sizes of rows/columns vary as they are rounded up and down implicitly, then we cannot do the differential rendering.

**NOW:**
- When deciding on a font, the `DxEngine` will take the scale factor into account and adjust the proposed height of the requested font. Then the remainder of the existing code that adjusts the baseline and integer-ifies each character cell will run naturally from there. That code already works correctly to align the height at normal DPI and scale out the font heights and advances to take an exact integer of pixels.
- `TermControl` has to use the scale now, in some places, and stop scaling in other places. This has to do with how the target's nature used to be implicit and is now explicit. For instance, determining where the cursor click hits must be scaled now. And determining the pixel size of the display canvas must no longer be scaled.
- `DxEngine` will no longer attempt to scale the invalid regions per my attempts in #5185 because the cell size is scaled. So it should work the same as at 96 DPI.
- The block is removed from the `DxEngine` that was causing a full invalidate on every frame at High DPI.
- A TODO was removed from `TermControl` that was invalidating everything when the DPI changed because the underlying renderer will already do that.

## Validation Steps Performed
* [x] Check at 150% DPI. Print text, scroll text down and up, do selection.
* [x] Check at 100% DPI. Print text, scroll text down and up, do selection.
* [x] Span two different DPI monitors and drag between them.
* [x] Giant pile of tests in https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/5345#issuecomment-614127648

Co-authored-by: Dustin Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Mike Griese <migrie@microsoft.com>
2020-04-22 14:59:51 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
0741cfdaec Enable Control Flow Guard in the common build props (#5453)
All binaries produced by our build system will have CFG enabled.

Fixes #5452
2020-04-22 11:30:13 -07:00
Leon Liang
632e8ff8ac Send a Ctrl-C KeyUp event (#5431)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Users were not able to intercept Ctrl-C input using `$Host.UI.RawUI.ReadKey("IncludeKeyUp")`, because we weren't sending a Ctrl-C KeyUp event. This PR simply adds a KeyUp event alongside the existing KeyDown.

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #1894
* [x] CLA signed.
* [x] Tests added/passed

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
The repro script in #1894 now works, both options for `ReadKey`: `IncludeKeyUp` and `IncludeKeyDown` work fine.
2020-04-22 17:28:04 +00:00
Loo Rong Jie
fde662f4e2 Use string_view where possible (#5457) 2020-04-22 10:24:19 -07:00
Mike Griese
f7e2159310 Add a test to cover #5428 (#5449)
This PR adds a test for #5428. Mysteriously, after #5398 merged, 5428 went away. However, I already wrote this test for it, so we might as well add it to our collection.

* [x] Closes #5428
* [x] I work here
* [x] Is a test
2020-04-22 11:16:17 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
4d8c26aaae ci: weird, spell didn't warn me about notypeopt (#5456) 2020-04-21 18:46:45 -07:00
Dustin Howett
57fd7baff4 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/inbox' 2020-04-21 16:43:48 -07:00
Dustin Howett
ad9627db89 ci: add LKG to the MS dictionary 2020-04-21 16:43:03 -07:00
Mike Griese
f6f0731eae doc: Add note about using ; as a separator in PowerShell (#5361)
This PR adds some notes from #4570 to the [UsingCommandlineArguments.md](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/doc/user-docs/UsingCommandlineArguments.md) doc. Hopefully, this should add clarity on how to use sub-commands in the `wt` commandline from within Powershell.

* [x] Closes #4570 
* [x] I work here
* [x] This is docs
2020-04-21 14:55:02 -07:00
Dustin Howett
c6cb3b53dd Merged PR 4587251: conhost: ingest OSS up to 86685079e
- build: move oss required to build conhost out of dep/

This change is necessary as the dep/ folder is not synced into the
Windows source tree.

I've also added a build rule producing a lib for {fmt}.

This will be required for our next OS ingestion.

Related work items: #26069643
2020-04-21 21:53:22 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
86685079ec build: move oss required to build conhost out of dep/ (#5451)
This change is necessary as the dep/ folder is not synced into the
Windows source tree.

I've also added a build rule producing a lib for {fmt}.

This will be required for our next OS ingestion.
2020-04-21 14:43:09 -07:00
Josh Soref
bc6ea11233 ci: spelling: update to 0.0.15a; update whitelist (#5413)
* Cleaning up the whitelist a bit.
  * The magic to exclude repeated characters worked 👍 
  * Every successful run on master now logs its suggested cleanup, e.g. for 5740e197c2 has https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/runs/596271627#step:4:37 
* ⚠️ This check-spelling 0.0.15a+ tolerates Windows line endings in the `whitelist.txt` file (another project I touched had some `.gitconfig` magic which required supporting them).
  This means that if someone edits the file w/ something that likes Windows line endings, the file will successfully convert (instead of it being ignored and check-spelling complaining about everything). Most likely anyone else who then edits the file will use something that will maintain the line endings.
2020-04-21 14:07:04 -07:00
Mike Griese
6995d0b2dc doc: add a note about running wt in the current instance (#5448) 2020-04-21 13:45:18 -07:00
Dustin Howett
13e31a0056 Merged PR 4585873: conhost: ingest OSS up to 8a976c0d2
Improve wide glyph support in UIA (GH-4946)
Add enhanced key support for ConPty (GH-5021)
Set DxRenderer non-text alias mode (GH-5149)
Reduce CursorChanged Events for Accessibility (GH-5196)
Add more object ID tracing for Accessibility (GH-5215)
Add SS3 cursor key encoding to ConPty (GH-5383)
UIA: Prevent crash from invalid UTR endpoint comparison (GH-5399)
Make CodepointWidthDetector::GetWidth faster (CC-3727)
add til::math, use it for float conversions to point, size (GH-5150)
Add support for renderer backoff, don't FAIL_FAST on 3x failures, add UI (GH-5353)
Fix a deadlock and a bounding rects issue in UIA (GH-5385)
Don't duplicate spaces from potentially-wrapped EOL-deferred lines (GH-5398)
Reimplement the VT tab stop functionality (CC-5173)
Clamp parameter values to a maximum of 32767. (CC-5200)
Prevent the cursor type being reset when changing the visibility (CC-5251)
Make RIS switch back to the main buffer (CC-5248)
Add support for the DSR-OS operating status report (CC-5300)
Update the virtual bottom location if the cursor moves below it (CC-5317)
ci: run spell check in CI, fix remaining issues (CC-4799) (CC-5352)
Set Cascadia Code as default font (GH-5121)
Show a double width cursor for double width characters (GH-5319)
Delegate all character input to the character event handler (CC-4192)
Update til::bitmap to use dynamic_bitset<> + libpopcnt (GH-5092)
Merged PR 4465022: [Git2Git] Merged PR 4464559: Console: Ingest OSS changes up to e0550798
Correct scrolling invalidation region for tmux in pty w/ bitmap (GH-5122)
Render row-by-row instead of invalidating entire screen (GH-5185)
Make conechokey use ReadConsoleInputW by default (GH-5148)
Manually pass mouse wheel messages to TermControls (GH-5131)
This fixes C-M-space for WSL but not for Win32, but I'm not sure there's a problem in Win32 quite yet. (GH-5208)
Fix copying wrapped lines by implementing better scrolling (GH-5181)
Emit lines wrapped due to spaces at the end correctly (GH-5294)
Remove unneeded whitespace (CC-5162)
2020-04-21 17:52:10 +00:00
Michael Niksa
252c7d36a4 Merged PR 4560408: [Git2Git] LKG9 optimizer workaround
[Git2Git] Git Train: Merge of building/rs_onecore_dep_uxp/200414-1630 into official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os OS official/rs_onecore_dep_uxp 90031afa8114b7d95e3993573fc8449a1524a7fd

Related work items: #25439646
2020-04-21 17:44:56 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
8a976c0d23 Change Windows Powershell default scheme to Campbell (#5432)
The "Campbell Powershell" color scheme does not have a high enough color contrast
ratio. Campbell does, so we're changing it there.

Closes (only upon validation) #5393.
2020-04-21 10:19:54 -07:00
Carlos Zamora
e3e57081a2 UIA: Prevent crash from invalid UTR endpoint comparison (#5399)
## Summary of the Pull Request
This is a quick-and-easy solution to #5309. If the ITextRangeProvider API allows us to take in two UiaTextRanges, we need to verify that they are both valid.

With this PR, we make sure they both fit in the current TextBuffer. If not, we return `E_FAIL`. Though this doesn't prove that both UiaTextRanges are from the same TextBuffer, at the very least we don't crash and in cases where we can't make a valid comparison, we return an HRESULT failure.

## References
#5406 - This should be the proper solution to this problem. Each UiaTextRange needs to be aware of which TextBuffer it came from.

## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #5309

## Validation Steps Performed
1. generate enough output to cause the terminal to scroll
2. execute `nano` to make us go into the alternate buffer
This previously crashed, now NVDA seems to detect that there was an error and keeps moving along.
2020-04-21 16:45:17 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
e271599bf4 Add copyFormatting setting to all settings json files (#5404)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Added `copyFormatting` to defaults json files and userDefaults.

## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #5403
2020-04-20 23:49:12 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
152b399e90 Don't duplicate spaces from potentially-wrapped EOL-deferred lines (#5398)
The logic here, regarding deleting the spaces and just instantly adding
them bad, is incredibly suspect. Given that we're close to 0.11, I don't
think I can change it.

I've added a TODO with an issue number to figure out the right logic
here.

Fixes #5386.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #5386
* [x] CLA signed
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I'm horrified.

## Validation Steps Performed
Tests, manual validation of the scenario in 5386 and a repro program.
2020-04-20 21:45:44 +00:00
Mike Griese
56259ea005 Add a git submodules sanity check step to the build (#5424)
This commit adds a specific error message to the build that tells people
to restore git submodules if they forgot to read the README.

#5416 was the straw that broke the camel's back.
2020-04-20 11:11:36 -07:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
5740e197c2 wpf: only dismiss selection for real chars, not modifiers (#5388)
Selection would act up when you were using shift to ignore VT mouse
mode: we would get hundreds of WM_KEYDOWN for VK_SHIFT and dismiss the
selection every time.

I took the opportunity to move the actual responsibility for key event
dispatch into HwndTerminal. In the future, I'd like to make more of the
TerminalXxx calls just call impl methods on HwndTerminal.
2020-04-17 11:28:56 -07:00
Oisin Grehan
38e7cb0742 Add WT_PROFILE_ID to the environment of the spawned process (#4852)
This commit adds a `WT_PROFILE_ID` environment variable, which contains
the guid of the active profile.

It also teaches ConptyConnection to take an environment map on creation.

We had to do a little manual jiggery with the WSLENV environment
variable as passed by the creator.

* [x] CLA signed
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already.

Ran terminal, validated vars and translated paths under windows and WSL. 

References #4566 (this PR originally introduced WT_SETTINGS/DEFAULTS)
Closes #3589
2020-04-17 17:15:20 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
bceeb4523e Fix a deadlock and a bounding rects issue in UIA (#5385)
The scroll locking rework that landed with the DxRenderer's partial
invalidation change introduced a deadlock. UIA locks the buffer for
reading before asking it to scroll (which now requires a write lock.)

Scrolling is probably _okay_ to have a little bit of torn state that
might arise from us unlocking the read lock early before triggering the
write lock down the line.

While investigating this, I also noticed that our bounding rects stopped
being viewport-relative (and were instead buffer-relative.) That
regressed with the switch to `GetTextRects` in #4991  

## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes (issues noticed in investigating the DPI changes)
* [x] CLA signed.
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] Core contributor badge

## Validation Steps Performed
Manual pass with inspect.exe
2020-04-17 17:09:58 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
f1fe4c6ccd Add SS3 cursor key encoding to ConPty (#5383)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds SS3 cursor encoding for cursor keys and home/end button. Reverts a portion of #4913 that checks for VT Input Mode.

## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #4873

## Validation Steps Performed
1. Open pwsh
2. run `wsl`
3. execute `printf "\e[?1h"`
4. verify keys work
5. exit back to pwsh
6. verify keys work still (didn't previously)

Also verified that those keys work in vim when connected to my Raspberry Pi over SSH.
2020-04-17 16:14:38 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
f04b7aae87 wpf: add support for VT mouse mode (#5375)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This pull request ports the VT mouse code from TermControl to WpfTerminalControl. Our WPF control is a lot closer to Win32 than to Xaml, so our mouse event handler looks _nothing_ like the one that we got from Xaml. We can pass events through almost directly, because the window message handling in the mouse input code actually came from _conhost_. It's awesome.

Neither TermControl nor conhost pass hover events through when the control isn't focused, so I wired up focus events to make sure we acted the same.

Just like Terminal and conhost, mouse events are suppressed when <kbd>Shift</kbd> is held.

## Validation Steps Performed
Tested with MC, and tested by manually engaging SGR events in an Echo terminal.

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/14316954/79417901-2f976a00-7f68-11ea-97e9-c053cbed3878.png)
2020-04-17 02:05:47 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
a6b2e7f612 wpf: port selection changes from TermControl, add multi-click selection (#5374)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This pull request ports #5096 to WpfTerminalControl, bringing it in line with the selection mechanics in Terminal. It also introduces double- and triple-click selection and makes sure we clear the selection when we resize.

Please read #5096 for more details.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

This code is, largely, copy-and-pasted from TermControl with some updates to use `std::chrono` and `til::point`. I love `til::point`. A lot.

## Validation Steps Performed
Lots of manual selection.
2020-04-17 01:10:29 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
7f886620b3 wpf: fix two crashes and some fallout from the new key event handler (#5373)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This pull request fixes a crash on scrolling down (overflow exception cramming the signed short upper WORD of the wParam into an actual signed short on x64) and a crash on key input caused by improper use of `Marshal.ReadByte` on an integer (instead of a memory address).

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

## Validation Steps Performed
Manually did those things on x64.
2020-04-17 01:10:14 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
c186c7d683 Rework error handling and state flow in the Azure connection (#5356)
This commit fixes a number of problems and code quality/health issues
with the AzureConnection.

This is a general tidying-up of the azure connection. It improves error
logging (like: it actually emits error logs...) and retry logic and the
state machine and it audits the exit points of the state machine for
exceptions and removes the HRESULT returns (so they either succeed and
transition to a new state or throw an exception or are going down
anyway).

There's also a change in here that changes how we display tenants. It
adds the "default domain" to the name, so that instead of seeing this:

Conhost (aaaaaaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaaaaaaaaaa)
Default Directory (bbbbbbbb-bbbb-bbbb-bbbb-bbbbbbbbbbbb)

you see this

Conhost (conhost.onmicrosoft.com)
Default Directory (dustinhowett.onmicrosoft.com)

Changes:

* rework tenant/tenant storage and fix display names

  Switch to the 2020 tenant API.

  Instead of passing around four loose variables, create a Tenant class
  and use that for packing/unpacking into/out of json (and the windows
  credential store, where we "cleverly" used json for the tenant info
  there too).
  
  When displaying a tenant, use its display name if there is one, the
  unknown resource string if there isn't, and the default domain if
  there is one and the ID if there isn't.
  
  Fixes #5325.

* use {fmt} for formatting request bodies
* remove dead strings
* rework/rename Request/HeaderHelper to
  Send(Authenticated)ReqReturningJson
* rewrite polling to use std::chrono
* remove HR returns from state machine
* rename state handlers from _XHelper to _RunXState
* cleanup namespaces, prefix user input with >, remove namespaces
* Rework error handling
  - _RequestHelper no longer eats exceptions.
  - Delete the "no internet" error message.
  - Wrap exceptions coming out of Azure API in a well-known type.
  - Catch by type.
  - Extract error codes for known failures (keep polling, invalid
    grant).
  - When we get an Invalid Grant, dispose of the cached refresh token
    and force the user to log in again.
  - Catch all printable exceptions and print them.
  - Remove the NoConnect state completely -- just bail out when an
    exception hits the toplevel of the output thread.
  - Move 3x logic into _RefreshTokens and pop exceptions out of it.
  - Begin abstracting into AzureClient

Fixes #5325 (by addressing its chief complaint).
Fixes #4803 (by triggering auth flow again if the token expires).
Improves diagnosability for #4575.
2020-04-16 17:32:52 -07:00
1188 changed files with 40727 additions and 498842 deletions

View File

@@ -9,7 +9,8 @@
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [ ] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] Documentation updated. If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx
<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->

View File

@@ -1,17 +0,0 @@
<details>
<summary>
:pencil2: Contributor please read this
</summary>
* If the items listed above are names, please add them to `.github/actions/spell-check/dictionary/names.txt`.
* If they're APIs, you can add them to a file in `.github/actions/spell-check/dictionary/`.
* If they're just things you're using, please add them to an appropriate file in `.github/actions/spell-check/whitelist/`.
* If you need to use a specific token in one place and it shouldn't generally be used, you can
add an item in an appropriate file in `.github/actions/spell-check/patterns/`.
See the `README.md` in each directory for more information.
</details>
#### :warning: Reviewers
At present, the action that triggered this message will not show its :x: in this PR unless the branch is within this repository.
Thus, you **should** make sure that this comment has been addressed before encouraging the merge bot to merge this PR.

View File

@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
ICustom
IObject
LCID
rfind

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
powf
sqrtf
isnan

View File

@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
mfcribbon
microsoft
microsoftonline
osgvsowi
powershell
tdbuildteamid
visualstudio

View File

@@ -1,61 +0,0 @@
(?:^|/)dirs$
(?:^|/)go\.mod$
(?:^|/)go\.sum$
(?:^|/)package-lock\.json$
(?:^|/)sources(?:|\.dep)$
SUMS$
\.ai$
\.bmp$
\.cer$
\.class$
\.crl$
\.crt$
\.csr$
\.dll$
\.DS_Store$
\.eot$
\.eps$
\.exe$
\.gif$
\.graffle$
\.gz$
\.icns$
\.ico$
\.jar$
\.jpeg$
\.jpg$
\.key$
\.lib$
\.lock$
\.map$
\.min\..
\.mp3$
\.mp4$
\.otf$
\.pbxproj$
\.pdf$
\.pem$
\.png$
\.psd$
\.runsettings$
\.sig$
\.so$
\.svg$
\.svgz$
\.tar$
\.tgz$
\.ttf$
\.woff
\.xcf$
\.xls
\.xpm$
\.yml$
\.zip$
^dep/
^doc/reference/UTF8-torture-test\.txt$
^src/interactivity/onecore/BgfxEngine\.
^src/renderer/wddmcon/WddmConRenderer\.
^src/terminal/parser/ft_fuzzer/VTCommandFuzzer\.cpp$
^src/tools/U8U16Test/(?:fr|ru|zh)\.txt$
^\.github/actions/spell-check/
^\.gitignore$

View File

@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
https://(?:(?:[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=]*\.|)microsoft\.com)/[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=_\/.]*
https://aka\.ms/[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=\/_]*
https://(?:(?:www\.|)youtube\.com|youtu.be)/[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=]*
(?:0[Xx]|U\+|#)[a-f0-9A-FGgRr]{2,}[Uu]?[Ll]?\b
\{[0-9A-FA-F]{8}-(?:[0-9A-FA-F]{4}-){3}[0-9A-FA-F]{12}\}
\d+x\d+Logo
Scro\&ll
# selectionInput.cpp
:\\windows\\syste\b
TestUtils::VerifyExpectedString\(tb, L"[^"]+"
hostSm\.ProcessString\(L"[^"]+"
\b([A-Za-z])\1{3,}\b

View File

@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
The contents of each `.txt` file in this directory are merged together.
* [alphabet](alphabet.txt) is a sample for alphabet related items
* [web](web.txt) is a sample for web/html related items
* [whitelist](whitelist.txt) is the main whitelist -- there is nothing
particularly special about the file name (beyond the extension which is
important).

View File

@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
http
td
www
ecma

15
.github/actions/spelling/README.md vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
# check-spelling/check-spelling configuration
File | Purpose | Format | Info
-|-|-|-
[allow/*.txt](allow/) | Add words to the dictionary | one word per line (only letters and `'`s allowed) | [allow](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration#allow)
[reject.txt](reject.txt) | Remove words from the dictionary (after allow) | grep pattern matching whole dictionary words | [reject](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples%3A-reject)
[excludes.txt](excludes.txt) | Files to ignore entirely | perl regular expression | [excludes](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples%3A-excludes)
[patterns/*.txt](patterns/) | Patterns to ignore from checked lines | perl regular expression (order matters, first match wins) | [patterns](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples%3A-patterns)
[candidate.patterns](candidate.patterns) | Patterns that might be worth adding to [patterns.txt](patterns.txt) | perl regular expression with optional comment block introductions (all matches will be suggested) | [candidates](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Feature:-Suggest-patterns)
[line_forbidden.patterns](line_forbidden.patterns) | Patterns to flag in checked lines | perl regular expression (order matters, first match wins) | [patterns](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples%3A-patterns)
[expect/*.txt](expect.txt) | Expected words that aren't in the dictionary | one word per line (sorted, alphabetically) | [expect](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration#expect)
[advice.md](advice.md) | Supplement for GitHub comment when unrecognized words are found | GitHub Markdown | [advice](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples%3A-advice)
Note: you can replace any of these files with a directory by the same name (minus the suffix)
and then include multiple files inside that directory (with that suffix) to merge multiple files together.

48
.github/actions/spelling/advice.md vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,48 @@
<!-- See https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples%3A-advice --> <!-- markdownlint-disable MD033 MD041 -->
<details>
<summary>
:pencil2: Contributor please read this
</summary>
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.
* ... *names*, please add them to `.github/actions/spelling/allow/names.txt`.
* ... APIs, you can add them to a file in `.github/actions/spelling/allow/`.
* ... just things you're using, please add them to an appropriate file in `.github/actions/spelling/expect/`.
* ... tokens you only need in one place and shouldn't *generally be used*, you can add an item in an appropriate file in `.github/actions/spelling/patterns/`.
See the `README.md` in each directory for more information.
:microscope: You can test your commits **without** *appending* to a PR by creating a new branch with that extra change and pushing it to your fork. The [check-spelling](https://github.com/marketplace/actions/check-spelling) action will run in response to your **push** -- it doesn't require an open pull request. By using such a branch, you can limit the number of typos your peers see you make. :wink:
<details><summary>If the flagged items are :exploding_head: false positives</summary>
If items relate to a ...
* binary file (or some other file you wouldn't want to check at all).
Please add a file path to the `excludes.txt` file matching the containing file.
File paths are Perl 5 Regular Expressions - you can [test](
https://www.regexplanet.com/advanced/perl/) yours before committing to verify it will match your files.
`^` refers to the file's path from the root of the repository, so `^README\.md$` would exclude [README.md](
../tree/HEAD/README.md) (on whichever branch you're using).
* well-formed pattern.
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](
https://www.regexplanet.com/advanced/perl/) yours before committing to verify it will match your lines.
Note that patterns can't match multiline strings.
</details>
</details>

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# Dictionaries are lists of words to accept unconditionally
# Allow files are lists of words to accept unconditionally
While check spelling will complain about a whitelisted word
While check spelling will complain about an expected word
which is no longer present, you can include things here even if
they are not otherwise present in the repository.
@@ -8,13 +8,14 @@ E.g., you could include a list of system APIs here, or potential
contributors (so that if a future commit includes their name,
it'll be accepted).
### Files
## Files
| File | Description |
| ---- | ----------- |
| [Dictionary](dictionary.txt) | Primary US English dictionary |
| [Allow](allow.txt) | Supplements to the dictionary |
| [Chinese](chinese.txt) | Chinese words |
| [Japanese](japanese.txt) | Japanese words |
| [Microsoft](microsoft.txt) | Microsoft brand items |
| [Fonts](fonts.txt) | Font names |
| [Names](names.txt) | Names of people |
| [Colors](colors.txt) | Names of color |

108
.github/actions/spelling/allow/allow.txt vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,108 @@
admins
allcolors
Apc
apc
breadcrumb
breadcrumbs
bsd
calt
ccmp
changelog
clickable
clig
CMMI
copyable
cybersecurity
dalet
Dcs
dcs
dialytika
dje
downside
downsides
dze
dzhe
EDDB
EDDC
Enum'd
Fitt
formattings
FTCS
ftp
fvar
gantt
gcc
geeksforgeeks
ghe
github
gje
godbolt
hostname
hostnames
https
hyperlink
hyperlinking
hyperlinks
iconify
img
inlined
It'd
kje
libfuzzer
libuv
liga
lje
Llast
llvm
Lmid
locl
lol
lorem
Lorigin
maxed
minimalistic
mkmk
mnt
mru
nje
noreply
ogonek
ok'd
overlined
pipeline
postmodern
ptys
qof
qps
rclt
reimplementation
reserialization
reserialize
reserializes
rlig
runtimes
shcha
slnt
Sos
ssh
timeline
timelines
timestamped
TLDR
tokenizes
tonos
toolset
tshe
ubuntu
uiatextrange
UIs
und
unregister
versioned
vsdevcmd
We'd
wildcards
XBox
YBox
yeru
zhe

248
.github/actions/spelling/allow/apis.txt vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,248 @@
ACCEPTFILES
ACCESSDENIED
acl
aclapi
alignas
alignof
APPLYTOSUBMENUS
appxrecipe
bitfield
bitfields
BUILDBRANCH
BUILDMSG
BUILDNUMBER
BYCOMMAND
BYPOSITION
charconv
CLASSNOTAVAILABLE
CLOSEAPP
cmdletbinding
COLORPROPERTY
colspan
COMDLG
commandlinetoargv
comparand
cstdint
CXICON
CYICON
Dacl
dataobject
dcomp
DERR
dlldata
DNE
DONTADDTORECENT
DWMSBT
DWMWA
DWMWA
DWORDLONG
endfor
ENDSESSION
enumset
environstrings
EXPCMDFLAGS
EXPCMDSTATE
filetime
FILTERSPEC
FORCEFILESYSTEM
FORCEMINIMIZE
frac
fullkbd
futex
GETDESKWALLPAPER
GETHIGHCONTRAST
GETMOUSEHOVERTIME
Hashtable
HIGHCONTRASTON
HIGHCONTRASTW
hotkeys
href
hrgn
HTCLOSE
hwinsta
HWINSTA
IActivation
IApp
IAppearance
IAsync
IBind
IBox
IClass
IComparable
IComparer
IConnection
ICustom
IDialog
IDirect
IExplorer
IFACEMETHOD
IFile
IGraphics
IInheritable
IMap
IMonarch
IObject
iosfwd
IPackage
IPeasant
ISetup
isspace
IStorage
istream
IStringable
ITab
ITaskbar
itow
IUri
IVirtual
KEYSELECT
LCID
llabs
llu
localtime
lround
Lsa
lsass
LSHIFT
LTGRAY
MAINWINDOW
memchr
memicmp
MENUCOMMAND
MENUDATA
MENUINFO
MENUITEMINFOW
mmeapi
MOUSELEAVE
mov
mptt
msappx
MULTIPLEUSE
NCHITTEST
NCLBUTTONDBLCLK
NCMOUSELEAVE
NCMOUSEMOVE
NCRBUTTONDBLCLK
NIF
NIN
NOAGGREGATION
NOASYNC
NOCHANGEDIR
NOPROGRESS
NOREDIRECTIONBITMAP
NOREPEAT
NOTIFYBYPOS
NOTIFYICON
NOTIFYICONDATA
ntprivapi
oaidl
ocidl
ODR
offsetof
ofstream
onefuzz
osver
OSVERSIONINFOEXW
otms
OUTLINETEXTMETRICW
overridable
PACL
PAGESCROLL
PATINVERT
PEXPLICIT
PICKFOLDERS
pmr
ptstr
QUERYENDSESSION
rcx
REGCLS
RETURNCMD
rfind
ROOTOWNER
roundf
RSHIFT
SACL
schandle
semver
serializer
SETVERSION
SHELLEXECUTEINFOW
shobjidl
SHOWHIDE
SHOWMINIMIZED
SHOWTIP
SINGLEUSE
SIZENS
smoothstep
snprintf
spsc
sregex
SRWLOC
SRWLOCK
STDCPP
STDMETHOD
strchr
strcpy
streambuf
strtoul
Stubless
Subheader
Subpage
syscall
SYSTEMBACKDROP
TABROW
TASKBARCREATED
TBPF
THEMECHANGED
tlg
TME
tmp
tmpdir
tolower
toupper
TRACKMOUSEEVENT
TTask
TVal
UChar
UFIELD
ULARGE
UOI
UPDATEINIFILE
userenv
USEROBJECTFLAGS
Viewbox
virtualalloc
wcsstr
wcstoui
winmain
winsta
winstamin
wmemcmp
wpc
WSF
wsregex
wwinmain
xchg
XDocument
XElement
xfacet
xhash
XIcon
xiosbase
xlocale
xlocbuf
xlocinfo
xlocmes
xlocmon
xlocnum
xloctime
XMax
xmemory
XParse
xpath
xstddef
xstring
xtree
xutility
YIcon
YMax

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,117 @@
alice
aliceblue
antiquewhite
blanchedalmond
blueviolet
burlywood
cadetblue
cornflowerblue
cornsilk
cyan
darkblue
darkcyan
darkgoldenrod
darkgray
darkgreen
darkgrey
darkkhaki
darkmagenta
darkolivegreen
darkorange
darkorchid
darkred
darksalmon
darkseagreen
darkslateblue
darkslategray
darkslategrey
darkturquoise
darkviolet
deeppink
deepskyblue
dimgray
dimgrey
dodgerblue
firebrick
floralwhite
forestgreen
gainsboro
ghostwhite
greenyellow
hotpink
indian
indianred
lavenderblush
lawngreen
lemonchiffon
lightblue
lightcoral
lightcyan
lightgoldenrod
lightgoldenrodyellow
lightgray
lightgreen
lightgrey
lightpink
lightsalmon
lightseagreen
lightskyblue
lightslateblue
lightslategray
lightslategrey
lightsteelblue
lightyellow
limegreen
mediumaquamarine
mediumblue
mediumorchid
mediumpurple
mediumseagreen
mediumslateblue
mediumspringgreen
mediumturquoise
mediumvioletred
midnightblue
mintcream
mistyrose
navajo
navajowhite
navyblue
oldlace
olivedrab
orangered
palegoldenrod
palegreen
paleturquoise
palevioletred
papayawhip
peachpuff
peru
powderblue
rebecca
rebeccapurple
rosybrown
royalblue
saddlebrown
sandybrown
seagreen
sienna
skyblue
slateblue
slategray
slategrey
springgreen
steelblue
violetred
webgray
webgreen
webgrey
webmaroon
webpurple
whitesmoke
xaroon
xray
xreen
xrey
xurple
yellowgreen

View File

@@ -1,8 +1,10 @@
Consolas
emoji
emojis
Extralight
Gabriola
Iosevka
MDL
Monofur
Segoe
wght

11
.github/actions/spelling/allow/math.txt vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
atan
CPrime
HBar
HPrime
isnan
LPrime
LStep
powf
RSub
sqrtf
ULP

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,85 @@
ACLs
ADMINS
advapi
altform
altforms
appendwttlogging
appx
appxbundle
appxerror
appxmanifest
ATL
backplating
bitmaps
BOMs
CPLs
cpptools
cppvsdbg
CPRs
cryptbase
DACL
DACLs
defaultlib
diffs
disposables
dotnetfeed
DTDs
DWINRT
enablewttlogging
Intelli
IVisual
libucrt
libucrtd
LKG
LOCKFILE
Lxss
mfcribbon
microsoft
microsoftonline
MSAA
msixbundle
MSVC
MSVCP
muxc
netcore
Onefuzz
osgvsowi
PFILETIME
pgc
pgo
pgosweep
powerrename
powershell
propkey
pscustomobject
QWORD
regedit
robocopy
SACLs
sdkddkver
Shobjidl
Skype
SRW
sxs
Sysinternals
sysnative
systemroot
taskkill
tasklist
tdbuildteamid
ucrt
ucrtd
unvirtualized
VCRT
vcruntime
Virtualization
visualstudio
vscode
VSTHRD
winsdkver
wlk
wslpath
wtl
wtt
wttlog
Xamarin

View File

@@ -1,57 +1,91 @@
Anup
austdi
arkthur
Ballmer
bhoj
Bhojwani
Bluloco
carlos
dhowett
Diviness
dsafa
duhowett
DXP
ekg
eryksun
ethanschoonover
Firefox
Gatta
glsl
Gravell
Grie
Griese
Hernan
Howett
Illhardt
iquilezles
italo
jantari
jerrysh
Kaiyu
kimwalisch
KMehrain
KODELIFE
Kodelife
Kourosh
kowalczyk
leonmsft
Lepilleur
lhecker
lukesampson
Macbook
Manandhar
masserano
mbadolato
Mehrain
menger
mgravell
michaelniksa
michkap
migrie
mikegr
mikemaccana
miloush
miniksa
niksa
nvaccess
nvda
oising
oldnewthing
opengl
osgwiki
pabhojwa
panos
paulcam
pauldotknopf
PGP
Pham
Rincewind
rprichard
Schoonover
shadertoy
Shomnipotence
simioni
Somuah
sonph
sonpham
stakx
talo
thereses
Walisch
WDX
Wellons
Wirt
Wojciech
zadjii
Zamor
Zamora
zamora
Zoey
zorio
Zverovich

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@@ -0,0 +1,523 @@
# marker to ignore all code on line
^.*/\* #no-spell-check-line \*/.*$
# 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}
# cid urls
(['"])cid:.*?\g{-1}
# data url in parens
\(data:[^)]*?(?:[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,})[^)]*\)
# data url in quotes
([`'"])data:.*?(?:[A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,}).*\g{-1}
# data url
data:[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*,\S*
# mailto urls
mailto:[-a-zA-Z=;:/?%&0-9+@.]{3,}
# magnet urls
magnet:[?=:\w]+
# magnet urls
"magnet:[^"]+"
# obs:
"obs:[^"]*"
# The `\b` here means a break, it's the fancy way to handle urls, but it makes things harder to read
# In this examples content, I'm using a number of different ways to match things to show various approaches
# asciinema
\basciinema\.org/a/[0-9a-zA-Z]+
# apple
\bdeveloper\.apple\.com/[-\w?=/]+
# Apple music
\bembed\.music\.apple\.com/fr/playlist/usr-share/[-\w.]+
# appveyor api
\bci\.appveyor\.com/api/projects/status/[0-9a-z]+
# appveyor project
\bci\.appveyor\.com/project/(?:[^/\s"]*/){2}builds?/\d+/job/[0-9a-z]+
# Amazon
# Amazon
\bamazon\.com/[-\w]+/(?:dp/[0-9A-Z]+|)
# AWS S3
\b\w*\.s3[^.]*\.amazonaws\.com/[-\w/&#%_?:=]*
# AWS execute-api
\b[0-9a-z]{10}\.execute-api\.[-0-9a-z]+\.amazonaws\.com\b
# AWS ELB
\b\w+\.[-0-9a-z]+\.elb\.amazonaws\.com\b
# AWS SNS
\bsns\.[-0-9a-z]+.amazonaws\.com/[-\w/&#%_?:=]*
# AWS VPC
vpc-\w+
# While you could try to match `http://` and `https://` by using `s?` in `https?://`, sometimes there
# YouTube url
\b(?:(?:www\.|)youtube\.com|youtu.be)/(?:channel/|embed/|user/|playlist\?list=|watch\?v=|v/|)[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=_%]*
# YouTube music
\bmusic\.youtube\.com/youtubei/v1/browse(?:[?&]\w+=[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=_]*)
# YouTube tag
<\s*youtube\s+id=['"][-a-zA-Z0-9?_]*['"]
# YouTube image
\bimg\.youtube\.com/vi/[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=_]*
# Google Accounts
\baccounts.google.com/[-_/?=.:;+%&0-9a-zA-Z]*
# Google Analytics
\bgoogle-analytics\.com/collect.[-0-9a-zA-Z?%=&_.~]*
# Google APIs
\bgoogleapis\.(?:com|dev)/[a-z]+/(?:v\d+/|)[a-z]+/[-@:./?=\w+|&]+
# Google Storage
\b[-a-zA-Z0-9.]*\bstorage\d*\.googleapis\.com(?:/\S*|)
# Google Calendar
\bcalendar\.google\.com/calendar(?:/u/\d+|)/embed\?src=[@./?=\w&%]+
\w+\@group\.calendar\.google\.com\b
# Google DataStudio
\bdatastudio\.google\.com/(?:(?:c/|)u/\d+/|)(?:embed/|)(?:open|reporting|datasources|s)/[-0-9a-zA-Z]+(?:/page/[-0-9a-zA-Z]+|)
# The leading `/` here is as opposed to the `\b` above
# ... a short way to match `https://` or `http://` since most urls have one of those prefixes
# Google Docs
/docs\.google\.com/[a-z]+/(?:ccc\?key=\w+|(?:u/\d+|d/(?:e/|)[0-9a-zA-Z_-]+/)?(?:edit\?[-\w=#.]*|/\?[\w=&]*|))
# Google Drive
\bdrive\.google\.com/(?:file/d/|open)[-0-9a-zA-Z_?=]*
# Google Groups
\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
themes\.googleusercontent\.com/static/fonts/[^/\s"]+/v\d+/[^.]+.
# Google CDN
\bclients2\.google(?:usercontent|)\.com[-0-9a-zA-Z/.]*
# Goo.gl
/goo\.gl/[a-zA-Z0-9]+
# Google Chrome Store
\bchrome\.google\.com/webstore/detail/[-\w]*(?:/\w*|)
# Google Books
\bgoogle\.(?:\w{2,4})/books(?:/\w+)*\?[-\w\d=&#.]*
# Google Fonts
\bfonts\.(?:googleapis|gstatic)\.com/[-/?=:;+&0-9a-zA-Z]*
# Google Forms
\bforms\.gle/\w+
# Google Scholar
\bscholar\.google\.com/citations\?user=[A-Za-z0-9_]+
# Google Colab Research Drive
\bcolab\.research\.google\.com/drive/[-0-9a-zA-Z_?=]*
# GitHub SHAs (api)
\bapi.github\.com/repos(?:/[^/\s"]+){3}/[0-9a-f]+\b
# GitHub SHAs (markdown)
(?:\[`?[0-9a-f]+`?\]\(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 wiki
\bgithub\.com/(?:[^/]+/){2}wiki/(?:(?:[^/]+/|)_history|[^/]+(?:/_compare|)/[0-9a-f.]{40,})\b
# githubusercontent
/[-a-z0-9]+\.githubusercontent\.com/[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=_\/.]*
# githubassets
\bgithubassets.com/[0-9a-f]+(?:[-/\w.]+)
# gist github
\bgist\.github\.com/[^/\s"]+/[0-9a-f]+
# git.io
\bgit\.io/[0-9a-zA-Z]+
# GitHub JSON
"node_id": "[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*"
# Contributor
\[[^\]]+\]\(https://github\.com/[^/\s"]+\)
# GHSA
GHSA(?:-[0-9a-z]{4}){3}
# GitLab commit
\bgitlab\.[^/\s"]*/\S+/\S+/commit/[0-9a-f]{7,16}#[0-9a-f]{40}\b
# GitLab merge requests
\bgitlab\.[^/\s"]*/\S+/\S+/-/merge_requests/\d+/diffs#[0-9a-f]{40}\b
# GitLab uploads
\bgitlab\.[^/\s"]*/uploads/[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*
# GitLab commits
\bgitlab\.[^/\s"]*/(?:[^/\s"]+/){2}commits?/[0-9a-f]+\b
# 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]+
# bitbucket repositories commits
\bapi\.bitbucket\.org/\d+\.\d+/repositories/(?:[^/\s"]+/){2}commits?/[0-9a-f]+
# bitbucket commits
\bbitbucket\.org/(?:[^/\s"]+/){2}commits?/[0-9a-f]+
# bit.ly
\bbit\.ly/\w+
# bitrise
\bapp\.bitrise\.io/app/[0-9a-f]*/[\w.?=&]*
# bootstrapcdn.com
\bbootstrapcdn\.com/[-./\w]+
# cdn.cloudflare.com
\bcdnjs\.cloudflare\.com/[./\w]+
# circleci
\bcircleci\.com/gh(?:/[^/\s"]+){1,5}.[a-z]+\?[-0-9a-zA-Z=&]+
# gitter
\bgitter\.im(?:/[^/\s"]+){2}\?at=[0-9a-f]+
# gravatar
\bgravatar\.com/avatar/[0-9a-f]+
# ibm
[a-z.]*ibm\.com/[-_#=:%!?~.\\/\d\w]*
# imgur
\bimgur\.com/[^.]+
# Internet Archive
\barchive\.org/web/\d+/(?:[-\w.?,'/\\+&%$#_:]*)
# discord
/discord(?:app\.com|\.gg)/(?:invite/)?[a-zA-Z0-9]{7,}
# Disqus
\bdisqus\.com/[-\w/%.()!?&=_]*
# medium link
\blink\.medium\.com/[a-zA-Z0-9]+
# medium
\bmedium\.com/\@?[^/\s"]+/[-\w]+
# microsoft
\b(?:https?://|)(?:(?:download\.visualstudio|docs|msdn2?|research)\.microsoft|blogs\.msdn)\.com/[-_a-zA-Z0-9()=./%]*
# powerbi
\bapp\.powerbi\.com/reportEmbed/[^"' ]*
# vs devops
\bvisualstudio.com(?::443|)/[-\w/?=%&.]*
# microsoft store
\bmicrosoft\.com/store/apps/\w+
# mvnrepository.com
\bmvnrepository\.com/[-0-9a-z./]+
# now.sh
/[0-9a-z-.]+\.now\.sh\b
# oracle
\bdocs\.oracle\.com/[-0-9a-zA-Z./_?#&=]*
# chromatic.com
/\S+.chromatic.com\S*[")]
# codacy
\bapi\.codacy\.com/project/badge/Grade/[0-9a-f]+
# compai
\bcompai\.pub/v1/png/[0-9a-f]+
# mailgun api
\.api\.mailgun\.net/v3/domains/[0-9a-z]+\.mailgun.org/messages/[0-9a-zA-Z=@]*
# mailgun
\b[0-9a-z]+.mailgun.org
# /message-id/
/message-id/[-\w@./%]+
# Reddit
\breddit\.com/r/[/\w_]*
# requestb.in
\brequestb\.in/[0-9a-z]+
# sched
\b[a-z0-9]+\.sched\.com\b
# Slack url
slack://[a-zA-Z0-9?&=]+
# Slack
\bslack\.com/[-0-9a-zA-Z/_~?&=.]*
# Slack edge
\bslack-edge\.com/[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=%./]+
# Slack images
\bslack-imgs\.com/[-a-zA-Z0-9?&=%.]+
# shields.io
\bshields\.io/[-\w/%?=&.:+;,]*
# stackexchange -- https://stackexchange.com/feeds/sites
\b(?:askubuntu|serverfault|stack(?:exchange|overflow)|superuser).com/(?:questions/\w+/[-\w]+|a/)
# Sentry
[0-9a-f]{32}\@o\d+\.ingest\.sentry\.io\b
# Twitter markdown
\[\@[^[/\]:]*?\]\(https://twitter.com/[^/\s"')]*(?:/status/\d+(?:\?[-_0-9a-zA-Z&=]*|)|)\)
# Twitter hashtag
\btwitter\.com/hashtag/[\w?_=&]*
# Twitter status
\btwitter\.com/[^/\s"')]*(?:/status/\d+(?:\?[-_0-9a-zA-Z&=]*|)|)
# Twitter profile images
\btwimg\.com/profile_images/[_\w./]*
# Twitter media
\btwimg\.com/media/[-_\w./?=]*
# Twitter link shortened
\bt\.co/\w+
# facebook
\bfburl\.com/[0-9a-z_]+
# facebook CDN
\bfbcdn\.net/[\w/.,]*
# facebook watch
\bfb\.watch/[0-9A-Za-z]+
# dropbox
\bdropbox\.com/sh?/[^/\s"]+/[-0-9A-Za-z_.%?=&;]+
# ipfs protocol
ipfs://[0-9a-z]*
# ipfs url
/ipfs/[0-9a-z]*
# w3
\bw3\.org/[-0-9a-zA-Z/#.]+
# loom
\bloom\.com/embed/[0-9a-f]+
# regex101
\bregex101\.com/r/[^/\s"]+/\d+
# figma
\bfigma\.com/file(?:/[0-9a-zA-Z]+/)+
# freecodecamp.org
\bfreecodecamp\.org/[-\w/.]+
# image.tmdb.org
\bimage\.tmdb\.org/[/\w.]+
# mermaid
\bmermaid\.ink/img/[-\w]+|\bmermaid-js\.github\.io/mermaid-live-editor/#/edit/[-\w]+
# Wikipedia
\ben\.wikipedia\.org/wiki/[-\w%.#]+
# gitweb
[^"\s]+/gitweb/\S+;h=[0-9a-f]+
# HyperKitty lists
/archives/list/[^@/]+\@[^/\s"]*/message/[^/\s"]*/
# lists
/thread\.html/[^"\s]+
# list-management
\blist-manage\.com/subscribe(?:[?&](?:u|id)=[0-9a-f]+)+
# kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration
"kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration": ".*"
# pgp
\bgnupg\.net/pks/lookup[?&=0-9a-zA-Z]*
# Spotify
\bopen\.spotify\.com/embed/playlist/\w+
# Mastodon
\bmastodon\.[-a-z.]*/(?:media/|\@)[?&=0-9a-zA-Z_]*
# scastie
\bscastie\.scala-lang\.org/[^/]+/\w+
# images.unsplash.com
\bimages\.unsplash\.com/(?:(?:flagged|reserve)/|)[-\w./%?=%&.;]+
# pastebin
\bpastebin\.com/[\w/]+
# heroku
\b\w+\.heroku\.com/source/archive/\w+
# quip
\b\w+\.quip\.com/\w+(?:(?:#|/issues/)\w+)?
# badgen.net
\bbadgen\.net/badge/[^")\]'\s]+
# statuspage.io
\w+\.statuspage\.io\b
# media.giphy.com
\bmedia\.giphy\.com/media/[^/]+/[\w.?&=]+
# tinyurl
\btinyurl\.com/\w+
# getopts
\bgetopts\s+(?:"[^"]+"|'[^']+')
# ANSI color codes
(?:\\(?:u00|x)1b|\x1b)\[\d+(?:;\d+|)m
# URL escaped characters
\%[0-9A-F][A-F]
# IPv6
\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
(['"]|&quot;)[0-9a-f]{40,}\g{-1}
# hex runs
\b[0-9a-fA-F]{16,}\b
# hex in url queries
=[0-9a-fA-F]*?(?:[A-F]{3,}|[a-f]{3,})[0-9a-fA-F]*?&
# ssh
(?:ssh-\S+|-nistp256) [-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]{12,}
# PGP
\b(?:[0-9A-F]{4} ){9}[0-9A-F]{4}\b
# GPG keys
\b(?:[0-9A-F]{4} ){5}(?: [0-9A-F]{4}){5}\b
# Well known gpg keys
.well-known/openpgpkey/[\w./]+
# 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}|u\d+)\b
# integrity
integrity="sha\d+-[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]{40,}"
# https://www.gnu.org/software/groff/manual/groff.html
# man troff content
\\f[BCIPR]
# '
\\\(aq
# .desktop mime types
^MimeTypes?=.*$
# .desktop localized entries
^[A-Z][a-z]+\[[a-z]+\]=.*$
# Localized .desktop content
Name\[[^\]]+\]=.*
# IServiceProvider
\bI(?=(?:[A-Z][a-z]{2,})+\b)
# crypt
"\$2[ayb]\$.{56}"
# scrypt / argon
\$(?:scrypt|argon\d+[di]*)\$\S+
# Input to GitHub JSON
content: "[-a-zA-Z=;:/0-9+]*="
# 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,})
# Regular expressions for (P|p)assword
\([A-Z]\|[a-z]\)[a-z]+
# JavaScript regular expressions
# javascript test regex
/.*/[gim]*\.test\(
# javascript match regex
\.match\(/[^/\s"]*/[gim]*\s*
# javascript match regex
\.match\(/\\[b].*?/[gim]*\s*\)(?:;|$)
# javascript regex
^\s*/\\[b].*/[gim]*\s*(?:\)(?:;|$)|,$)
# javascript replace regex
\.replace\(/[^/\s"]*/[gim]*\s*,
# Go regular expressions
regexp?\.MustCompile\(`[^`]*`\)
# sed regular expressions
sed 's/(?:[^/]*?[a-zA-Z]{3,}[^/]*?/){2}
# go install
go install(?:\s+[a-z]+\.[-@\w/.]+)+
# 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+
# kubectl - pods in CrashLoopBackOff
\w+-[0-9a-f]+-\w+\s+\d+/\d+\s+CrashLoopBackOff\s+
# kubernetes object suffix
-[0-9a-f]{10}-\w{5}\s
# posthog secrets
posthog\.init\((['"])phc_[^"',]+\g{-1},
# xcode
# xcodeproject scenes
(?:Controller|ID|id)="\w{3}-\w{2}-\w{3}"
# xcode api botches
customObjectInstantitationMethod
# font awesome classes
\.fa-[-a-z0-9]+
# Update Lorem based on your content (requires `ge` and `w` from https://github.com/jsoref/spelling; and `review` from https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Looking-for-items-locally )
# grep '^[^#].*lorem' .github/actions/spelling/patterns.txt|perl -pne 's/.*i..\?://;s/\).*//' |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|[,.])*
# Non-English
[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
\\(?: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])
# 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 (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
\bset(?:\s+-[abefimouxE]{1,2})*\s+-[abefimouxE]{3,}(?:\s+-[abefimouxE]+)*
# tar arguments
\b(?:\\n|)g?tar(?:\.exe|)(?:(?:\s+--[-a-zA-Z]+|\s+-[a-zA-Z]+|\s[ABGJMOPRSUWZacdfh-pr-xz]+\b)(?:=[^ ]*|))+
# 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
# macOS temp folders
/var/folders/\w\w/[+\w]+/(?:T|-Caches-)/

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.github/actions/spelling/excludes.txt vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,117 @@
# 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$
(?:^|/)sources(?:|\.dep)$
(?:^|/)vendor/
\.a$
\.ai$
\.avi$
\.bmp$
\.bz2$
\.cer$
\.class$
\.crl$
\.crt$
\.csr$
\.dll$
\.docx?$
\.drawio$
\.DS_Store$
\.eot$
\.eps$
\.exe$
\.gif$
\.gitattributes$
\.graffle$
\.gz$
\.icns$
\.ico$
\.jar$
\.jks$
\.jpeg$
\.jpg$
\.key$
\.lib$
\.lock$
\.map$
\.min\..
\.mod$
\.mp3$
\.mp4$
\.o$
\.ocf$
\.otf$
\.pbxproj$
\.pdf$
\.pem$
\.png$
\.psd$
\.pyc$
\.runsettings$
\.s$
\.sig$
\.so$
\.svg$
\.svgz$
\.svgz?$
\.tar$
\.tgz$
\.tiff?$
\.ttf$
\.vsdx$
\.wav$
\.webm$
\.webp$
\.woff
\.woff2?$
\.xcf$
\.xls
\.xlsx?$
\.xpm$
\.yml$
\.zip$
^\.github/actions/spelling/
^\.github/fabricbot.json$
^\.gitignore$
^\Q.git-blame-ignore-revs\E$
^\Q.github/workflows/spelling.yml\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/tools/closetest/CloseTest.vcxproj.filters\E$
^\XamlStyler.json$
^build/config/
^consolegit2gitfilters\.json$
^dep/
^doc/reference/master-sequence-list.csv$
^doc/reference/UTF8-torture-test\.txt$
^oss/
^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\.
^src/terminal/adapter/ut_adapter/run\.bat$
^src/terminal/parser/delfuzzpayload\.bat$
^src/terminal/parser/ft_fuzzer/run\.bat$
^src/terminal/parser/ft_fuzzer/VTCommandFuzzer\.cpp$
^src/terminal/parser/ft_fuzzwrapper/run\.bat$
^src/terminal/parser/ut_parser/Base64Test.cpp$
^src/terminal/parser/ut_parser/run\.bat$
^src/tools/integrity/packageuwp/ConsoleUWP\.appxSources$
^src/tools/lnkd/lnkd\.bat$
^src/tools/pixels/pixels\.bat$
^src/tools/texttests/fira\.txt$
^src/tools/U8U16Test/(?:fr|ru|zh)\.txt$
^src/types/ut_types/UtilsTests.cpp$
^tools/ReleaseEngineering/ServicingPipeline.ps1$
ignore$
SUMS$

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
The contents of each `.txt` file in this directory are merged together.
* [alphabet](alphabet.txt) is a sample for alphabet related items
* [web](web.txt) is a sample for web/html related items
* [expect](expect.txt) is the main list of expected items -- there is nothing
particularly special about the file name (beyond the extension which is
important).
These terms are things which temporarily exist in the project, but which
aren't necessarily words.
If something is a word that could come and go, it probably belongs in a
[dictionary](../dictionary/README.md).

View File

@@ -1,24 +1,33 @@
AAAa
AAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAABBBBBBCCC
AAAAABBBBBBCCC
abcd
abcd
abcde
abcdef
ABCDEFG
ABCDEFGH
ABCDEFGHIJ
abcdefghijk
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNO
abcdefghijklmnop
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRST
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTQ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
ABCDEFGHIJPQRST
ABCDEFGHIJPQRSTQ
ABCG
ABE
abf
BBBBB
BBBBBBBB
BBBBBCCC
BBBBCCCCC
BBGGRR
EFG
EFGh
QQQQQQQQQQABCDEFGHIJ
QQQQQQQQQQABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQABCDEFGHIJPQRSTQQQQQQQQQQ
qrstuvwxyz
qwerty
QWERTYUIOP
qwertyuiopasdfg
YYYYYYYDDDDDDDDDDD
ZAAZZ
ZABBZ
ZBAZZ
@@ -28,3 +37,4 @@ ZYXWVUT
ZZBBZ
ZZZBB
ZZZBZ
ZZZZZ

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
WCAG
winui
appshellintegration
mdtauk
gfycat
Guake

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,62 @@
# 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,
# you might not want to check in code where you were debugging w/ `fit()`, in which case, you might want
# to use this:
#\bfit\(
# s.b. GitHub
\bGithub\b
# s.b. GitLab
\bGitlab\b
# s.b. JavaScript
\bJavascript\b
# s.b. Microsoft
\bMicroSoft\b
# s.b. another
\ban[- ]other\b
# s.b. greater than
\bgreater then\b
# s.b. into
#\sin to\s
# s.b. opt-in
\sopt in\s
# s.b. less than
\bless then\b
# s.b. otherwise
\bother[- ]wise\b
# s.b. nonexistent
\bnon existing\b
\b[Nn]o[nt][- ]existent\b
# s.b. preexisting
[Pp]re[- ]existing
# s.b. preempt
[Pp]re[- ]empt\b
# s.b. preemptively
[Pp]re[- ]emptively
# s.b. reentrancy
[Rr]e[- ]entrancy
# s.b. reentrant
[Rr]e[- ]entrant
# s.b. workaround(s)
#\bwork[- ]arounds?\b
# Reject duplicate words
\s([A-Z]{3,}|[A-Z][a-z]{2,}|[a-z]{3,})\s\g{-1}\s

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,96 @@
# See https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples:-patterns
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
microsoft/cascadia-code\@[0-9a-fA-F]{40}
\d+x\d+Logo
Scro\&ll
# selectionInput.cpp
:\\windows\\syste\b
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\+/"
std::memory_order_[\w]+
D2DERR_SHADER_COMPILE_FAILED
TIL_FEATURE_[0-9A-Z_]+
vcvars\w*
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)'
# Automatically suggested patterns
# hit-count: 3831 file-count: 582
# IServiceProvider
\bI(?=(?:[A-Z][a-z]{2,})+\b)
# hit-count: 71 file-count: 35
# Compiler flags
(?:^|[\t ,"'`=(])-[D](?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z])
(?:^|[\t ,"'`=(])-[X](?=[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z][a-z]|[a-z]{2,})
# 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: 20 file-count: 9
# hex runs
\b[0-9a-fA-F]{16,}\b
# 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: 4 file-count: 4
# 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
# latex
\\(?:n(?:ew|ormal|osub)|r(?:enew)|t(?:able(?:of|)|he|itle))(?=[a-z]+)
# hit-count: 1 file-count: 1
# 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
# Non-English
[a-zA-Z]*[ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź][a-zA-Z]{3}[a-zA-ZÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýÿĀāŁłŃńŅņŒœŚśŠšŜŝŸŽžź]*
# hit-count: 1 file-count: 1
# 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][-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*$
# Autogenerated revert commit message
^This reverts commit [0-9a-f]{40}\.$
# vtmode
--vtmode\s+(\w+)\s+\g{-1}\s
# ignore long runs of a single character:
\b([A-Za-z])\g{-1}{3,}\b

12
.github/actions/spelling/reject.txt vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
^attache$
^attacher$
^attachers$
benefitting
occurences?
^dependan.*
^oer$
Sorce
^[Ss]pae.*
^untill$
^untilling$
^wether.*

View File

@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
name: Spell checking
on:
push:
schedule:
# * is a special character in YAML so you have to quote this string
- cron: '15 * * * *'
jobs:
build:
name: Spell checking
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2.0.0
with:
fetch-depth: 5
- uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@0.0.14-alpha
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
bucket: .github/actions
project: spell-check

134
.github/workflows/spelling2.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,134 @@
# spelling.yml is blocked per https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/security/advisories/GHSA-g86g-chm8-7r2p
name: Spell checking
# Comment management is handled through a secondary job, for details see:
# 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 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
# or collapse a comment (in the case where it had previously made a comment and now no longer needs to show a comment)
# it needs `pull-requests: write` in order to manipulate those comments.
# Updating pull request branches is managed via comment handling.
# For details, see: https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Feature:-Update-expect-list
#
# These elements work together to make it happen:
#
# `on.issue_comment`
# This event listens to comments by users asking to update the metadata.
#
# `jobs.update`
# This job runs in response to an issue_comment and will push a new commit
# to update the spelling metadata.
#
# `with.experimental_apply_changes_via_bot`
# Tells the action to support and generate messages that enable it
# to make a commit to update the spelling metadata.
#
# `with.ssh_key`
# In order to trigger workflows when the commit is made, you can provide a
# secret (typically, a write-enabled github deploy key).
#
# For background, see: https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Feature:-Update-with-deploy-key
on:
push:
branches:
- "**"
tags-ignore:
- "**"
pull_request_target:
branches:
- "**"
tags-ignore:
- "**"
types:
- 'opened'
- 'reopened'
- 'synchronize'
issue_comment:
types:
- 'created'
jobs:
spelling:
name: Spell checking
permissions:
contents: read
pull-requests: read
actions: read
outputs:
followup: ${{ steps.spelling.outputs.followup }}
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: "contains(github.event_name, 'pull_request') || github.event_name == 'push'"
concurrency:
group: spelling-${{ github.event.pull_request.number || github.ref }}
# note: If you use only_check_changed_files, you do not want cancel-in-progress
cancel-in-progress: true
steps:
- name: check-spelling
id: spelling
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.21
with:
suppress_push_for_open_pull_request: 1
checkout: true
check_file_names: 1
spell_check_this: check-spelling/spell-check-this@prerelease
post_comment: 0
use_magic_file: 1
extra_dictionary_limit: 10
extra_dictionaries:
cspell:software-terms/src/software-terms.txt
cspell:python/src/python/python-lib.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:npm/npm.txt
cspell:dotnet/dotnet.txt
cspell:python/src/python/python.txt
cspell:css/css.txt
cspell:cpp/src/stdlib-cmath.txt
check_extra_dictionaries: ''
comment-push:
name: Report (Push)
# If your workflow isn't running on push, you can remove this job
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: spelling
permissions:
contents: write
if: (success() || failure()) && needs.spelling.outputs.followup && github.event_name == 'push'
steps:
- name: comment
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.21
with:
checkout: true
spell_check_this: check-spelling/spell-check-this@prerelease
task: ${{ needs.spelling.outputs.followup }}
comment-pr:
name: Report (PR)
# If you workflow isn't running on pull_request*, you can remove this job
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: spelling
permissions:
pull-requests: write
if: (success() || failure()) && needs.spelling.outputs.followup && contains(github.event_name, 'pull_request')
steps:
- name: comment
uses: check-spelling/check-spelling@v0.0.21
with:
checkout: true
spell_check_this: check-spelling/spell-check-this@prerelease
task: ${{ needs.spelling.outputs.followup }}

1
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -48,6 +48,7 @@ dlldata.c
project.lock.json
artifacts/
*_h.h
*_i.c
*_p.c
*_i.h

View File

@@ -125,7 +125,7 @@ Team members will be happy to help review specs and guide them to completion.
### Help Wanted
Once the team have approved an issue/spec, development can proceed. If no developers are immediately available, the spec can be parked ready for a developer to get started. Parked specs' issues will be labeled "Help Wanted". To find a list of development opportunities waiting for developer involvement, visit the Issues and filter on [the Help-Wanted label](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/labels/Help-Wanted).
Once the team have approved an issue/spec, development can proceed. If no developers are immediately available, the spec can be parked ready for a developer to get started. Parked specs' issues will be labeled "Help Wanted". To find a list of development opportunities waiting for developer involvement, visit the Issues and filter on [the Help-Wanted label](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/labels/Help%20Wanted).
---
@@ -155,4 +155,4 @@ Once your code has been reviewed and approved by the requisite number of team me
## Thank you
Thank you in advance for your contribution! Now, [what's next on the list](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/labels/Help-Wanted)? 😜
Thank you in advance for your contribution! Now, [what's next on the list](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/labels/Help%20Wanted)? 😜

View File

@@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ SOFTWARE.
```
## {fmt}
## &#x7b;fmt&#x7d;
**Source**: https://github.com/fmtlib/fmt

View File

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
<!--<add key="Static Package Dependencies" value="dep\packages" />-->
<!-- Use our own NuGet Feed -->
<add key="Windows Terminal NuGet Feed" value="https://terminalnuget.blob.core.windows.net/feed/index.json" />
<add key="TerminalDependencies" value="https://pkgs.dev.azure.com/ms/terminal/_packaging/TerminalDependencies/nuget/v3/index.json" />
<!-- Internal NuGet feeds that may not be accessible outside Microsoft corporate network -->
<!--<add key="TAEF - internal" value="https://microsoft.pkgs.visualstudio.com/DefaultCollection/_packaging/Taef/nuget/v3/index.json" />

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,8 @@
This repository contains the source code for:
* [Windows Terminal](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/p/windows-terminal-preview/9n0dx20hk701)
* [Windows Terminal](https://aka.ms/terminal)
* [Windows Terminal Preview](https://aka.ms/terminal-preview)
* The Windows console host (`conhost.exe`)
* Components shared between the two projects
* [ColorTool](https://github.com/Microsoft/Terminal/tree/master/src/tools/ColorTool)
@@ -10,6 +11,7 @@ This repository contains the source code for:
Related repositories include:
* [Windows Terminal Documentation](https://docs.microsoft.com/windows/terminal) ([Repo: Contribute to the docs](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal))
* [Console API Documentation](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/Console-Docs)
* [Cascadia Code Font](https://github.com/Microsoft/Cascadia-Code)
@@ -19,7 +21,7 @@ Related repositories include:
### Microsoft Store [Recommended]
Install the [Windows Terminal from the Microsoft Store][store-install-link]. This allows you to always be on the latest version when we release new builds with automatic upgrades.
Install the [Windows Terminal from the Microsoft Store][store-install-link]. This allows you to always be on the latest version when we release new builds with automatic upgrades.
This is our preferred method.
@@ -34,6 +36,14 @@ For users who are unable to install Terminal from the Microsoft Store, Terminal
> * Be sure to install the [Desktop Bridge VC++ v14 Redistributable Package](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=53175) otherwise Terminal may not install and/or run and may crash at startup
> * Terminal will not auto-update when new builds are released so you will need to regularly install the latest Terminal release to receive all the latest fixes and improvements!
#### Via Windows Package Manager CLI (aka winget)
[winget](https://github.com/microsoft/winget-cli) users can download and install the latest Terminal release by installing the `Microsoft.WindowsTerminal` package:
```powershell
winget install --id=Microsoft.WindowsTerminal -e
```
#### Via Chocolatey (unofficial)
[Chocolatey](https://chocolatey.org) users can download and install the latest Terminal release by installing the `microsoft-windows-terminal` package:
@@ -52,6 +62,10 @@ If you have any issues when installing/upgrading the package please go to the [W
---
## Windows Terminal 2.0 Roadmap
The plan for delivering Windows Terminal 2.0 [is described here](/doc/terminal-v2-roadmap.md) and will be updated as the project proceeds.
## Project Build Status
Project|Build Status
@@ -61,12 +75,6 @@ ColorTool|![](https://microsoft.visualstudio.com/_apis/public/build/definitions/
---
## Windows Terminal v1.0 Roadmap
The plan for delivering Windows Terminal v1.0 [is described here](/doc/terminal-v1-roadmap.md), and will be updated as the project proceeds.
---
## Terminal & Console Overview
Please take a few minutes to review the overview below before diving into the code:
@@ -131,7 +139,7 @@ Solution: Make sure you're building & deploying the `CascadiaPackage` project in
## Documentation
All project documentation is located in the `./doc` folder. If you would like to contribute to the documentation, please submit a pull request.
All project documentation is located at aka.ms/terminal-docs. If you would like to contribute to the documentation, please submit a pull request on the [Windows Terminal Documentation repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal).
---
@@ -226,4 +234,4 @@ For more information see the [Code of Conduct FAQ][conduct-FAQ] or contact [open
[conduct-code]: https://opensource.microsoft.com/codeofconduct/
[conduct-FAQ]: https://opensource.microsoft.com/codeofconduct/faq/
[conduct-email]: mailto:opencode@microsoft.com
[store-install-link]: https://aka.ms/windowsterminal
[store-install-link]: https://aka.ms/terminal

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,5 @@
<SignConfigXML>
<job platform="" configuration="" certSubject="CN=Microsoft Corporation, O=Microsoft Corporation, L=Redmond, S=Washington, C=US" jobname="EngFunSimpleSign" approvers="">
<file src="__INPATHROOT__\Microsoft.WindowsTerminal_8wekyb3d8bbwe.msixbundle" signType="136020001" dest="__OUTPATHROOT__\Microsoft.WindowsTerminal_8wekyb3d8bbwe.msixbundle" />
<file src="__INPATHROOT__\Microsoft.WindowsTerminalUniversal_8wekyb3d8bbwe.msixbundle" signType="136020001" dest="__OUTPATHROOT__\Microsoft.WindowsTerminalUniversal_8wekyb3d8bbwe.msixbundle" />
<file src="__INPATHROOT__\Microsoft.WindowsTerminal*.msixbundle" signType="136020001" />
</job>
</SignConfigXML>

View File

@@ -47,7 +47,6 @@ stages:
- stage: Build_x86
displayName: Build x86
dependsOn: []
condition: not(eq(variables['Build.Reason'], 'PullRequest'))
jobs:
- template: ./templates/build-console-ci.yml
parameters:

View File

@@ -15,6 +15,14 @@ variables:
# store publication machinery happy.
name: 'Terminal_$(date:yyMM).$(date:dd)$(rev:rrr)'
# Build Arguments:
# WindowsTerminalOfficialBuild=[true,false]
# true - this is running on our build agent
# false - running locally
# WindowsTerminalBranding=[Dev,Preview,Release]
# <none> - Development build resources (default)
# Preview - Preview build resources
# Release - regular build resources
jobs:
- template: ./templates/build-console-audit-job.yml
parameters:
@@ -23,17 +31,17 @@ jobs:
- template: ./templates/build-console-int.yml
parameters:
platform: x64
additionalBuildArguments: /p:WindowsTerminalReleaseBuild=true
additionalBuildArguments: /p:WindowsTerminalOfficialBuild=true;WindowsTerminalBranding=Preview
- template: ./templates/build-console-int.yml
parameters:
platform: x86
additionalBuildArguments: /p:WindowsTerminalReleaseBuild=true
additionalBuildArguments: /p:WindowsTerminalOfficialBuild=true;WindowsTerminalBranding=Preview
- template: ./templates/build-console-int.yml
parameters:
platform: arm64
additionalBuildArguments: /p:WindowsTerminalReleaseBuild=true
additionalBuildArguments: /p:WindowsTerminalOfficialBuild=true;WindowsTerminalBranding=Preview
- template: ./templates/check-formatting.yml

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<Project DefaultTargets="Build" ToolsVersion="16.0" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003">
<PropertyGroup>
</PropertyGroup>
<Target Name="BeforeGenerateProjectPriFile" DependsOnTargets="OpenConsoleCollectWildcardPRIFiles" />
<!--
The vcxproj system does not support wildcards at the root level of a project.
This poses a problem, as we want to include resw files that are not checked into the
repository. Since they're usually localized and stored in directories named after
their languages, we can't exactly explicitly simultaneously list them all and remain
sane. We want to use wildcards to make our lives easier.
This rule takes OCResourceDirectory items and includes all resw files that live
underneath them.
** TIRED **
(does not work because of wildcards)
<PRIResource Include="Resources/*/Resources.resw" />
** WIRED **
(keep the en-US resource in the project, because it is checked in and VS will show it)
<PRIResource Include="Resources/en-US/Resources.resw" />
<OCResourceDirectory Include="Resources" />
-->
<Target Name="OpenConsoleCollectWildcardPRIFiles">
<CreateItem Include="@(OCResourceDirectory->'%(Identity)\**\*.resw')">
<Output TaskParameter="Include" ItemName="_OCFoundPRIFiles" />
</CreateItem>
<ItemGroup>
<_OCFoundPRIFiles Include="@(PRIResource)" />
<PRIResource Remove="@(PRIResource)" />
<PRIResource Include="@(_OCFoundPRIFiles->Distinct())" />
</ItemGroup>
<Message Text="$(ProjectName) (wildcard PRIs) -> @(PRIResource)" />
</Target>
</Project>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
[CmdletBinding()]
Param(
[Parameter(Position=0, Mandatory=$true)][string]$MarkdownNoticePath,
[Parameter(Position=1, Mandatory=$true)][string]$OutputPath
)
@"
<html>
<head><title>Third-Party Notices</title></head>
<body>
$(ConvertFrom-Markdown $MarkdownNoticePath | Select -Expand Html)
</body>
</html>
"@ | Out-File -Encoding UTF-8 $OutputPath -Force

View File

@@ -68,6 +68,27 @@ Try {
}
}
$dependencies = $Manifest.Package.Dependencies.PackageDependency.Name
$depsHasVclibsDesktop = ("Microsoft.VCLibs.140.00.UWPDesktop" -in $dependencies) -or ("Microsoft.VCLibs.140.00.Debug.UWPDesktop" -in $dependencies)
$depsHasVcLibsAppX = ("Microsoft.VCLibs.140.00" -in $dependencies) -or ("Microsoft.VCLibs.140.00.Debug" -in $dependencies)
$filesHasVclibsDesktop = ($null -ne (Get-Item "$AppxPackageRootPath\vcruntime140.dll" -EA:Ignore)) -or ($null -ne (Get-Item "$AppxPackageRootPath\vcruntime140d.dll" -EA:Ignore))
$filesHasVclibsAppX = ($null -ne (Get-Item "$AppxPackageRootPath\vcruntime140_app.dll" -EA:Ignore)) -or ($null -ne (Get-Item "$AppxPackageRootPath\vcruntime140d_app.dll" -EA:Ignore))
If ($depsHasVclibsDesktop -Eq $filesHasVclibsDesktop) {
$eitherBoth = if ($depsHasVclibsDesktop) { "both" } else { "neither" }
$neitherNor = if ($depsHasVclibsDesktop) { "and" } else { "nor" }
Throw "Package has $eitherBoth Dependency $neitherNor Integrated Desktop VCLibs"
}
If ($depsHasVclibsAppx -Eq $filesHasVclibsAppx) {
if ($depsHasVclibsAppx) {
# We've shipped like this forever, so downgrade to warning.
Write-Warning "Package has both Dependency and Integrated AppX VCLibs"
} else {
Throw "Package has neither Dependency nor Integrated AppX VCLibs"
}
}
### Check that we have an App.xbf (which is a proxy for our resources having been merged)
$resourceXpath = '/PriInfo/ResourceMap/ResourceMapSubtree[@name="Files"]/NamedResource[@name="App.xbf"]'
$AppXbf = $PRIFile.SelectSingleNode($resourceXpath)
@@ -80,6 +101,11 @@ Try {
Throw "Failed to find cpprest142_2_10.dll -- check the WAP packaging project"
}
If (($null -eq (Get-Item "$AppxPackageRootPath\wtd.exe" -EA:Ignore)) -And
($null -eq (Get-Item "$AppxPackageRootPath\wt.exe" -EA:Ignore))) {
Throw "Failed to find wt.exe/wtd.exe -- check the WAP packaging project"
}
} Finally {
Remove-Item -Recurse -Force $AppxPackageRootPath
}

View File

@@ -36,6 +36,7 @@
".db",
".wrn",
".rec",
".err"
".err",
".xlsx"
]
}

View File

@@ -4,8 +4,8 @@
<PropertyGroup Label="Version">
<XesUseOneStoreVersioning>true</XesUseOneStoreVersioning>
<XesBaseYearForStoreVersion>2020</XesBaseYearForStoreVersion>
<VersionMajor>0</VersionMajor>
<VersionMinor>11</VersionMinor>
<VersionMajor>1</VersionMajor>
<VersionMinor>3</VersionMinor>
<VersionInfoProductName>Windows Terminal</VersionInfoProductName>
</PropertyGroup>
</Project>

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
# CLI11
Taken from [release v1.8.0](https://github.com/CLIUtils/CLI11/releases/tag/v1.8.0), source commit
[13becad](https://github.com/CLIUtils/CLI11/commit/13becaddb657eacd090537719a669d66d393b8b2)
Taken from [release v1.9.0](https://github.com/CLIUtils/CLI11/releases/tag/v1.9.0), source commit
[dd0d8e4](https://github.com/CLIUtils/CLI11/commit/dd0d8e4fe729e5b1110232c7a5c9566dad884686)

13
dep/CLI11/cgmanifest.json Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
{"Registrations":[
{
"component": {
"type": "git",
"git": {
"repositoryUrl": "https://github.com/CLIUtils/CLI11",
"commitHash": "dd0d8e4fe729e5b1110232c7a5c9566dad884686"
}
}
}
],
"Version": 1
}

View File

@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
#include "os.h"
#warning "fmt/posix.h is deprecated; use fmt/os.h instead"

View File

@@ -1,176 +0,0 @@
// Formatting library for C++
//
// Copyright (c) 2012 - 2016, Victor Zverovich
// All rights reserved.
//
// For the license information refer to format.h.
#include "fmt/format-inl.h"
FMT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
namespace internal {
template <typename T>
int format_float(char* buf, std::size_t size, const char* format, int precision,
T value) {
#ifdef FUZZING_BUILD_MODE_UNSAFE_FOR_PRODUCTION
if (precision > 100000)
throw std::runtime_error(
"fuzz mode - avoid large allocation inside snprintf");
#endif
// Suppress the warning about nonliteral format string.
int (*snprintf_ptr)(char*, size_t, const char*, ...) = FMT_SNPRINTF;
return precision < 0 ? snprintf_ptr(buf, size, format, value)
: snprintf_ptr(buf, size, format, precision, value);
}
struct sprintf_specs {
int precision;
char type;
bool alt : 1;
template <typename Char>
constexpr sprintf_specs(basic_format_specs<Char> specs)
: precision(specs.precision), type(specs.type), alt(specs.alt) {}
constexpr bool has_precision() const { return precision >= 0; }
};
// This is deprecated and is kept only to preserve ABI compatibility.
template <typename Double>
char* sprintf_format(Double value, internal::buffer<char>& buf,
sprintf_specs specs) {
// Buffer capacity must be non-zero, otherwise MSVC's vsnprintf_s will fail.
FMT_ASSERT(buf.capacity() != 0, "empty buffer");
// Build format string.
enum { max_format_size = 10 }; // longest format: %#-*.*Lg
char format[max_format_size];
char* format_ptr = format;
*format_ptr++ = '%';
if (specs.alt || !specs.type) *format_ptr++ = '#';
if (specs.precision >= 0) {
*format_ptr++ = '.';
*format_ptr++ = '*';
}
if (std::is_same<Double, long double>::value) *format_ptr++ = 'L';
char type = specs.type;
if (type == '%')
type = 'f';
else if (type == 0 || type == 'n')
type = 'g';
#if FMT_MSC_VER
if (type == 'F') {
// MSVC's printf doesn't support 'F'.
type = 'f';
}
#endif
*format_ptr++ = type;
*format_ptr = '\0';
// Format using snprintf.
char* start = nullptr;
char* decimal_point_pos = nullptr;
for (;;) {
std::size_t buffer_size = buf.capacity();
start = &buf[0];
int result =
format_float(start, buffer_size, format, specs.precision, value);
if (result >= 0) {
unsigned n = internal::to_unsigned(result);
if (n < buf.capacity()) {
// Find the decimal point.
auto p = buf.data(), end = p + n;
if (*p == '+' || *p == '-') ++p;
if (specs.type != 'a' && specs.type != 'A') {
while (p < end && *p >= '0' && *p <= '9') ++p;
if (p < end && *p != 'e' && *p != 'E') {
decimal_point_pos = p;
if (!specs.type) {
// Keep only one trailing zero after the decimal point.
++p;
if (*p == '0') ++p;
while (p != end && *p >= '1' && *p <= '9') ++p;
char* where = p;
while (p != end && *p == '0') ++p;
if (p == end || *p < '0' || *p > '9') {
if (p != end) std::memmove(where, p, to_unsigned(end - p));
n -= static_cast<unsigned>(p - where);
}
}
}
}
buf.resize(n);
break; // The buffer is large enough - continue with formatting.
}
buf.reserve(n + 1);
} else {
// If result is negative we ask to increase the capacity by at least 1,
// but as std::vector, the buffer grows exponentially.
buf.reserve(buf.capacity() + 1);
}
}
return decimal_point_pos;
}
} // namespace internal
template FMT_API char* internal::sprintf_format(double, internal::buffer<char>&,
sprintf_specs);
template FMT_API char* internal::sprintf_format(long double,
internal::buffer<char>&,
sprintf_specs);
template struct FMT_INSTANTIATION_DEF_API internal::basic_data<void>;
// Workaround a bug in MSVC2013 that prevents instantiation of format_float.
int (*instantiate_format_float)(double, int, internal::float_specs,
internal::buffer<char>&) =
internal::format_float;
#ifndef FMT_STATIC_THOUSANDS_SEPARATOR
template FMT_API internal::locale_ref::locale_ref(const std::locale& loc);
template FMT_API std::locale internal::locale_ref::get<std::locale>() const;
#endif
// Explicit instantiations for char.
template FMT_API std::string internal::grouping_impl<char>(locale_ref);
template FMT_API char internal::thousands_sep_impl(locale_ref);
template FMT_API char internal::decimal_point_impl(locale_ref);
template FMT_API void internal::buffer<char>::append(const char*, const char*);
template FMT_API void internal::arg_map<format_context>::init(
const basic_format_args<format_context>& args);
template FMT_API std::string internal::vformat<char>(
string_view, basic_format_args<format_context>);
template FMT_API format_context::iterator internal::vformat_to(
internal::buffer<char>&, string_view, basic_format_args<format_context>);
template FMT_API int internal::snprintf_float(double, int,
internal::float_specs,
internal::buffer<char>&);
template FMT_API int internal::snprintf_float(long double, int,
internal::float_specs,
internal::buffer<char>&);
template FMT_API int internal::format_float(double, int, internal::float_specs,
internal::buffer<char>&);
template FMT_API int internal::format_float(long double, int,
internal::float_specs,
internal::buffer<char>&);
// Explicit instantiations for wchar_t.
template FMT_API std::string internal::grouping_impl<wchar_t>(locale_ref);
template FMT_API wchar_t internal::thousands_sep_impl(locale_ref);
template FMT_API wchar_t internal::decimal_point_impl(locale_ref);
template FMT_API void internal::buffer<wchar_t>::append(const wchar_t*,
const wchar_t*);
template FMT_API std::wstring internal::vformat<wchar_t>(
wstring_view, basic_format_args<wformat_context>);
FMT_END_NAMESPACE

Submodule dep/gsl updated: 7e99e76c97...0f6dbc9e29

View File

@@ -2,6 +2,15 @@
[Amalgamated](https://github.com/open-source-parsers/jsoncpp/wiki/Amalgamated)
from source commit
[ddabf50](https://github.com/open-source-parsers/jsoncpp/commit/ddabf50f72cf369bf652a95c4d9fe31a1865a781),
release 1.8.4.
[6aba23f](https://github.com/open-source-parsers/jsoncpp/commit/6aba23f4a8628d599a9ef7fa4811c4ff6e4070e2),
release 1.9.3.
> Generating amalgamated source and header JsonCpp is provided with a script to
> generate a single header and a single source file to ease inclusion into an
> existing project. The amalgamated source can be generated at any time by
> running the following command from the top-directory (this requires Python
> 3.4+):
>
> ```
> python amalgamate.py
> ```

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
{"Registrations":[
{
"component": {
"type": "git",
"git": {
"repositoryUrl": "https://github.com/open-source-parsers/jsoncpp",
"commitHash": "6aba23f4a8628d599a9ef7fa4811c4ff6e4070e2"
}
}
}
],
"Version": 1
}

View File

@@ -79,6 +79,151 @@ license you like.
/// to prevent private header inclusion.
#define JSON_IS_AMALGAMATION
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Beginning of content of file: include/json/version.h
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#ifndef JSON_VERSION_H_INCLUDED
#define JSON_VERSION_H_INCLUDED
// Note: version must be updated in three places when doing a release. This
// annoying process ensures that amalgamate, CMake, and meson all report the
// correct version.
// 1. /meson.build
// 2. /include/json/version.h
// 3. /CMakeLists.txt
// IMPORTANT: also update the SOVERSION!!
#define JSONCPP_VERSION_STRING "1.9.3"
#define JSONCPP_VERSION_MAJOR 1
#define JSONCPP_VERSION_MINOR 9
#define JSONCPP_VERSION_PATCH 3
#define JSONCPP_VERSION_QUALIFIER
#define JSONCPP_VERSION_HEXA \
((JSONCPP_VERSION_MAJOR << 24) | (JSONCPP_VERSION_MINOR << 16) | \
(JSONCPP_VERSION_PATCH << 8))
#ifdef JSONCPP_USING_SECURE_MEMORY
#undef JSONCPP_USING_SECURE_MEMORY
#endif
#define JSONCPP_USING_SECURE_MEMORY 0
// If non-zero, the library zeroes any memory that it has allocated before
// it frees its memory.
#endif // JSON_VERSION_H_INCLUDED
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// End of content of file: include/json/version.h
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Beginning of content of file: include/json/allocator.h
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Copyright 2007-2010 Baptiste Lepilleur and The JsonCpp Authors
// Distributed under MIT license, or public domain if desired and
// recognized in your jurisdiction.
// See file LICENSE for detail or copy at http://jsoncpp.sourceforge.net/LICENSE
#ifndef JSON_ALLOCATOR_H_INCLUDED
#define JSON_ALLOCATOR_H_INCLUDED
#include <cstring>
#include <memory>
#pragma pack(push, 8)
namespace Json {
template <typename T> class SecureAllocator {
public:
// Type definitions
using value_type = T;
using pointer = T*;
using const_pointer = const T*;
using reference = T&;
using const_reference = const T&;
using size_type = std::size_t;
using difference_type = std::ptrdiff_t;
/**
* Allocate memory for N items using the standard allocator.
*/
pointer allocate(size_type n) {
// allocate using "global operator new"
return static_cast<pointer>(::operator new(n * sizeof(T)));
}
/**
* Release memory which was allocated for N items at pointer P.
*
* The memory block is filled with zeroes before being released.
* The pointer argument is tagged as "volatile" to prevent the
* compiler optimizing out this critical step.
*/
void deallocate(volatile pointer p, size_type n) {
std::memset(p, 0, n * sizeof(T));
// free using "global operator delete"
::operator delete(p);
}
/**
* Construct an item in-place at pointer P.
*/
template <typename... Args> void construct(pointer p, Args&&... args) {
// construct using "placement new" and "perfect forwarding"
::new (static_cast<void*>(p)) T(std::forward<Args>(args)...);
}
size_type max_size() const { return size_t(-1) / sizeof(T); }
pointer address(reference x) const { return std::addressof(x); }
const_pointer address(const_reference x) const { return std::addressof(x); }
/**
* Destroy an item in-place at pointer P.
*/
void destroy(pointer p) {
// destroy using "explicit destructor"
p->~T();
}
// Boilerplate
SecureAllocator() {}
template <typename U> SecureAllocator(const SecureAllocator<U>&) {}
template <typename U> struct rebind { using other = SecureAllocator<U>; };
};
template <typename T, typename U>
bool operator==(const SecureAllocator<T>&, const SecureAllocator<U>&) {
return true;
}
template <typename T, typename U>
bool operator!=(const SecureAllocator<T>&, const SecureAllocator<U>&) {
return false;
}
} // namespace Json
#pragma pack(pop)
#endif // JSON_ALLOCATOR_H_INCLUDED
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// End of content of file: include/json/allocator.h
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Beginning of content of file: include/json/config.h
// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
@@ -90,19 +235,14 @@ license you like.
#ifndef JSON_CONFIG_H_INCLUDED
#define JSON_CONFIG_H_INCLUDED
#include <stddef.h>
#include <string> //typedef String
#include <stdint.h> //typedef int64_t, uint64_t
/// If defined, indicates that json library is embedded in CppTL library.
//# define JSON_IN_CPPTL 1
/// If defined, indicates that json may leverage CppTL library
//# define JSON_USE_CPPTL 1
/// If defined, indicates that cpptl vector based map should be used instead of
/// std::map
/// as Value container.
//# define JSON_USE_CPPTL_SMALLMAP 1
#include <cstddef>
#include <cstdint>
#include <istream>
#include <memory>
#include <ostream>
#include <sstream>
#include <string>
#include <type_traits>
// If non-zero, the library uses exceptions to report bad input instead of C
// assertion macros. The default is to use exceptions.
@@ -110,164 +250,132 @@ license you like.
#define JSON_USE_EXCEPTION 1
#endif
// Temporary, tracked for removal with issue #982.
#ifndef JSON_USE_NULLREF
#define JSON_USE_NULLREF 1
#endif
/// If defined, indicates that the source file is amalgamated
/// to prevent private header inclusion.
/// Remarks: it is automatically defined in the generated amalgamated header.
// #define JSON_IS_AMALGAMATION
#ifdef JSON_IN_CPPTL
#include <cpptl/config.h>
#ifndef JSON_USE_CPPTL
#define JSON_USE_CPPTL 1
#endif
#endif
#ifdef JSON_IN_CPPTL
#define JSON_API CPPTL_API
#elif defined(JSON_DLL_BUILD)
// Export macros for DLL visibility
#if defined(JSON_DLL_BUILD)
#if defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__MINGW32__)
#define JSON_API __declspec(dllexport)
#define JSONCPP_DISABLE_DLL_INTERFACE_WARNING
#elif defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
#define JSON_API __attribute__((visibility("default")))
#endif // if defined(_MSC_VER)
#elif defined(JSON_DLL)
#if defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__MINGW32__)
#define JSON_API __declspec(dllimport)
#define JSONCPP_DISABLE_DLL_INTERFACE_WARNING
#endif // if defined(_MSC_VER)
#endif // ifdef JSON_IN_CPPTL
#endif // ifdef JSON_DLL_BUILD
#if !defined(JSON_API)
#define JSON_API
#endif
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER < 1800
#error \
"ERROR: Visual Studio 12 (2013) with _MSC_VER=1800 is the oldest supported compiler with sufficient C++11 capabilities"
#endif
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER < 1900
// As recommended at
// https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2915672/snprintf-and-visual-studio-2010
extern JSON_API int msvc_pre1900_c99_snprintf(char* outBuf, size_t size,
const char* format, ...);
#define jsoncpp_snprintf msvc_pre1900_c99_snprintf
#else
#define jsoncpp_snprintf std::snprintf
#endif
// If JSON_NO_INT64 is defined, then Json only support C++ "int" type for
// integer
// Storages, and 64 bits integer support is disabled.
// #define JSON_NO_INT64 1
#if defined(_MSC_VER) // MSVC
# if _MSC_VER <= 1200 // MSVC 6
// Microsoft Visual Studio 6 only support conversion from __int64 to double
// (no conversion from unsigned __int64).
# define JSON_USE_INT64_DOUBLE_CONVERSION 1
// Disable warning 4786 for VS6 caused by STL (identifier was truncated to '255'
// characters in the debug information)
// All projects I've ever seen with VS6 were using this globally (not bothering
// with pragma push/pop).
# pragma warning(disable : 4786)
# endif // MSVC 6
# if _MSC_VER >= 1500 // MSVC 2008
/// Indicates that the following function is deprecated.
# define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message) __declspec(deprecated(message))
# endif
#endif // defined(_MSC_VER)
// In c++11 the override keyword allows you to explicitly define that a function
// is intended to override the base-class version. This makes the code more
// managable and fixes a set of common hard-to-find bugs.
#if __cplusplus >= 201103L
# define JSONCPP_OVERRIDE override
# define JSONCPP_NOEXCEPT noexcept
#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER > 1600 && _MSC_VER < 1900
# define JSONCPP_OVERRIDE override
# define JSONCPP_NOEXCEPT throw()
#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER >= 1900
# define JSONCPP_OVERRIDE override
# define JSONCPP_NOEXCEPT noexcept
#else
# define JSONCPP_OVERRIDE
# define JSONCPP_NOEXCEPT throw()
#endif
#ifndef JSON_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCES
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER >= 1600 // MSVC >= 2010
#define JSON_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCES 1
#endif // MSVC >= 2010
// JSONCPP_OVERRIDE is maintained for backwards compatibility of external tools.
// C++11 should be used directly in JSONCPP.
#define JSONCPP_OVERRIDE override
#ifdef __clang__
#if __has_feature(cxx_rvalue_references)
#define JSON_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCES 1
#endif // has_feature
#elif defined __GNUC__ // not clang (gcc comes later since clang emulates gcc)
#if defined(__GXX_EXPERIMENTAL_CXX0X__) || (__cplusplus >= 201103L)
#define JSON_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCES 1
#endif // GXX_EXPERIMENTAL
#endif // __clang__ || __GNUC__
#endif // not defined JSON_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCES
#ifndef JSON_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCES
#define JSON_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCES 0
#if __has_extension(attribute_deprecated_with_message)
#define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message) __attribute__((deprecated(message)))
#endif
#ifdef __clang__
# if __has_extension(attribute_deprecated_with_message)
# define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message) __attribute__ ((deprecated(message)))
# endif
#elif defined __GNUC__ // not clang (gcc comes later since clang emulates gcc)
# if (__GNUC__ > 4 || (__GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 5))
# define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message) __attribute__ ((deprecated(message)))
# elif (__GNUC__ > 3 || (__GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 1))
# define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message) __attribute__((__deprecated__))
# endif // GNUC version
#endif // __clang__ || __GNUC__
#elif defined(__GNUC__) // not clang (gcc comes later since clang emulates gcc)
#if (__GNUC__ > 4 || (__GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 5))
#define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message) __attribute__((deprecated(message)))
#elif (__GNUC__ > 3 || (__GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 1))
#define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message) __attribute__((__deprecated__))
#endif // GNUC version
#elif defined(_MSC_VER) // MSVC (after clang because clang on Windows emulates
// MSVC)
#define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message) __declspec(deprecated(message))
#endif // __clang__ || __GNUC__ || _MSC_VER
#if !defined(JSONCPP_DEPRECATED)
#define JSONCPP_DEPRECATED(message)
#endif // if !defined(JSONCPP_DEPRECATED)
#if __GNUC__ >= 6
# define JSON_USE_INT64_DOUBLE_CONVERSION 1
#if defined(__clang__) || (defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ >= 6))
#define JSON_USE_INT64_DOUBLE_CONVERSION 1
#endif
#if !defined(JSON_IS_AMALGAMATION)
# include "version.h"
# if JSONCPP_USING_SECURE_MEMORY
# include "allocator.h" //typedef Allocator
# endif
#include "allocator.h"
#include "version.h"
#endif // if !defined(JSON_IS_AMALGAMATION)
namespace Json {
typedef int Int;
typedef unsigned int UInt;
using Int = int;
using UInt = unsigned int;
#if defined(JSON_NO_INT64)
typedef int LargestInt;
typedef unsigned int LargestUInt;
using LargestInt = int;
using LargestUInt = unsigned int;
#undef JSON_HAS_INT64
#else // if defined(JSON_NO_INT64)
// For Microsoft Visual use specific types as long long is not supported
#if defined(_MSC_VER) // Microsoft Visual Studio
typedef __int64 Int64;
typedef unsigned __int64 UInt64;
using Int64 = __int64;
using UInt64 = unsigned __int64;
#else // if defined(_MSC_VER) // Other platforms, use long long
typedef int64_t Int64;
typedef uint64_t UInt64;
#endif // if defined(_MSC_VER)
typedef Int64 LargestInt;
typedef UInt64 LargestUInt;
using Int64 = int64_t;
using UInt64 = uint64_t;
#endif // if defined(_MSC_VER)
using LargestInt = Int64;
using LargestUInt = UInt64;
#define JSON_HAS_INT64
#endif // if defined(JSON_NO_INT64)
#if JSONCPP_USING_SECURE_MEMORY
#define JSONCPP_STRING std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, Json::SecureAllocator<char> >
#define JSONCPP_OSTRINGSTREAM std::basic_ostringstream<char, std::char_traits<char>, Json::SecureAllocator<char> >
#define JSONCPP_OSTREAM std::basic_ostream<char, std::char_traits<char>>
#define JSONCPP_ISTRINGSTREAM std::basic_istringstream<char, std::char_traits<char>, Json::SecureAllocator<char> >
#define JSONCPP_ISTREAM std::istream
#else
#define JSONCPP_STRING std::string
#define JSONCPP_OSTRINGSTREAM std::ostringstream
#define JSONCPP_OSTREAM std::ostream
#define JSONCPP_ISTRINGSTREAM std::istringstream
#define JSONCPP_ISTREAM std::istream
#endif // if JSONCPP_USING_SECURE_MEMORY
} // end namespace Json
template <typename T>
using Allocator =
typename std::conditional<JSONCPP_USING_SECURE_MEMORY, SecureAllocator<T>,
std::allocator<T>>::type;
using String = std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, Allocator<char>>;
using IStringStream =
std::basic_istringstream<String::value_type, String::traits_type,
String::allocator_type>;
using OStringStream =
std::basic_ostringstream<String::value_type, String::traits_type,
String::allocator_type>;
using IStream = std::istream;
using OStream = std::ostream;
} // namespace Json
// Legacy names (formerly macros).
using JSONCPP_STRING = Json::String;
using JSONCPP_ISTRINGSTREAM = Json::IStringStream;
using JSONCPP_OSTRINGSTREAM = Json::OStringStream;
using JSONCPP_ISTREAM = Json::IStream;
using JSONCPP_OSTREAM = Json::OStream;
#endif // JSON_CONFIG_H_INCLUDED
@@ -299,17 +407,23 @@ typedef UInt64 LargestUInt;
namespace Json {
// writer.h
class StreamWriter;
class StreamWriterBuilder;
class Writer;
class FastWriter;
class StyledWriter;
class StyledStreamWriter;
// reader.h
class Reader;
class CharReader;
class CharReaderBuilder;
// features.h
// json_features.h
class Features;
// value.h
typedef unsigned int ArrayIndex;
using ArrayIndex = unsigned int;
class StaticString;
class Path;
class PathArgument;

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Submodule dep/wil updated: e8c599bca6...3c00e7f1d8

View File

@@ -67,12 +67,12 @@ To update the version of a given package, use the following snippet
where:
- `$PackageName` is the name of the package, e.g. Microsoft.UI.Xaml
- `$OldVersionNumber` is the version number currently used, e.g. 2.3.191217003-prerelease
- `$OldVersionNumber` is the version number currently used, e.g. 2.5.0-prerelease.200609001
- `$NewVersionNumber` is the version number you want to migrate to, e.g. 2.4.200117003-prerelease
Example usage:
`git grep -z -l Microsoft.UI.Xaml | xargs -0 sed -i -e 's/2.3.191217003-prerelease/2.4.200117003-prerelease/g'`
`git grep -z -l Microsoft.UI.Xaml | xargs -0 sed -i -e 's/2.5.0-prerelease.200609001/2.4.200117003-prerelease/g'`
## Using .nupkg files instead of downloaded Nuget packages
If you want to use .nupkg files instead of the downloaded Nuget package, you can do this with the following steps:

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,257 @@
# New Json Utility API
## Raw value conversion (GetValue)
`GetValue` is a convenience helper that will either read a value into existing storage (type-deduced) or
return a JSON value coerced into the specified type.
When reading into existing storage, it returns a boolean indicating whether that storage was modified.
If the JSON value cannot be converted to the specified type, an exception will be generated.
```c++
std::string one;
std::optional<std::string> two;
JsonUtils::GetValue(json, one);
// one is populated or unchanged.
JsonUtils::GetValue(json, two);
// two is populated, nullopt or unchanged
auto three = JsonUtils::GetValue<std::string>(json);
// three is populated or zero-initialized
auto four = JsonUtils::GetValue<std::optional<std::string>>(json);
// four is populated or nullopt
```
## Key lookup (GetValueForKey)
`GetValueForKey` follows the same rules as `GetValue`, but takes an additional key.
It is assumed that the JSON value passed to GetValueForKey is of `object` type.
```c++
std::string one;
std::optional<std::string> two;
JsonUtils::GetValueForKey(json, "firstKey", one);
// one is populated or unchanged.
JsonUtils::GetValueForKey(json, "secondKey", two);
// two is populated, nullopt or unchanged
auto three = JsonUtils::GetValueForKey<std::string>(json, "thirdKey");
// three is populated or zero-initialized
auto four = JsonUtils::GetValueForKey<std::optional<std::string>>(json, "fourthKey");
// four is populated or nullopt
```
## Rationale: Value-Returning Getters
JsonUtils provides two types of `GetValue...`: value-returning and reference-filling.
The reference-filling fixtures use type deduction so that a developer does not
need to specify template parameters on every `GetValue` call. It excels at
populating class members during deserialization.
The value-returning fixtures, on the other hand, are very useful for partial
deserialization and key detection when you do not need to deserialize an entire
instance of a class or you need to reason about the presence of members.
To provide a concrete example of the latter, consider:
```c++
if (const auto guid{ GetValueForKey<std::optional<GUID>>(json, "guid") })
// This condition is only true if there was a "guid" member in the provided JSON object.
// It can be accessed through *guid.
}
```
If you are... | Use
--------------|-----
Deserializing | `GetValue(..., storage)`
Interrogating | `storage = GetValue<T>(...)`
## Converting User-Defined Types
All conversions are done using specializations of
`JsonUtils::ConversionTrait<T>`. To implement a converter for a user-defined
type, you must implement a specialization of `JsonUtils::ConversionTrait<T>`.
Every specialization over `T` must implement `static T FromJson(const Json::Value&)`
and `static bool CanConvert(const Json::Value&)`.
```c++
struct MyCustomType { int val; };
template<>
struct ConversionTrait<MyCustomType>
{
// This trait converts a string of the format "[0-9]" to a value of type MyCustomType.
static MyCustomType FromJson(const Json::Value& json)
{
return MyCustomType{ json.asString()[0] - '0' };
}
static bool CanConvert(const Json::Value& json)
{
return json.isString();
}
};
```
### Converting User-Defined Enumerations
Enumeration types represent a single choice out of multiple options.
In a JSON data model, they are typically represented as strings.
For parsing enumerations, JsonUtils provides the `JSON_ENUM_MAPPER` macro. It
can be used to establish a converter that will take a set of known strings and
convert them to values.
```c++
JSON_ENUM_MAPPER(CursorStyle)
{
// pair_type is provided by ENUM_MAPPER.
JSON_MAPPINGS(5) = {
pair_type{ "bar", CursorStyle::Bar },
pair_type{ "vintage", CursorStyle::Vintage },
pair_type{ "underscore", CursorStyle::Underscore },
pair_type{ "filledBox", CursorStyle::FilledBox },
pair_type{ "emptyBox", CursorStyle::EmptyBox }
};
};
```
If the enum mapper fails to convert the provided string, it will throw an
exception.
### Converting User-Defined Flag Sets
Flags represent a multiple-choice selection. They are typically implemented as
enums with bitfield values intended to be ORed together.
In JSON, a set of flags may be represented by a single string (`"flagName"`) or
an array of strings (`["flagOne", "flagTwo"]`).
JsonUtils provides a `JSON_FLAG_MAPPER` macro that can be used to produce a
specialization for a set of flags.
Given the following flag enum,
```c++
enum class JsonTestFlags : int
{
FlagOne = 1 << 0,
FlagTwo = 1 << 1
};
```
You can register a flag mapper with the `JSON_FLAG_MAPPER` macro as follows:
```c++
JSON_FLAG_MAPPER(JsonTestFlags)
{
JSON_MAPPINGS(2) = {
pair_type{ "flagOne", JsonTestFlags::FlagOne },
pair_type{ "flagTwo", JsonTestFlags::FlagTwo },
};
};
```
The `FLAG_MAPPER` also provides two convenience definitions, `AllSet` and
`AllClear`, that can be used to represent "all choices" and "no choices"
respectively.
```c++
JSON_FLAG_MAPPER(JsonTestFlags)
{
JSON_MAPPINGS(4) = {
pair_type{ "never", AllClear },
pair_type{ "flagOne", JsonTestFlags::FlagOne },
pair_type{ "flagTwo", JsonTestFlags::FlagTwo },
pair_type{ "always", AllSet },
};
};
```
Because flag values are additive, `["always", "flagOne"]` will result in the
same behavior as `"always"`.
If the flag mapper encounters an unknown flag, it will throw an exception.
If the flag mapper encounters a logical discontinuity such as `["never", "flagOne"]`
(as in the above example), it will throw an exception.
### Advanced Use
`GetValue` and `GetValueForKey` can be passed, as their final arguments, any
value whose type implements the same interface as `ConversionTrait<T>`--that
is, `FromJson(const Json::Value&)` and `CanConvert(const Json::Value&)`.
This allows for one-off conversions without a specialization of
`ConversionTrait` or even stateful converters.
#### Stateful Converter Sample
```c++
struct MultiplyingConverter {
int BaseValue;
bool CanConvert(const Json::Value&) { return true; }
int FromJson(const Json::Value& value)
{
return value.asInt() * BaseValue;
}
};
...
Json::Value json{ 66 }; // A JSON value containing the number 66
MultiplyingConverter conv{ 10 };
auto v = JsonUtils::GetValue<int>(json, conv);
// v is equal to 660.
```
## Behavior Chart
### GetValue(T&) (type-deducing)
-|json type invalid|json null|valid
-|-|-|-
`T`|❌ exception|🔵 unchanged|✔ converted
`std::optional<T>`|❌ exception|🟨 `nullopt`|✔ converted
### GetValue&lt;T&gt;() (returning)
-|json type invalid|json null|valid
-|-|-|-
`T`|❌ exception|🟨 `T{}` (zero value)|✔ converted
`std::optional<T>`|❌ exception|🟨 `nullopt`|✔ converted
### GetValueForKey(T&) (type-deducing)
GetValueForKey builds on the behavior set from GetValue by adding
a "key not found" state. The remaining three cases are the same.
val type|key not found|_json type invalid_|_json null_|_valid_
-|-|-|-|-
`T`|🔵 unchanged|_❌ exception_|_🔵 unchanged_|_✔ converted_
`std::optional<T>`|_🔵 unchanged_|_❌ exception_|_🟨 `nullopt`_|_✔ converted_
### GetValueForKey&lt;T&gt;() (return value)
val type|key not found|_json type invalid_|_json null_|_valid_
-|-|-|-|-
`T`|🟨 `T{}` (zero value)|_❌ exception_|_🟨 `T{}` (zero value)_|_✔ converted_
`std::optional<T>`|🟨 `nullopt`|_❌ exception_|_🟨 `nullopt`_|_✔ converted_
### Future Direction
These converters lend themselves very well to automatic _serialization_.

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
# Profiles.json Documentation
# Settings.json Documentation
## Globals
Properties listed below affect the entire window, regardless of the profile settings.
| Property | Necessity | Type | Default | Description |
@@ -8,21 +9,27 @@ Properties listed below affect the entire window, regardless of the profile sett
| `alwaysShowTabs` | _Required_ | Boolean | `true` | When set to `true`, tabs are always displayed. When set to `false` and `showTabsInTitlebar` is set to `false`, tabs only appear after typing <kbd>Ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>T</kbd>. |
| `copyOnSelect` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | When set to `true`, a selection is immediately copied to your clipboard upon creation. When set to `false`, the selection persists and awaits further action. |
| `copyFormatting` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | When set to `true`, the color and font formatting of selected text is also copied to your clipboard. When set to `false`, only plain text is copied to your clipboard. |
| `largePasteWarning` | Optional | Boolean | `true` | When set to `true`, trying to paste text with more than 5 KiB of characters will display a warning asking you whether to continue or not with the paste. |
| `multiLinePasteWarning` | Optional | Boolean | `true` | When set to `true`, trying to paste text with a _new line_ character will display a warning asking you whether to continue or not with the paste. |
| `defaultProfile` | _Required_ | String | PowerShell guid | Sets the default profile. Opens by typing <kbd>Ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>T</kbd> or by clicking the '+' icon. The guid of the desired default profile is used as the value. |
| `initialCols` | _Required_ | Integer | `120` | The number of columns displayed in the window upon first load. |
| `initialPosition` | Optional | String | `","` | The position of the top left corner of the window upon first load. On a system with multiple displays, these coordinates are relative to the top left of the primary display. If `launchMode` is set to `"maximized"`, the window will be maximized on the monitor specified by those coordinates. |
| `initialRows` | _Required_ | Integer | `30` | The number of rows displayed in the window upon first load. |
| `launchMode` | Optional | String | `default` | Defines whether the Terminal will launch as maximized or not. Possible values: `"default"`, `"maximized"` |
| `rowsToScroll` | Optional | Integer | `system` | The number of rows to scroll at a time with the mouse wheel. This will override the system setting if the value is not zero or "system". |
| `theme` | _Required_ | String | `system` | Sets the theme of the application. Possible values: `"light"`, `"dark"`, `"system"` |
| `showTerminalTitleInTitlebar` | _Required_ | Boolean | `true` | When set to `true`, titlebar displays the title of the selected tab. When set to `false`, titlebar displays "Windows Terminal". |
| `showTabsInTitlebar` | Optional | Boolean | `true` | When set to `true`, the tabs are moved into the titlebar and the titlebar disappears. When set to `false`, the titlebar sits above the tabs. |
| `snapToGridOnResize` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | When set to `true`, the window will snap to the nearest character boundary on resize. When `false`, the window will resize "smoothly" |
| `tabWidthMode` | Optional | String | `equal` | Sets the width of the tabs. Possible values: `"equal"`, `"titleLength"` |
| `tabWidthMode` | Optional | String | `equal` | Sets the width of the tabs. Possible values: <br><ul><li>`"equal"`: sizes each tab to the same width</li><li>`"titleLength"`: sizes each tab to the length of its title</li><li>`"compact"`: sizes each tab to the length of its title when focused, and shrinks to the size of only the icon when the tab is unfocused.</li></ul> |
| `wordDelimiters` | Optional | String | <code>&nbsp;&#x2f;&#x5c;&#x28;&#x29;&#x22;&#x27;&#x2d;&#x3a;&#x2c;&#x2e;&#x3b;&#x3c;&#x3e;&#x7e;&#x21;&#x40;&#x23;&#x24;&#x25;&#x5e;&#x26;&#x2a;&#x7c;&#x2b;&#x3d;&#x5b;&#x5d;&#x7b;&#x7d;&#x7e;&#x3f;│</code><br>_(`│` is `U+2502 BOX DRAWINGS LIGHT VERTICAL`)_ | Determines the delimiters used in a double click selection. |
| `confirmCloseAllTabs` | Optional | Boolean | `true` | When set to `true` closing a window with multiple tabs open WILL require confirmation. When set to `false` closing a window with multiple tabs open WILL NOT require confirmation. |
| `startOnUserLogin` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | When set to `true` enables the launch of Windows Terminal at startup. Setting to `false` will disable the startup task entry. Note: if the Windows Terminal startup task entry is disabled either by org policy or by user action this setting will have no effect. |
| `disabledProfileSources` | Optional | Array[String] | `[]` | Disables all the dynamic profile generators in this list, preventing them from adding their profiles to the list of profiles on startup. This array can contain any combination of `Windows.Terminal.Wsl`, `Windows.Terminal.Azure`, or `Windows.Terminal.PowershellCore`. For more information, see [UsingJsonSettings.md](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/doc/user-docs/UsingJsonSettings.md#dynamic-profiles) |
| `experimental.rendering.forceFullRepaint` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | When set to true, we will redraw the entire screen each frame. When set to false, we will render only the updates to the screen between frames. |
| `experimental.rendering.software` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | When set to true, we will use the software renderer (a.k.a. WARP) instead of the hardware one. |
## Profiles
Properties listed below are specific to each unique profile.
| Property | Necessity | Type | Default | Description |
@@ -42,8 +49,9 @@ Properties listed below are specific to each unique profile.
| `cursorColor` | Optional | String | | Sets the cursor color of the profile. Overrides `cursorColor` set in color scheme if `colorscheme` is set. Uses hex color format: `"#rrggbb"`. |
| `cursorHeight` | Optional | Integer | | Sets the percentage height of the cursor starting from the bottom. Only works when `cursorShape` is set to `"vintage"`. Accepts values from 25-100. |
| `cursorShape` | Optional | String | `bar` | Sets the cursor shape for the profile. Possible values: `"vintage"` ( &#x2583; ), `"bar"` ( &#x2503; ), `"underscore"` ( &#x2581; ), `"filledBox"` ( &#x2588; ), `"emptyBox"` ( &#x25AF; ) |
| `fontFace` | Optional | String | `Cascadia Code` | Name of the font face used in the profile. We will try to fallback to Consolas if this can't be found or is invalid. |
| `fontFace` | Optional | String | `Cascadia Mono` | Name of the font face used in the profile. We will try to fallback to Consolas if this can't be found or is invalid. |
| `fontSize` | Optional | Integer | `12` | Sets the font size. |
| `fontWeight` | Optional | String | `normal` | Sets the weight (lightness or heaviness of the strokes) for the given font. Possible values: `"thin"`, `"extra-light"`, `"light"`, `"semi-light"`, `"normal"`, `"medium"`, `"semi-bold"`, `"bold"`, `"extra-bold"`, `"black"`, `"extra-black"`, or the corresponding numeric representation of OpenType font weight. |
| `foreground` | Optional | String | | Sets the foreground color of the profile. Overrides `foreground` set in color scheme if `colorscheme` is set. Uses hex color format: `#rgb` or `"#rrggbb"`. |
| `hidden` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | If set to true, the profile will not appear in the list of profiles. This can be used to hide default profiles and dynamically generated profiles, while leaving them in your settings file. |
| `historySize` | Optional | Integer | `9001` | The number of lines above the ones displayed in the window you can scroll back to. |
@@ -52,6 +60,7 @@ Properties listed below are specific to each unique profile.
| `scrollbarState` | Optional | String | `"visible"` | Defines the visibility of the scrollbar. Possible values: `"visible"`, `"hidden"` |
| `selectionBackground` | Optional | String | | Sets the selection background color of the profile. Overrides `selectionBackground` set in color scheme if `colorscheme` is set. Uses hex color format: `"#rrggbb"`. |
| `snapOnInput` | Optional | Boolean | `true` | When set to `true`, the window will scroll to the command input line when typing. When set to `false`, the window will not scroll when you start typing. |
| `altGrAliasing` | Optional | Boolean | `true` | By default Windows treats Ctrl+Alt as an alias for AltGr. When altGrAliasing is set to false, this behavior will be disabled. |
| `source` | Optional | String | | Stores the name of the profile generator that originated this profile. _There are no discoverable values for this field._ |
| `startingDirectory` | Optional | String | `%USERPROFILE%` | The directory the shell starts in when it is loaded. |
| `suppressApplicationTitle` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | When set to `true`, `tabTitle` overrides the default title of the tab and any title change messages from the application will be suppressed. When set to `false`, `tabTitle` behaves as normal. |
@@ -60,6 +69,7 @@ Properties listed below are specific to each unique profile.
| `experimental.retroTerminalEffect` | Optional | Boolean | `false` | When set to `true`, enable retro terminal effects. This is an experimental feature, and its continued existence is not guaranteed. |
## Schemes
Properties listed below are specific to each color scheme. [ColorTool](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/tree/master/src/tools/ColorTool) is a great tool you can use to create and explore new color schemes. All colors use hex color format.
| Property | Necessity | Type | Description |
@@ -87,12 +97,13 @@ Properties listed below are specific to each color scheme. [ColorTool](https://g
| `yellow` | _Required_ | String | Sets the color used as ANSI yellow. |
## Keybindings
Properties listed below are specific to each custom key binding.
| Property | Necessity | Type | Description |
| -------- | ---- | ----------- | ----------- |
| `command` | _Required_ | String | The command executed when the associated key bindings are pressed. |
| `keys` | _Required_ | Array[String] | Defines the key combinations used to call the command. |
| `keys` | _Required_ | Array[String] or String | Defines the key combinations used to call the command. |
| `action` | Optional | String | Adds additional functionality to certain commands. |
### Implemented Commands and Actions
@@ -139,9 +150,10 @@ For commands with arguments:
### Accepted Modifiers and Keys
#### Modifiers
`Ctrl+`, `Shift+`, `Alt+`
`ctrl+`, `shift+`, `alt+`
#### Keys
| Type | Keys |
| ---- | ---- |
| Function and Alphanumeric Keys | `f1-f24`, `a-z`, `0-9` |
@@ -151,6 +163,7 @@ For commands with arguments:
| Numpad Keys | `numpad_0-numpad_9`, `numpad0-numpad9`, `numpad_add`, `numpad_plus`, `numpad_decimal`, `numpad_period`, `numpad_divide`, `numpad_minus`, `numpad_subtract`, `numpad_multiply` |
## Background Images and Icons
Some Terminal settings allow you to specify custom background images and icons. It is recommended that custom images and icons are stored in system-provided folders and are referred to using the correct [URI Schemes](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/uwp/app-resources/uri-schemes). URI Schemes provide a way to reference files independent of their physical paths (which may change in the future).
The most useful URI schemes to remember when customizing background images and icons are:
@@ -163,6 +176,7 @@ The most useful URI schemes to remember when customizing background images and i
> ⚠ Note: Do not rely on file references using the `ms-appx` URI Scheme (i.e. icons). These files are considered an internal implementation detail and may change name/location or may be omitted in the future.
### Icons
Terminal displays icons for each of your profiles which Terminal generates for any built-in shells - PowerShell Core, PowerShell, and any installed Linux/WSL distros. Each profile refers to a stock icon via the `ms-appx` URI Scheme.
> ⚠ Note: Do not rely on the files referenced by the `ms-appx` URI Scheme - they are considered an internal implementation detail and may change name/location or may be omitted in the future.
@@ -176,6 +190,7 @@ You can refer to you own icons if you wish, e.g.:
> 👉 Tip: Icons should be sized to 32x32px in an appropriate raster image format (e.g. .PNG, .GIF, or .ICO) to avoid having to scale your icons during runtime (causing a noticeable delay and loss of quality.)
### Custom Background Images
You can apply a background image to each of your profiles, allowing you to configure/brand/style each of your profiles independently from one another if you wish.
To do so, specify your preferred `backgroundImage`, position it using `backgroundImageAlignment`, set its opacity with `backgroundImageOpacity`, and/or specify how your image fill the available space using `backgroundImageStretchMode`.

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{
"$id": "https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/doc/cascadia/profiles.schema.json",
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#",
"title": "Microsoft's Windows Terminal Settings Profile Schema'",
"$schema": "https://json-schema.org/draft/2019-09/schema#",
"title": "Microsoft's Windows Terminal Settings Profile Schema",
"definitions": {
"KeyChordSegment": {
"pattern": "^(?<modifier>(ctrl|alt|shift)(?:\\+(ctrl|alt|shift)(?<!\\2))?(?:\\+(ctrl|alt|shift)(?<!\\2|\\3))?\\+)?(?<key>[^\\s+]|backspace|tab|enter|esc|escape|space|pgup|pageup|pgdn|pagedown|end|home|left|up|right|down|insert|delete|(?<!shift.+)(?:numpad_?[0-9]|numpad_(?:period|decimal))|numpad_(?:multiply|plus|add|minus|subtract|divide)|f[1-9]|f1[0-9]|f2[0-4]|plus)$",
@@ -18,6 +18,14 @@
"pattern": "^(-?\\d+)?(,\\s?(-?\\d+)?)?$",
"type": "string"
},
"DynamicProfileSource": {
"enum": [
"Windows.Terminal.Wsl",
"Windows.Terminal.Azure",
"Windows.Terminal.PowershellCore"
],
"type": "string"
},
"ProfileGuid": {
"default": "{}",
"pattern": "^\\{[a-fA-F0-9]{8}-[a-fA-F0-9]{4}-[a-fA-F0-9]{4}-[a-fA-F0-9]{4}-[a-fA-F0-9]{12}\\}$",
@@ -30,7 +38,6 @@
"closeTab",
"closeWindow",
"copy",
"decreaseFontSize",
"duplicateTab",
"moveFocus",
"newTab",
@@ -47,8 +54,16 @@
"scrollUpPage",
"splitPane",
"switchToTab",
"toggleFocusMode",
"toggleFullscreen",
"toggleAlwaysOnTop",
"toggleRetroEffect",
"find",
"setTabColor",
"openTabColorPicker",
"renameTab",
"commandPalette",
"wt",
"unbound"
],
"type": "string"
@@ -90,7 +105,7 @@
},
"index": {
"type": "integer",
"description": "The index of the profile in the new tab dropdown to open"
"description": "The index of the profile in the new tab dropdown (starting at 0)"
}
},
"type": "object"
@@ -134,7 +149,7 @@
"singleLine": {
"type": "boolean",
"default": false,
"description": "If true, newlines are removed and whitespace is maintained. If false, whitespace is removed and newlines are maintained."
"description": "If true, the copied content will be copied as a single line (even if there are hard line breaks present in the text). If false, newlines persist from the selected text."
}
}
}
@@ -214,16 +229,75 @@
"split": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/SplitState",
"default": "auto",
"description": "The orientation to split the pane in, either vertical (think [|]), horizontal (think [-]), or auto (splits pane based on remaining space)"
"description": "The orientation to split the pane in. Possible values:\n -\"auto\" (splits pane based on remaining space)\n -\"horizontal\" (think [-])\n -\"vertical\" (think [|])"
},
"splitMode": {
"default": "duplicate",
"description": "Control how the pane splits. Only accepts `duplicate` which will duplicate the focused pane's profile into a new pane."
"description": "Control how the pane splits. Only accepts \"duplicate\" which will duplicate the focused pane's profile into a new pane."
}
}
}
]
},
"OpenSettingsAction": {
"description": "Arguments corresponding to a Open Settings Action",
"allOf": [
{
"$ref": "#/definitions/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"properties": {
"action": {
"type": "string",
"pattern": "openSettings"
},
"target": {
"type": "string",
"default": "settingsFile",
"description": "The settings file to open.",
"enum": [
"settingsFile",
"defaultsFile",
"allFiles"
]
}
}
}
]
},
"SetTabColorAction": {
"description": "Arguments corresponding to a Set Tab Color Action",
"allOf": [
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/ShortcutAction" },
{
"properties": {
"action": { "type": "string", "pattern": "setTabColor" },
"color": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"default": null,
"description": "If provided, will set the tab's color to the given value. If omitted, will reset the tab's color."
}
}
}
]
},
"WtAction": {
"description": "Arguments corresponding to a wt Action",
"allOf": [
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/ShortcutAction" },
{
"properties": {
"action": { "type": "string", "pattern": "wt" },
"commandline": {
"type": "string",
"default": "",
"description": "a `wt` commandline to run in the current window"
}
}
}
],
"required": [ "commandline" ]
},
"Keybinding": {
"additionalProperties": false,
"properties": {
@@ -238,11 +312,14 @@
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/MoveFocusAction" },
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/ResizePaneAction" },
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/SplitPaneAction" },
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/OpenSettingsAction" },
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/SetTabColorAction" },
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/WtAction" },
{ "type": "null" }
]
},
"keys": {
"description": "Defines the key combinations used to call the command.",
"description": "Defines the key combinations used to call the command. It must be composed of...\n -any number of modifiers (ctrl/alt/shift)\n -a non-modifier key",
"oneOf": [
{
"$ref": "#/definitions/KeyChordSegment"
@@ -267,9 +344,14 @@
"additionalProperties": true,
"description": "Properties that affect the entire window, regardless of the profile settings.",
"properties": {
"alwaysOnTop": {
"default": false,
"description": "When set to true, the window is created on top of all other windows. If multiple windows are all \"always on top\", the most recently focused one will be the topmost",
"type": "boolean"
},
"alwaysShowTabs": {
"default": true,
"description": "When set to true, tabs are always displayed. When set to false and showTabsInTitlebar is set to false, tabs only appear after opening a new tab.",
"description": "When set to true, tabs are always displayed. When set to false and \"showTabsInTitlebar\" is set to false, tabs only appear after opening a new tab.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"copyOnSelect": {
@@ -278,13 +360,38 @@
"type": "boolean"
},
"copyFormatting": {
"default": false,
"default": true,
"description": "When set to `true`, the color and font formatting of selected text is also copied to your clipboard. When set to `false`, only plain text is copied to your clipboard.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"largePasteWarning": {
"default": true,
"description": "When set to true, trying to paste text with more than 5 KiB of characters will display a warning asking you whether to continue or not with the paste.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"multiLinePasteWarning": {
"default": true,
"description": "When set to true, trying to paste text with a \"new line\" character will display a warning asking you whether to continue or not with the paste.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"defaultProfile": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/ProfileGuid",
"description": "Sets the default profile. Opens by clicking the '+' icon or typing the key binding assigned to 'newTab'. The guid of the desired default profile is used as the value."
"description": "Sets the default profile. Opens by clicking the \"+\" icon or typing the key binding assigned to \"newTab\".",
"type": "string"
},
"disabledProfileSources": {
"description": "Disables all the dynamic profile generators in this list, preventing them from adding their profiles to the list of profiles on startup.",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/DynamicProfileSource"
},
"type": "array"
},
"experimental.rendering.forceFullRepaint": {
"description": "When set to true, we will redraw the entire screen each frame. When set to false, we will render only the updates to the screen between frames.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"experimental.rendering.software": {
"description": "When set to true, we will use the software renderer (a.k.a. WARP) instead of the hardware one.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"initialCols": {
"default": 120,
@@ -295,7 +402,7 @@
},
"initialPosition": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Coordinates",
"description": "The position of the top left corner of the window upon first load. On a system with multiple displays, these coordinates are relative to the top left of the primary display. If launchMode is set to maximized, the window will be maximized on the monitor specified by those coordinates."
"description": "The position of the top left corner of the window upon first load. On a system with multiple displays, these coordinates are relative to the top left of the primary display. If \"launchMode\" is set to maximized, the window will be maximized on the monitor specified by those coordinates."
},
"initialRows": {
"default": 30,
@@ -315,10 +422,11 @@
},
"rowsToScroll": {
"default": "system",
"description": "The number of rows to scroll at a time with the mouse wheel. This will override the system setting if the value is not zero or 'system'.",
"description": "This parameter once allowed you to override the systemwide \"choose how many lines to scroll at one time\" setting. It no longer does so.",
"maximum": 999,
"minimum": 0,
"type": ["integer", "string"]
"type": [ "integer", "string" ],
"deprecated": true
},
"keybindings": {
"description": "Properties are specific to each custom key binding.",
@@ -329,7 +437,7 @@
},
"theme": {
"default": "system",
"description": "Sets the theme of the application.",
"description": "Sets the theme of the application. The special value \"system\" refers to the active Windows system theme.",
"enum": [
"light",
"dark",
@@ -344,18 +452,19 @@
},
"showTerminalTitleInTitlebar": {
"default": true,
"description": "When set to true, titlebar displays the title of the selected tab. When set to false, titlebar displays 'Windows Terminal'.",
"description": "When set to true, titlebar displays the title of the selected tab. When set to false, titlebar displays \"Windows Terminal\".",
"type": "boolean"
},
"snapToGridOnResize": {
"default": false,
"description": "When set to true, the window will snap to the nearest character boundary on resize. When false, the window will resize 'smoothly'",
"description": "When set to true, the window will snap to the nearest character boundary on resize. When false, the window will resize smoothly",
"type": "boolean"
},
"tabWidthMode": {
"default": "equal",
"description": "Sets the width of the tabs.",
"description": "Sets the width of the tabs. Possible values include:\n -\"equal\" sizes each tab to the same width\n -\"titleLength\" sizes each tab to the length of its title\n -\"compact\" sizes each tab to the length of its title when focused, and shrinks to the size of only the icon when the tab is unfocused.",
"enum": [
"compact",
"equal",
"titleLength"
],
@@ -368,8 +477,8 @@
},
"confirmCloseAllTabs": {
"default": true,
"description": " When set to `true` closing a window with multiple tabs open WILL require confirmation. When set to `false` closing a window with multiple tabs open WILL NOT require confirmation.",
"type":"boolean"
"description": "When set to \"true\" closing a window with multiple tabs open will require confirmation. When set to \"false\", the confirmation dialog will not appear.",
"type": "boolean"
}
},
"required": [
@@ -401,11 +510,11 @@
"background": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"default": "#0c0c0c",
"description": "Sets the background color of the profile. Overrides background set in color scheme if colorscheme is set. Uses hex color format: \"#rrggbb\".",
"description": "Sets the background color of the text. Overrides \"background\" from the color scheme. Uses hex color format: \"#rrggbb\".",
"type": ["string", "null"]
},
"backgroundImage": {
"description": "Sets the file location of the Image to draw over the window background.",
"description": "Sets the file location of the image to draw over the window background.",
"type": ["string", "null"]
},
"backgroundImageAlignment": {
@@ -421,12 +530,14 @@
"topLeft",
"topRight"
],
"description": "Sets how the background image aligns to the boundaries of the window. Possible values: \"center\", \"left\", \"top\", \"right\", \"bottom\", \"topLeft\", \"topRight\", \"bottomLeft\", \"bottomRight\"",
"type": "string"
},
"backgroundImageOpacity": {
"description": "(Not in SettingsSchema.md)",
"maximum": 1,
"minimum": 0,
"default": 1.0,
"description": "Sets the transparency of the background image. Accepts floating point values from 0-1.",
"maximum": 1.0,
"minimum": 0.0,
"type": "number"
},
"backgroundImageStretchMode": {
@@ -442,7 +553,7 @@
},
"closeOnExit": {
"default": "graceful",
"description": "Sets how the profile reacts to termination or failure to launch. Possible values: \"graceful\" (close when exit is typed or the process exits normally), \"always\" (always close) and \"never\" (never close). true and false are accepted as synonyms for \"graceful\" and \"never\" respectively.",
"description": "Sets how the profile reacts to termination or failure to launch. Possible values:\n -\"graceful\" (close when exit is typed or the process exits normally)\n -\"always\" (always close)\n -\"never\" (never close).\ntrue and false are accepted as synonyms for \"graceful\" and \"never\" respectively.",
"oneOf": [
{
"enum": [
@@ -462,109 +573,27 @@
"description": "Name of the terminal color scheme to use. Color schemes are defined under \"schemes\".",
"type": "string"
},
"colorTable": {
"description": "Array of colors used in the profile if colorscheme is not set. Colors use hex color format: \"#rrggbb\". Ordering is as follows: [black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, white, bright black, bright red, bright green, bright yellow, bright blue, bright magenta, bright cyan, bright white]",
"items": {
"additionalProperties": false,
"properties": {
"background": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the background color of the color table."
},
"black": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI black."
},
"blue": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI blue."
},
"brightBlack": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI bright black."
},
"brightBlue": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI bright blue."
},
"brightCyan": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI bright cyan."
},
"brightGreen": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI bright green."
},
"brightPurple": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI bright purple."
},
"brightRed": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI bright red."
},
"brightWhite": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI bright white."
},
"brightYellow": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI bright yellow."
},
"cyan": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI cyan."
},
"foreground": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the foreground color of the color table."
},
"green": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI green."
},
"purple": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI purple."
},
"red": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI red."
},
"white": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI white."
},
"yellow": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the color used as ANSI yellow."
}
},
"type": "object"
},
"type": "array"
},
"commandline": {
"description": "Executable used in the profile.",
"type": "string"
},
"connectionType": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/ProfileGuid",
"description": "A GUID reference to a connection type. Currently undocumented as of 0.3, this is used for Azure Cloud Shell"
},
"cursorColor": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the cursor color of the profile. Overrides cursor color set in color scheme if colorscheme is set. Uses hex color format: \"#rrggbb\"."
"oneOf": [
{ "$ref": "#/definitions/Color" },
{"type": "null"}
],
"description": "Sets the color of the cursor. Overrides the cursor color from the color scheme. Uses hex color format: \"#rrggbb\"."
},
"cursorHeight": {
"description": "Sets the percentage height of the cursor starting from the bottom. Only works when cursorShape is set to \"vintage\". Accepts values from 25-100.",
"maximum": 100,
"minimum": 25,
"type": ["integer","null"]
"type": ["integer","null"],
"default": 25
},
"cursorShape": {
"default": "bar",
"description": "Sets the cursor shape for the profile. Possible values: \"vintage\" ( ▃ ), \"bar\" ( ┃, default ), \"underscore\" ( ), \"filledBox\" ( █ ), \"emptyBox\" ( )",
"description": "Sets the shape of the cursor. Possible values:\n -\"bar\" ( ┃, default )\n -\"emptyBox\" ( )\n -\"filledBox\" ( █ )\n -\"underscore\" ( ▁ )\n -\"vintage\" ( )",
"enum": [
"bar",
"emptyBox",
@@ -579,20 +608,47 @@
"type": "boolean"
},
"fontFace": {
"default": "Cascadia Code",
"default": "Cascadia Mono",
"description": "Name of the font face used in the profile.",
"type": "string"
},
"fontSize": {
"default": 12,
"description": "Sets the font size.",
"description": "Size of the font in points.",
"minimum": 1,
"type": "integer"
},
"fontWeight": {
"default": "normal",
"description": "Sets the weight (lightness or heaviness of the strokes) for the given font. Possible values:\n -\"thin\"\n -\"extra-light\"\n -\"light\"\n -\"semi-light\"\n -\"normal\" (default)\n -\"medium\"\n -\"semi-bold\"\n -\"bold\"\n -\"extra-bold\"\n -\"black\"\n -\"extra-black\" or the corresponding numeric representation of OpenType font weight.",
"oneOf": [
{
"enum": [
"thin",
"extra-light",
"light",
"semi-light",
"normal",
"medium",
"semi-bold",
"bold",
"extra-bold",
"black",
"extra-black"
],
"type": "string"
},
{
"maximum": 990,
"minimum": 100,
"type": "integer"
}
]
},
"foreground": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"default": "#cccccc",
"description": "Sets the foreground color of the profile. Overrides foreground set in color scheme if colorscheme is set. Uses hex color format: \"#rrggbb\".",
"description": "Sets the text color. Overrides \"foreground\" from the color scheme. Uses hex color format: \"#rrggbb\".",
"type": ["string", "null"]
},
"guid": {
@@ -621,7 +677,7 @@
},
"padding": {
"default": "8, 8, 8, 8",
"description": "Sets the padding around the text within the window. Can have three different formats: \"#\" sets the same padding for all sides, \"#, #\" sets the same padding for left-right and top-bottom, and \"#, #, #, #\" sets the padding individually for left, top, right, and bottom.",
"description": "Sets the padding around the text within the window. Can have three different formats:\n -\"#\" sets the same padding for all sides \n -\"#, #\" sets the same padding for left-right and top-bottom\n -\"#, #, #, #\" sets the padding individually for left, top, right, and bottom.",
"pattern": "^-?[0-9]+(\\.[0-9]+)?( *, *-?[0-9]+(\\.[0-9]+)?|( *, *-?[0-9]+(\\.[0-9]+)?){3})?$",
"type": "string"
},
@@ -635,14 +691,22 @@
"type": "string"
},
"selectionBackground": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Color",
"description": "Sets the selection background color of the profile. Overrides selection background set in color scheme if colorscheme is set. Uses hex color format: \"#rrggbb\"."
"oneOf": [
{"$ref": "#/definitions/Color"},
{ "type": "null" }
],
"description": "Sets the background color of selected text. Overrides selectionBackground set in the color scheme. Uses hex color format: \"#rrggbb\"."
},
"snapOnInput": {
"default": true,
"description": "When set to true, the window will scroll to the command input line when typing. When set to false, the window will not scroll when you start typing.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"altGrAliasing": {
"default": true,
"description": "By default Windows treats Ctrl+Alt as an alias for AltGr. When altGrAliasing is set to false, this behavior will be disabled.",
"type": "boolean"
},
"source": {
"description": "Stores the name of the profile generator that originated this profile.",
"type": ["string", "null"]
@@ -653,7 +717,8 @@
},
"suppressApplicationTitle": {
"description": "When set to true, tabTitle overrides the default title of the tab and any title change messages from the application will be suppressed. When set to false, tabTitle behaves as normal.",
"type": "boolean"
"type": "boolean",
"default": false
},
"tabTitle": {
"description": "If set, will replace the name as the title to pass to the shell on startup. Some shells (like bash) may choose to ignore this initial value, while others (cmd, powershell) may use this value over the lifetime of the application.",

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@@ -0,0 +1,227 @@
---
author: Leon Liang @leonMSFT
created on: 2019-11-27
last updated: 2020-06-16
issue id: 1502
---
# Advanced Tab Switcher
## Abstract
Currently the user is able to cycle through tabs on the tab bar. However, this horizontal cycling can be pretty inconvenient when the tab titles are long or when there are too many tabs on the tab bar. It could also get hard to see all your available tabs if the tab titles are long and your screen is small. In addition, there's a common use case to quickly switch between two tabs, e.g. when one tab is used as reference and the other is the actively worked-on tab. If the tabs are not right next to each other on the tab bar, it could be difficult to quickly swap between the two. Having the tabs displayed in Most Recently Used (MRU) order would help with this problem. It could also make the user experience better when there are a handful of tabs that are frequently used, but are nowhere near each other on the tab bar.
Having a tab switcher UI, like the ones in Visual Studio and Visual Studio Code, could help with the tab experience. Presenting the tabs vertically in their own little UI allows the user to see more of the tabs at once, compared to scanning the tab row horizontally and scrolling left/right to find the tab you want. The tab order in those tab switchers are also in MRU order by default.
To try to alleviate some of these user scenarios, we want to create a tab switcher similar to the ones found in VSCode and VS. This spec will cover the design of the switcher, and how a user would interact with the switcher. It would be primarily keyboard driven, and would give a pop-up display of a vertical list of tabs. The tab switcher would also be able to display the tabs in Most Recently Used (MRU) order.
## Inspiration
This was mainly inspired by the tab switcher that's found in Visual Studio Code and Visual Studio.
VS Code's tab switcher appears directly underneath the tab bar.
![Visual Studio Code Tab Switcher](img/VSCodeTabSwitcher.png)
Visual Studio's tab switcher presents itself as a box in the middle of the editor.
![Visual Studio Tab Switcher](img/VSTabSwitcher.png)
In terms of navigating the switcher, both VSCode and Visual Studio behave very similarly. Both open with the press of <kbd>ctrl+tab</kbd> and dismiss on release of <kbd>ctrl</kbd>. They both also allow the user to select the tab with the mouse and with <kbd>enter</kbd>. <kbd>esc</kbd> and a mouse click outside of the switcher both dismiss the window as well.
I'm partial towards looking like VSCode's Tab Switcher - specifically because it seems like both their Command Palette and Tab Switcher use the same UI. You can observe this by first bringing up the command palette, then hitting the keybinding to bring up the tab switcher. You'll notice that they're both using the same centered drop-down from the tab row. In fact, hitting the Tab Switcher keybinding in VSCode while the Command Palette is open simply auto fills the search box with "edit active", signifying that the user wants to select one of the tabs to edit, effectively "swapping" to the tab that's highlighted.
Since Terminal now has a command palette, it would be amazing to reuse that UI and simply fill it with the names of a user's currently open tabs!
## Solution Design
To extend upon the command palette, we simply need to create and maintain two Vector<Commands>, where each command will simply dispatch a `SwitchToTab` `ShortcutAction`. One vector will have the commands in tab row order, and the other will be in MRU order. They'll both have to be maintained along with our existing vector of tabs.
These vectors of commands can then be set as the commands to pull from in the command palette, and as long as the tab titles are available in these commands, the command palette will be able to naturally filter through the tabs as a user types in its search bar. Just like the command palette, a user will be able to navigate through the list of tabs with the arrow keys and pointer interactions. As part of this implementation, I can supplement these actions with "tab switcher specific" navigation keybindings that would only work if the command palette is in tab switcher mode.
The `TabSwitcherControl` will use `TerminalPage`'s `ShortcutActionDispatch` to dispatch a `SwitchToTab` `ShortcutAction`. This will eventually cause `TerminalPage::_OnTabSelectionChanged` to be called. We can update the MRU in this function to be sure that changing tabs from the TabSwitcher, clicking on a tab, or nextTab/prevTab-ing will keep the MRU up-to-date. Adding or closing tabs are handled in `_OpenNewTab` and `_CloseFocusedTab`, which will need to be modified to update the command vectors.
## UI/UX Design
The Tab Switcher will reuse a lot of the XAML code that's used in the command palette. This means it'll show up as a drop-down from the horizontal center of the tab row. It'll appear as a single overlay over the whole Terminal window. There will also be a search box on top of the list of tabs. Here's a rough mockup of how the command palette/tab switcher looks like:
![Mockup Command Palette with Tab Titles](img/CommandPaletteExample.png)
Each entry in the list will show the tab's titles and their assigned number for quick switching, and only one line will be highlighted to signify the tab that is currently selected. The top 9 tabs in the list are numbered for quick switching, and the rest of the tabs will simply have an empty space where a number would be.
The list would look (roughly) like this:
```
1 foo (highlighted)
2 boo
3 Windows
4 /c/Users/booboo
5 Git Moo
6 shoo
7 /c/
8 /d/
9 /e/
/f/
/g/
/h/
```
The highlighted line can move up or down, and if the user moves up while the highlighted line is already at the top of the list, the highlight will wrap around to the bottom of the list. Similarly, it will wrap to the top if the highlight is at the bottom of the list and the user moves down.
If there's more tabs than the UI can display, the list of tabs will scroll up/down as the user keeps iterating up/down. Even if some of the numbered tabs (the first 9 tabs) are not visible, the user can still press any number 1 through 9 to quick switch to that tab.
To give an example of what happens after scrolling past the end, imagine a user is starting from the state in the mock above. The user then iterates down past the end of the visible list four times. The below mock shows the result.
```
5 Git Moo
6 shoo
7 /c/
8 /d
9 /e/
/f/
/g/
/h/
/i/
/j/
/k/
/l/ (highlighted)
```
The tabs designated by numbers 1 through 4 are no longer visible (but still quick-switchable), and the list now starts with "Git Moo", which is associated with number 5.
### Using the Switcher
#### Opening the Tab Switcher
The user can press a keybinding named `tabSwitcher` to bring up the command palette UI with a list of tab titles.
The user can also bring up the command palette first, and type a "tab switcher" prefix like "@" into the search bar to switch into "tab switcher mode".
The user will be able to change it to whatever they like.
There will also be an optional `anchor` arg that may be provided to this keybinding.
#### Keeping it open
We use the term `anchor` to illustrate the idea that the UI stays visible as long as something is "anchoring" it down.
Here's an example of how to set the `anchor` key in the settings:
```
{"keys": ["ctrl+tab"], "command": {"action": "openTabSwitcher", "anchor": "ctrl" }}
```
This user provided the `anchor` key arg, and set it to <kbd>ctrl</kbd>. So, the user would open the UI with <kbd>ctrl+tab</kbd>, and as long as the user is holding <kbd>ctrl</kbd> down, the UI won't dismiss. The moment the user releases <kbd>ctrl</kbd>, the UI dismisses. The `anchor` key needs to be one of the keys in the `openTabSwitcher` keybinding. If it isn't, we'll display a warning dialog in this case saying that the `anchor` key isn't actually part of the keybinding, and the user might run into some weird behavior.
If `openTabSwitcher` is not given an `anchor` key, the switcher will stay visible even after the release of the keybinding.
#### Switching through Tabs
The user will be able to navigate through the switcher with the following keybindings:
- Switching Down: <kbd>tab</kbd> or <kbd>downArrow</kbd>
- Switching Up: <kbd>shift+tab</kbd> or <kbd>upArrow</kbd>
As the user is cycling through the tab list, the selected tab will be highlighted but the terminal won't actually switch focus to the selected tab. This also applies to pointer interaction. Hovering over an item with a mouse will highlight the item but not switch to the tab.
#### Closing the Switcher and Bringing a Tab into Focus
There are two _dismissal_ keybindings:
1. <kbd>enter</kbd> : brings the currently selected tab into focus and dismisses the UI.
2. <kbd>esc</kbd> : dismisses the UI without changing tab focus.
The following are ways a user can dismiss the UI, _whether or not_ the `Anchor` key is provided to `openTabSwitcher`.
1. The user can press a number associated with a tab to instantly switch to the tab and dismiss the switcher.
2. The user can click on a tab to instantly switch to the tab and dismiss the switcher.
3. The user can click outside of the UI to dismiss the switcher without bringing the selected tab into focus.
4. The user can press any of the dismissal keybindings.
If the `anchor` key is provided, then in addition to the above methods, the UI will dismiss upon the release of the `anchor` key.
Pressing the `openTabSwitcher` keychord again will not close the switcher, it'll do nothing.
### Most Recently Used Order
We'll provide a setting that will allow the list of tabs to be presented in either _in-order_ (how the tabs are ordered on the tab bar), or _Most Recently Used Order_ (MRU). MRU means that the tab that the terminal most recently visited will be on the top of the list, and the tab that the terminal has not visited for the longest time will be on the bottom.
There will be an argument for the `openTabSwitcher` action called `displayOrder`. This can be either `inOrder` or `mruOrder`. Making the setting an argument passed into `openTabSwitcher` would allow the user to have one keybinding to open an MRU Tab Switcher, and different one for the In-Order Tab Switcher. For example:
```
{"keys": ["ctrl+tab"], "command": {"action": "openTabSwitcher", "anchor":"ctrl", "displayOrder":"mruOrder"}}
{"keys": ["ctrl+shift+p"], "command": {"action": "openTabSwitcher", "anchor":"ctrl", "displayOrder":"inOrder"}}
```
By default (when the arg isn't specified), `displayOrder` will be "mruOrder".
### Numbered Tabs
Similar to how the user can currently switch to a particular tab with a combination of keys such as <kbd>ctrl+shift+1</kbd>, we want to have the tab switcher provide a number to the first nine tabs (1-9) in the list for quick switching. If there are more than nine tabs in the list, then the rest of the tabs will not have a number assigned.
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
- The tab switcher will be using WinUI, and so it'll be automatically linked to the UIA tree. This allows screen readers to find it, and so narrator will be able to navigate the switcher easily.
- The UI is also fully keyboard-driven, with the option of using a mouse to interact with the UI.
- When the tab switcher pops up, the focus immediately swaps to it.
- For the sake of more contrast with the background, we could use a ThemeShadow to bring the UI closer to the user, making the focus clearer.
### Security
This shouldn't introduce any security issues.
### Reliability
How we're updating the MRU is something to watch out for since it triggers on a lot of tab interactions. However, I don't foresee the update taking long at all, and I can't imagine that users can create and delete tabs fast enough to matter.
### Compatibility
- The existing way of navigating horizontally through the tabs on the tab bar should not break.
- These should also be separate keybindings from the keybindings associated with using the tab switcher.
- When a user reorders their tabs on the tab bar, the MRU order remains unchanged. For example:
- Tab Bar:`[cmd(focused), ps, wsl]` and MRU:`[cmd, ps, wsl]`
- Reordered Tab Bar:`[wsl, cmd(focused), ps]` and MRU:`[cmd, ps, wsl]`
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
## Potential Issues
We'll need to be careful about how the UI is presented depending on different sizes of the terminal. We also should test how the UI looks as it's open and resizing is happening. Visual Studio's tab switcher is a fixed size, and is always in the middle. Even when the VS window is smaller than the tab switcher size, the tab switcher will show up larger than the VS window itself.
![Small Visual Studio Without Tab Switcher](img/VSMinimumSize.png)
![Small Visual Studio With Tab Switcher](img/VSMinimumSizeWithTabSwitcher.png)
Visual Studio Code only allows the user to shrink the window until it hits a minimum width and height. This minimum width and height gives its tab switcher enough space to show a meaningful amount of information.
![Small Visual Studio Code with Tab Switcher](img/VSCodeMinimumTabSwitcherSize.png)
Terminal can't really replicate Visual Studio's version of the tab switcher in this situation. The TabSwitcher needs to be contained within the Terminal. So, if the TabSwitcher is always centered and has a percentage padding from the borders of the Terminal, it'll shrink as Terminal shrinks. Since the Terminal also has a minimum width, the switcher should always have enough space to be usefully visible.
## Future considerations
### Pane Navigation
There was discussion in [#1502] that brought up the idea of pane navigation, inspired by tmux.
![Tmux Tab and Pane Switching](img/tmuxPaneSwitching.png)
Tmux allows the user to navigate directly to a pane and even give a preview of the pane. This would be extremely useful since it would allow the user to see a tree of their open tabs and panes. Currently there's no way to see what panes are open in each tab, so if you're looking for a particular pane, you'd need to cycle through your tabs to find it. If something like pane profile names (not sure what information to present in the switcher for panes) were presented in the TabSwitcher, the user could see all the panes in one box.
To support pane navigation, the tab switcher can simply have another column to the right of the tab list to show a list of panes inside the selected tab. As the user iterates through the tab list, they can simply hit right to dig deeper into the tab's panes, and hit left to come back to the tab list. Each tab's list of panes will be MRU or in-order, depending on which `displayOrder` arg was provided to the `openTabSwitcher` keybinding.
Pane navigation is a clear next step to build on top of the tab switcher, but this spec will specifically deal with just tab navigation in order to keep the scope tight. The tab switcher implementation just needs to allow for pane navigation to be added in later.
### Tab Preview on Hover
With this feature, having a tab highlighted in the switcher would make the Terminal display that tab as if it switched to it. I believe currently there is no way to set focus to a tab in a "preview" mode. This is important because MRU updates whenever a tab is focused, but we don't want the MRU to update on a preview. Given that this feature is a "nice thing to have", I'll leave it for
after the tab switcher has landed.
## Resources
Feature Request: An advanced tab switcher [#1502]
Ctrl+Tab toggle between last two windows like Alt+Tab [#973]
The Command Palette Thread [#2046]
The Command Palette Spec [#5674]
Feature Request: Search [#605]
<!-- Footnotes -->
[#605]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/605
[#973]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/973
[#1502]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1502
[#2046]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046
[#5674]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/5674

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---
author: Mike Griese @zadjii-msft
created on: 2019-08-01
last updated: 2020-06-16
issue id: 2046
---
# Command Palette
## Abstract
This spec covers the addition of a "command palette" to the Windows Terminal.
The Command Palette is a GUI that the user can activate to search for and
execute commands. Beneficially, the command palette allows the user to execute
commands _even if they aren't bound to a keybinding_.
## Inspiration
This feature is largely inspired by the "Command Palette" in text editors like
VsCode, Sublime Text and others.
This spec was initially drafted in [a
comment](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046#issuecomment-514219791)
in [#2046]. That was authored during the annual Microsoft Hackathon, where I
proceeded to prototype the solution. This spec is influenced by things I learned
prototyping.
Initially, the command palette was designed simply as a method for executing
certain actions that the user pre-defined. With the addition of [commandline
arguments](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4632) to the Windows
Terminal in v0.9, we also considered what it might mean to be able to have the
command palette work as an effective UI not only for dispatching pre-defined
commands, but also `wt.exe` commandlines to the current terminal instance.
## Solution Design
Fundamentally, we need to address two different modes of using the command palette:
* In the first mode, the command palette can be used to quickly look up
pre-defined actions and dispatch them. We'll refer to this as "Action Mode".
* The second mode allows the user to run `wt` commandline commands and have them
apply immediately to the current Terminal window. We'll refer to this as
"commandline mode".
Both these options will be discussed in detail below.
### Action Mode
We'll introduce a new top-level array to the user settings, under the key
`commands`. `commands` will contain an array of commands, each with the
following schema:
```js
{
"name": string|object,
"action": string|object,
"icon": string
}
```
Command names should be human-friendly names of actions, though they don't need
to necessarily be related to the action that it fires. For example, a command
with `newTab` as the action could have `"Open New Tab"` as the name.
The command will be parsed into a new class, `Command`:
```c++
class Command
{
winrt::hstring Name();
winrt::TerminalApp::ActionAndArgs ActionAndArgs();
winrt::hstring IconSource();
}
```
We'll add another structure in GlobalAppSettings to hold all these actions. It
will just be a `std::vector<Command>` in `GlobalAppSettings`.
We'll need app to be able to turn this vector into a `ListView`, or similar, so
that we can display this list of actions. Each element in the view will be
intrinsically associated with the `Command` object it's associated with. In
order to support this, we'll make `Command` a winrt type that implements
`Windows.UI.Xaml.Data.INotifyPropertyChanged`. This will let us bind the XAML
element to the winrt type.
When an element is clicked on in the list of commands, we'll raise the event
corresponding to that `ShortcutAction`. `AppKeyBindings` already does a great
job of dispatching `ShortcutActions` (and their associated arguments), so we'll
re-use that. We'll pull the basic parts of dispatching `ActionAndArgs`
callbacks into another class, `ShortcutActionDispatch`, with a single
`DoAction(ActionAndArgs)` method (and events for each action).
`AppKeyBindings` will be initialized with a reference to the
`ShortcutActionDispatch` object, so that it can call `DoAction` on it.
Additionally, by having a singular `ShortcutActionDispatch` instance, we won't
need to re-hook up the ShortcutAction keybindings each time we re-load the
settings.
In `TerminalPage`, when someone clicks on an item in the list, we'll get the
`ActionAndArgs` associated with that list element, and call `DoAction` on
the app's `ShortcutActionDispatch`. This will trigger the event handler just the
same as pressing the keybinding.
#### Commands for each profile?
[#3879] Is a request for being able to launch a profile directly, via the
command palette. Essentially, the user will type the name of a profile, and hit
enter to launch that profile. I quite like this idea, but with the current spec,
this won't work great. We'd need to manually have one entry in the command
palette for each profile, and every time the user adds a profile, they'd need to
update the list of commands to add a new entry for that profile as well.
This is a fairly complicated addition to this feature, so I'd hold it for
"Command Palette v2", though I believe it's solution deserves special
consideration from the outset.
I suggest that we need a mechanism by which the user can specify a single
command that would be expanded to one command for every profile in the list of
profiles. Consider the following sample:
```json
"commands": [
{
"expandOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": "New Tab with ${profile.name}",
"command": { "action": "newTab", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
},
{
"expandOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": "New Vertical Split with ${profile.name}",
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"vertical", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
}
],
```
In this example:
* The `"expandOn": "profiles"` property indicates that each command should be
repeated for each individual profile.
* The `${profile.name}` value is treated as "when expanded, use the given
profile's name". This allows each command to use the `name` and `icon`
properties of a `Profile` to customize the text of the command.
To ensure that this works correctly, we'll need to make sure to expand these
commands after all the other settings have been parsed, presumably in the
`Validate` phase. If we do it earlier, it's possible that not all the profiles
from various sources will have been added yet, which would lead to an incomplete
command list.
We'll need to have a placeholder property to indicate that a command should be
expanded for each `Profile`. When the command is first parsed, we'll leave the
format strings `${...}` unexpanded at this time. Then, in the validate phase,
when we encounter a `"expandOn": "profiles"` command, we'll remove it from the
list, and use it as a prototype to generate commands for every `Profile` in our
profiles list. We'll do a string find-and-replace on the format strings to
replace them with the values from the profile, before adding the completed
command to the list of commands.
Of course, how does this work with localization? Considering the [section
below](#localization), we'd update the built-in commands to the following:
```json
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "NewTabWithProfileCommandName" },
"command": { "action": "newTab", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
},
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "NewVerticalSplitWithProfileCommandName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"vertical", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
}
],
```
In this example, we'll look up the `NewTabWithProfileCommandName` resource when
we're first parsing the command, to find a string similar to `"New Tab with
${profile.name}"`. When we then later expand the command, we'll see the
`${profile.name}` bit from the resource, and expand that like we normally would.
Trickily, we'll need to make sure to have a helper for replacing strings like
this that can be used for general purpose arg parsing. As you can see, the
`profile` property of the `newTab` command also needs the name of the profile.
Either the command validation will need to go through and update these strings
manually, or we'll need another of enabling these `IActionArgs` classes to fill
those parameters in based on the profile being used. Perhaps the command
pre-expansion could just stash the json for the action, then expand it later?
This implementation detail is why this particular feature is not slated for
inclusion in an initial Command Palette implementation.
From initial prototyping, it seems like the best solution will be to stash the
command's original json around when parsing an expandable command like the above
examples. Then, we'll handle the expansion in the settings validation phase,
after all the profiles and color schemes have been loaded.
For each profile, we'll need to replace all the instances in the original json
of strings like `${profile.name}` with the profile's name to create a new json
string. We'll attempt to parse that new string into a new command to add to the
list of commands.
### Commandline Mode
One of our more highly requested features is the ability to run a `wt.exe`
commandline in the current WT window (see [#4472]). Typically, users want the
ability to do this straight from whatever shell they're currently running.
However, we don't really have an effective way currently to know if WT is itself
being called from another WT instance, and passing those arguments to the
hosting WT. Furthermore, in the long term, we see that feature as needing the
ability to not only run commands in the current WT window, but an _arbitrary_ WT
window.
The Command Palette seems like a natural fit for a stopgap measure while we
design the correct way to have a `wt` commandline apply to the window it's
running in.
In Commandline Mode, the user can simply type a `wt.exe` commandline, and when
they hit enter, we'll parse the commandline and dispatch it _to the current
window_. So if the user wants to open a new tab, they could type `new-tab` in
Commandline Mode, and it would open a new tab in the current window. They're
also free to chain multiple commands like they can with `wt` from a shell - by
entering something like `split-pane -p "Windows PowerShell" ; split-pane -H
wsl.exe`, the terminal would execute two `SplitPane` actions in the currently
focused pane, creating one with the "Windows PowerShell" profile and another
with the default profile running `wsl` in it.
## UI/UX Design
We'll add another action that can be used to toggle the visibility of the
command palette. Pressing that keybinding will bring up the command palette. We
should make sure to add a argument to this action that specifies whether the
palette should be opened directly in Action Mode or Commandline Mode.
When the command palette appears, we'll want it to appear as a single overlay
over all of the panes of the Terminal. The drop-down will be centered
horizontally, dropping down from the top (from the tab row). When commands are
entered, it will be implied that they are delivered to the focused terminal
pane. This will help avoid two problematic scenarios that could arise from
having the command palette attached to a single pane:
* When attached to a single pane, it might be very easy for the UI to quickly
become cluttered, especially at smaller pane sizes.
* This avoids the "find the overlay problem" which is common in editors like
VS where the dialog appears attached to the active editor pane.
The palette will consist of two main UI elements: a text box for
entering/searching for commands, and in action mode, a list of commands.
### Action Mode
The list of commands will be populated with all the commands by default. Each
command will appear like a `MenuFlyoutItem`, with an icon at the left (if it has
one) and the name visible. When opened, the palette will automatically highlight
the first entry in the list.
The user can navigate the list of entries with the arrow keys. Hitting enter
will close the palette and execute the action that's highlighted. Hitting escape
will dismiss the palette, returning control to the terminal. When the palette is
closed for any reason (executing a command, dismissing with either escape or the
`toggleCommandPalette` keybinding), we'll clear out any search text from the
palette, so the user can start fresh again.
We'll also want to enable the command palette to be filterable, so that the user
can type the name of a command, and the command palette will automatically
filter the list of commands. This should be more powerful then just a simple
string compare - the user should be able to type a search string, and get all
the commands that match a "fuzzy search" for that string. This will allow users
to find the command they're looking for without needing to type the entire
command.
For example, consider the following list of commands:
```json
"commands": [
{ "icon": null, "name": "New Tab", "action": "newTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Close Tab", "action": "closeTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Close Pane", "action": "closePane" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "[-] Split Horizontal", "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split": "horizontal" } },
{ "icon": null, "name": "[ | ] Split Vertical", "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split": "vertical" } },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Next Tab", "action": "nextTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Prev Tab", "action": "prevTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Open Settings", "action": "openSettings" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Open Media Controls", "action": "openTestPane" }
],
```
* "open" should return both "**Open** Settings" and "**Open** Media Controls".
* "Tab" would return "New **Tab**", "Close **Tab**", "Next **Tab**" and "Prev
**Tab**".
* "P" would return "Close **P**ane", "[-] S**p**lit Horizontal", "[ | ]
S**p**lit Vertical", "**P**rev Tab", "O**p**en Settings" and "O**p**en Media
Controls".
* Even more powerfully, "sv" would return "[ | ] Split Vertical" (by matching
the **S** in "Split", then the **V** in "Vertical"). This is a great example
of how a user could execute a command with very few keystrokes.
As the user types, we should **bold** each matching character in the command
name, to show how their input correlates to the results on screen.
Additionally, it will be important for commands in the action list to display
the keybinding that's bound to them, if there is one.
### Commandline Mode
Commandline mode is much simpler. In this mode, we'll simply display a text input,
similar to the search box that's rendered for Action Mode. In this box, the
user will be able to type a `wt.exe` style commandline. The user does not need
to start this commandline with `wt` (or `wtd`, etc) - since we're already
running in WT, the user shouldn't really need to repeat themselves.
When the user hits <kbd>enter</kbd>, we'll attempt to parse the commandline. If
we're successful in parsing the commandline, we can close the palette and
dispatch the commandline. If the commandline had errors, we should reveal a text
box with an error message below the text input. We'll leave the palette open
with their entered command, so they can edit the commandline and try again. We
should _probably_ leave the message up for a few seconds once they've begun
editing the commandline, but eventually hide the message (ideally with a motion
animation).
### Switching Between Modes
**TODO**: This is a topic for _discussion_.
How do we differentiate Action Mode from Commandline Mode?
I think there should be a character that the user types that switches the mode.
This is reminiscent of how the command palette works in applications like VsCode
and Sublime Text. The same UI is used for a number of functions. In the case of
VsCode, when the user opens the palette, it's initially in a "navigate to file"
mode. When the user types the prefix character `@`, the menu seamlessly switches
to a "navigate to symbol mode". Similarly, users can use `:` for "go to line"
and `>` enters an "editor command" mode.
I believe we should use a similarly implemented UI. The UI would be in one of
the two modes by default, and typing the prefix character would enter the other
mode. If the user deletes the prefix character, then we'd switch back into the
default mode.
When the user is in Action Mode vs Commandline mode, if the input is empty
(besides potentially the prefix character), we should probably have some sort of
placeholder text visible to indicate which mode the user is in. Something like
_"Enter a command name..."_ for action mode, or _"Type a wt commandline..."_ for
commandline mode.
Initially, I favored having the palette in Action Mode by default, and typing a
`:` prefix to enter Commandline Mode. This is fairly similar to how tmux's
internal command prompt works, which is bound to `<prefix>-:` by default.
If we wanted to remain _similar_ to VsCode, we'd have no prefix character be the
Commandline Mode, and `>` would enter the Action mode. I'd think that might
actually be _backwards_ from what I'd expect, with `>` being the default
character for the end of the default `cmd` `%PROMPT%`.
**FOR DISCUSSION** What option makes the most sense to the team? I'm leaning
towards the VsCode style (where Action='>', Commandline='') currently.
Enabling the user to configure this prefix is discussed below in "[Future
Considerations](#Configuring-The-ActionCommandline-Mode-Prefix)".
### Layering and "Unbinding" Commands
As we'll be providing a list of default commands, the user will inevitably want
to change or remove some of these default commands.
Commands should be layered based upon the _evaluated_ value of the "name"
property. Since the default commands will all use localized strings in the
`"name": { "key": "KeyName" }` format, the user should be able to override the
command based on the localized string for that command.
So, assuming that `NewTabCommandName` is evaluated as "Open New Tab", the
following command
```json
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "NewTabCommandName" }, "action": "newTab" },
```
Could be overridden with the command:
```json
{ "icon": null, "name": "Open New Tab", "action": "splitPane" },
```
Similarly, if the user wants to remove that command from the command palette,
they could set the action to `null`:
```json
{ "icon": null, "name": "Open New Tab", "action": null },
```
This will remove the command from the command list.
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
As the entire command palette will be a native XAML element, it'll automatically
be hooked up to the UIA tree, allowing for screen readers to naturally find it.
* When the palette is opened, it will automatically receive focus.
* The terminal panes will not be able to be interacted with while the palette
is open, which will help keep the UIA tree simple while the palette is open.
### Security
This should not introduce any _new_ security concerns. We're relying on the
security of jsoncpp for parsing json. Adding new keys to the settings file
will rely on jsoncpp's ability to securely parse those json values.
### Reliability
We'll need to make sure that invalid commands are ignored. A command could be
invalid because:
* it has a null `name`, or a name with the empty string for a value.
* it has a null `action`, or an action specified that's not an actual
`ShortcutAction`.
We'll ignore invalid commands from the user's settings, instead of hard
crashing. I don't believe this is a scenario that warrants an error dialog to
indicate to the user that there's a problem with the json.
### Compatibility
We will need to define default _commands_ for all the existing keybinding
commands. With #754, we could add all the actions (that make sense) as commands
to the commands list, so that everyone wouldn't need to define them manually.
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
We'll be adding a few extra XAML elements to our tree which will certainly
increase our runtime memory footprint while the palette is open.
We'll additionally be introducing a few extra json values to parse, so that could
increase our load times (though this will likely be negligible).
## Potential Issues
This will first require the work in [#1205] to work properly. Right now we
heavily lean on the "focused" element to determine which terminal is "active".
However, when the command palette is opened, focus will move out of the terminal
control into the command palette, which leads to some hard to debug crashes.
Additionally, we'll need to ensure that the "fuzzy search" algorithm proposed
above will work for non-english languages, where a single character might be
multiple `char`s long. As we'll be using a standard XAML text box for input, we
won't need to worry about handling the input ourselves.
### Localization
Because we'll be shipping a set of default commands with the terminal, we should
make sure that list of commands can be localizable. Each of the names we'll give
to the commands should be locale-specific.
To facilitate this, we'll use a special type of object in JSON that will let us
specify a resource name in JSON. We'll use a syntax like the following to
suggest that we should load a string from our resources, as opposed to using the
value from the file:
```json
"commands": [
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "NewTabCommandName" }, "action": "newTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "CloseTabCommandKey" }, "action": "closeTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ClosePaneCommandKey" }, "action": "closePane" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "SplitHorizontalCommandKey" }, "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split": "horizontal" } },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "SplitVerticalCommandKey" }, "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split": "vertical" } },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "NextTabCommandKey" }, "action": "nextTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "PrevTabCommandKey" }, "action": "prevTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "OpenSettingsCommandKey" }, "action": "openSettings" },
],
```
We'll check at parse time if the `name` property is a string or an object. If
it's a string, we'll treat that string as the literal text. Otherwise, if it's
an object, we'll attempt to use the `key` property of that object to look up a
string from our `ResourceDictionary`. This way, we'll be able to ship localized
strings for all the built-in commands, while also allowing the user to easily
add their own commands.
During the spec review process, we considered other options for localization as
well. The original proposal included options such as having one `defaults.json`
file per-locale, and building the Terminal independently for each locale. Those
were not really feasible options, so we instead settled on this solution, as it
allowed us to leverage the existing localization support provided to us by the
platform.
The `{ "key": "resourceName" }` solution proposed here was also touched on in
[#5280].
### Proposed Defaults
These are the following commands I'm proposing adding to the command palette by
default. These are largely the actions that are bound by default.
```json
"commands": [
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "NewTabCommandKey" }, "action": "newTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "DuplicateTabCommandKey" }, "action": "duplicateTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "DuplicatePaneCommandKey" }, "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"auto", "splitMode": "duplicate" } },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "SplitHorizontalCommandKey" }, "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split": "horizontal" } },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "SplitVerticalCommandKey" }, "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split": "vertical" } },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "CloseWindowCommandKey" }, "action": "closeWindow" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ClosePaneCommandKey" }, "action": "closePane" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "OpenNewTabDropdownCommandKey" }, "action": "openNewTabDropdown" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "OpenSettingsCommandKey" }, "action": "openSettings" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "FindCommandKey" }, "action": "find" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "NextTabCommandKey" }, "action": "nextTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "PrevTabCommandKey" }, "action": "prevTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ToggleFullscreenCommandKey" }, "action": "toggleFullscreen" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "CopyTextCommandKey" }, "action": { "action": "copy", "singleLine": false } },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "PasteCommandKey" }, "action": "paste" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "IncreaseFontSizeCommandKey" }, "action": { "action": "adjustFontSize", "delta": 1 } },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "DecreaseFontSizeCommandKey" }, "action": { "action": "adjustFontSize", "delta": -1 } },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ResetFontSizeCommandKey" }, "action": "resetFontSize" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ScrollDownCommandKey" }, "action": "scrollDown" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ScrollDownPageCommandKey" }, "action": "scrollDownPage" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ScrollUpCommandKey" }, "action": "scrollUp" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ScrollUpPageCommandKey" }, "action": "scrollUpPage" }
]
```
## Addenda
This spec also has a follow-up spec which introduces further changes upon this
original draft. Please also refer to:
* June 2020: Unified keybindings and commands, and synthesized action names.
## Future considerations
* Commands will provide an easy point for allowing an extension to add its
actions to the UI, without forcing the user to bind the extension's actions to
a keybinding
* Also discussed in [#2046] was the potential for adding a command that inputs a
certain commandline to be run by the shell. I felt that was out of scope for
this spec, so I'm not including it in detail. I believe that would be
accomplished by adding a `inputCommand` action, with two args: `commandline`,
a string, and `suppressNewline`, an optional bool, defaulted to false. The
`inputCommand` action would deliver the given `commandline` as input to the
connection, followed by a newline (as to execute the command).
`suppressNewline` would prevent the newline from being added. This would work
relatively well, so long as you're sitting at a shell prompt. If you were in
an application like `vim`, this might be handy for executing a sequence of
vim-specific keybindings. Otherwise, you're just going to end up writing a
commandline to the buffer of vim. It would be weird, but not unexpected.
* Additionally mentioned in [#2046] was the potential for profile-scoped
commands. While that's a great idea, I believe it's out of scope for this
spec.
* Once [#754] lands, we'll need to make sure to include commands for each action
manually in the default settings. This will add some overhead that the
developer will need to do whenever they add an action. That's unfortunate, but
will be largely beneficial to the end user.
* We could theoretically also display the keybinding for a certain command in
the `ListViewItem` for the command. We'd need some way to correlate a
command's action to a keybinding's action. This could be done in a follow-up
task.
* We might want to alter the fuzzy-search algorithm, to give higher precedence
in the results list to commands with more consecutive matching characters.
Alternatively we could give more weight to commands where the search matched
the initial character of words in the command.
- For example: `ot` would give more weight to "**O**pen **T**ab" than
"**O**pen Se**t**tings").
* We may want to add a button to the New Tab Button's dropdown to "Show Command
Palette". I'm hesitant to keep adding new buttons to that UI, but the command
palette is otherwise not highly discoverable.
- We could add another button to the UI to toggle the visibility of the
command palette. This was the idea initially proposed in [#2046].
- For both these options, we may want a global setting to hide that button, to
keep the UI as minimal as possible.
* [#1571] is a request for customizing the "new tab dropdown" menu. When we get
to discussing that design, we should consider also enabling users to add
commands from their list of commands to that menu as well.
- This is included in the spec in [#5888].
* I think it would be cool if there was a small timeout as the user was typing
in commandline mode before we try to auto-parse their commandline, to check
for errors. Might be useful to help sanity check users. We can always parse
their `wt` commandlines safely without having to execute them.
* It would be cool if the commands the user typed in Commandline Mode could be
saved to a history of some sort, so they could easily be re-entered.
- It would be especially cool if it could do this across launches.
- We don't really have any way of storing transient data like that in the
Terminal, so that would need to be figured out first.
- Typically the Command Palette is at the top of the view, with the
suggestions below it, so navigating through the history would be _backwards_
relative to a normal shell.
* Perhaps users will want the ability to configure which side of the window the
palette appears on?
- This might fit in better with [#3327].
* [#3753] is a pull request that covers the addition of an "Advanced Tab
Switcher". In an application like VsCode, their advanced tab switcher UI is
similar to their command palette UI. It might make sense that the user could
use the command palette UI to also navigate to active tabs or panes within the
terminal, by control name. We've already outlined how the Command Palette
could operate in "Action Mode" or "Commandline Mode" - we could also add
"Navigate Mode" on `@`, for navigating between tabs or panes.
- The tab switcher could probably largely re-use the command palette UI, but
maybe hide the input box by default.
* We should make sure to add a setting in the future that lets the user opt-in
to showing most-recently used commands _first_ in the search order, and
possibly even pre-populating the search box with whatever their last entry
was.
- I'm thinking these are two _separate_ settings.
### Nested Commands
Another idea for a future spec is the concept of "nested commands", where a
single command has many sub-commands. This would hide the children commands from
the entire list of commands, allowing for much more succinct top-level list of
commands, and allowing related commands to be grouped together.
- For example, I have a text editor plugin that enables rendering markdown to a
number of different styles. To use that command in my text editor, first I hit
enter on the "Render Markdown..." command, then I select which style I want to
render to, in another list of options. This way, I don't need to have three
options for "Render Markdown to github", "Render Markdown to gitlab", all in
the top-level list.
- We probably also want to allow a nested command set to be evaluated at runtime
somehow. Like if we had a "Open New Tab..." command that then had a nested
menu with the list of profiles.
The above might be able to be expressed through some JSON like the following:
```json
"commands": [
{
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "NewTabWithProfileRootCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "NewTabWithProfileCommandName" },
"command": { "action": "newTab", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
}
]
},
{
"icon": "...",
"name": "Connect to ssh...",
"commands": [
{
"icon": "...",
"name": "first.com",
"command": { "action": "newTab", "commandline": "ssh me@first.com" }
},
{
"icon": "...",
"name": "second.com",
"command": { "action": "newTab", "commandline": "ssh me@second.com" }
}
]
}
{
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneWithProfileRootCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneWithProfileCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "automatic" }
},
{
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneVerticalName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "vertical" }
},
{
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneHorizontalName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "horizontal" }
}
]
}
]
}
]
```
This would define three commands, each with a number of nested commands underneath it:
* For the first command:
- It uses the XAML resource `NewTabWithProfileRootCommandName` as it's name.
- Activating this command would cause us to remove all the other commands from
the command palette, and only show the nested commands.
- It contains nested commands, one for each profile.
- Each nested command would use the XAML resource
`NewTabWithProfileCommandName`, which then would also contain the string
`${profile.name}`, to be filled with the profile's name in the command's
name.
- It would also use the profile's icon as the command icon.
- Activating any of the nested commands would dispatch an action to create a
new tab with that profile
* The second command:
- It uses the string literal `"Connect to ssh..."` as it's name
- It contains two nested commands:
- Each nested command has it's own literal name
- Activating these commands would cause us to open a new tab with the
provided `commandline` instead of the default profile's `commandline`
* The third command:
- It uses the XAML resource `NewTabWithProfileRootCommandName` as it's name.
- It contains nested commands, one for each profile.
- Each one of these sub-commands each contains 3 subcommands - one that will
create a new split pane automatically, one vertically, and one
horizontally, each using the given profile.
So, you could imagine the entire tree as follows:
```
<Command Palette>
├─ New Tab With Profile...
│ ├─ Profile 1
│ ├─ Profile 2
│ └─ Profile 3
├─ Connect to ssh...
│ ├─ first.com
│ └─ second.com
└─ New Pane...
├─ Profile 1...
| ├─ Split Automatically
| ├─ Split Vertically
| └─ Split Horizontally
├─ Profile 2...
| ├─ Split Automatically
| ├─ Split Vertically
| └─ Split Horizontally
└─ Profile 3...
├─ Split Automatically
├─ Split Vertically
└─ Split Horizontally
```
Note that the palette isn't displayed like a tree - it only ever displays the
commands from one single level at a time. So at first, only:
* New Tab With Profile...
* Connect to ssh...
* New Pane...
are visible. Then, when the user <kbd>enter</kbd>'s on one of these (like "New
Pane"), the UI will change to display:
* Profile 1...
* Profile 2...
* Profile 3...
### Configuring the Action/Commandline Mode prefix
As always, I'm also on board with the "this should be configurable by the user"
route, so they can change what mode the command palette is in by default, and
what the prefixes for different modes are, but I'm not sure how we'd define that
cleanly in the settings.
```json
{
"commandPaletteActionModePrefix": "", // or null, for no prefix
"commandPaletteCommandlineModePrefix": ">"
}
```
We'd need to have validation on that though, what if both of them were set to
`null`? One of them would _need_ to be `null`, so if both have a character, do
we just assume one is the default?
## Resources
Initial post that inspired this spec: #[2046](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046)
Keybindings args: #[1349](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/1349)
Cascading User & Default Settings: #[754](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/754)
Untie "active control" from "currently XAML-focused control" #[1205](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1205)
Allow dropdown menu customization in profiles.json [#1571](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1571)
Search or run a command in Dropdown menu [#3879]
Spec: Introduce a mini-specification for localized resource use from JSON [#5280]
<!-- Footnotes -->
[#754]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/754
[#1205]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1205
[#1142]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/1349
[#2046]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046
[#1571]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1571
[#3879]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/3879
[#5280]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/5280
[#4472]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4472
[#3327]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/3327
[#3753]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pulls/3753
[#5888]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pulls/5888

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,608 @@
---
author: Mike Griese @zadjii-msft
created on: 2020-06-15
last updated: 2020-06-19
issue id: 2046
---
# Command Palette, Addendum 1 - Unified keybindings and commands, and synthesized action names
## Abstract
This document is intended to serve as an addition to the [Command Palette Spec].
While that spec is complete in it's own right, subsequent discussion revealed
additional ways to improve the functionality and usability of the command
palette. This document builds largely on the topics already introduced in the
original spec, so readers should first familiarize themselves with that
document.
One point of note from the original document was that the original specification
was entirely too verbose when defining both keybindings and commands for
actions. Consider, for instance, a user that wants to bind the action "duplicate
the current pane". In that spec, they need to add both a keybinding and a
command:
```json
{
"keybindings": [
{ "keys": [ "ctrl+alt+t" ], "command": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"auto", "splitMode": "duplicate" } },
],
"commands": [
{ "name": "Duplicate Pane", "action": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"auto", "splitMode": "duplicate" }, "icon": null },
]
}
```
These two entries are practically the same, except for two key differentiators:
* the keybinding has a `keys` property, indicating which key chord activates the
action.
* The command has a `name` property, indicating what name to display for the
command in the Command Palette.
What if the user didn't have to duplicate this action? What if the user could
just add this action once, in their `keybindings` or `commands`, and have it
work both as a keybinding AND a command?
## Solution Design
This spec will outline two primary changes to keybindings and commands.
1. Unify keybindings and commands, so both `keybindings` and `commands` can
specify either actions bound to keys, and/or actions bound to entries in the
Command Palette.
2. Propose a mechanism by which actions do not _require_ a `name` to appear in
the Command Palette.
These proposals are two atomic units - either could be approved or rejected
independently of one another. They're presented together here in the same doc
because together, they present a compelling story.
### Proposal 1: Unify Keybindings and Commands
As noted above, keybindings and commands have nearly the exact same syntax, save
for a couple properties. To make things easier for the user, I'm proposing
treating everything in _both_ the `keybindings` _and_ the `commands` arrays as
**BOTH** a keybinding and a command.
Furthermore, as a change from the previous spec, we'll be using `bindings` from
here on as the unified `keybindings` and `commands` lists. This is considering
that we'll currently be using `bindings` for both commands and keybindings, but
we'll potentially also have mouse & touch bindings in this array in the future.
We'll "deprecate" the existing `keybindings` property, and begin to exclusively
use `bindings` as the new property name. For compatibility reasons, we'll
continue to parse `keybindings` in the same way we parse `bindings`. We'll
simply layer `bindings` on top of the legacy `keybindings`.
* Anything entry that has a `keys` value will be added to the keybindings.
Pressing that keybinding will activate the action defined in `command`.
* Anything with a `name`<sup>[1]</sup> will be added as an entry (using that
name) to the Command Palette's Action Mode.
###### Caveats
* **Nested commands** (commands with other nested commands). If a command has
nested commands in the `commands` property, AND a `keys` property, then
pressing that keybinding should open the Command Palette directly to that
level of nesting of commands.
* **"Iterable" commands** (with an `iterateOn` property): These are commands
that are expanded into one command per profile. These cannot really be bound
as keybindings - which action should be bound to the key? They can't all be
bound to the same key. If a KeyBinding/Command json blob has a valid
`iterateOn` property, then we'll ignore it as a keybinding. This includes any
commands that are nested as children of this command - we won't be able to
know which of the expanded children will be the one to bind the keys to.
<sup>[1]</sup>: This requirement will be relaxed given **Proposal 2**, below,
but ignored for the remainder of this section, for illustrative purposes.
#### Example
Consider the following settings:
```json
"bindings": [
{ "name": "Duplicate Tab", "command": "duplicateTab", "keys": "ctrl+alt+a" },
{ "command": "nextTab", "keys": "ctrl+alt+b" },
{
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "NewTabWithProfileRootCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "NewTabWithProfileCommandName" },
"command": { "action": "newTab", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
}
]
},
{
"icon": "...",
"name": "Connect to ssh...",
"commands": [
{
"keys": "ctrl+alt+c",
"icon": "...",
"name": "first.com",
"command": { "action": "newTab", "commandline": "ssh me@first.com" }
},
{
"keys": "ctrl+alt+d",
"icon": "...",
"name": "second.com",
"command": { "action": "newTab", "commandline": "ssh me@second.com" }
}
]
}
{
"keys": "ctrl+alt+e",
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneWithProfileRootCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneWithProfileCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"keys": "ctrl+alt+f",
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "automatic" }
},
{
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneVerticalName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "vertical" }
},
{
"icon": "...",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneHorizontalName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "horizontal" }
}
]
}
]
}
]
```
This will generate a tree of commands as follows:
```
<Command Palette>
├─ Duplicate tab { ctrl+alt+a }
├─ New Tab With Profile...
│ ├─ Profile 1
│ ├─ Profile 2
│ └─ Profile 3
├─ Connect to ssh...
│ ├─ first.com { ctrl+alt+c }
│ └─ second.com { ctrl+alt+d }
└─ New Pane... { ctrl+alt+e }
├─ Profile 1...
| ├─ Split Automatically
| ├─ Split Vertically
| └─ Split Horizontally
├─ Profile 2...
| ├─ Split Automatically
| ├─ Split Vertically
| └─ Split Horizontally
└─ Profile 3...
├─ Split Automatically
├─ Split Vertically
└─ Split Horizontally
```
Note also the keybindings in the above example:
* <kbd>ctrl+alt+a</kbd>: This key chord is bound to the "Duplicate tab"
(`duplicateTab`) action, which is also bound to the command with the same
name.
* <kbd>ctrl+alt+b</kbd>: This key chord is bound to the `nextTab` action, which
doesn't have an associated command.
* <kbd>ctrl+alt+c</kbd>: This key chord is bound to the "Connect to
ssh../first.com" action, which will open a new tab with the `commandline`
`"ssh me@first.com"`. When the user presses this keybinding, the action will
be executed immediately, without the Command Palette appearing.
* <kbd>ctrl+alt+d</kbd>: This is the same as the above, but with the "Connect to
ssh../second.com" action.
* <kbd>ctrl+alt+e</kbd>: This key chord is bound to opening the Command Palette
to the "New Pane..." command's menu. When the user presses this keybinding,
they'll be prompted with this command's sub-commands:
```
Profile 1...
Profile 2...
Profile 3...
```
* <kbd>ctrl+alt+f</kbd>: This key will _not_ be bound to any action. The parent
action is iterable, which means that the `SplitPaneName` command is going to
get turned into one command for each and every profile, and therefore cannot
be bound to just a single action.
### Proposal 2: Automatically synthesize action names
Previously, all Commands were required to have a `name`. This name was used as
the text for the action in the Action Mode of the Command Palette. However, this
is a little tedious for users who already have lots of keys bound. They'll need
to go through and add names to each of their existing keybindings to ensure that
the actions appear in the palette. Could we instead synthesize the names for the
commands ourselves? This would enable users to automatically get each of their
existing keybindings to appear in the palette without any extra work.
To support this, the following changes will be made:
* `ActionAndArgs` will get a `GenerateName()` method defined. This will create a
string describing the `ShortcutAction` and it's associated `ActionArgs`.
- Not EVERY action _needs_ to define a result for `GenerateName`. Actions that
don't _won't_ be automatically added to the Command Palette.
- Each of the strings used in `GenerateName` will need to come from our
resources, so they can be localized appropriately.
* When we're parsing commands, if a command doesn't have a `name`, we'll instead
attempt to use `GenerateName` to create the unique string for the action
associated with this command. If the command does have a `name` set, we'll use
that string instead, allowing the user to override the default name.
- If a command has it's name set to `null`, then we'll ignore the command
entirely, not just use the generated name.
[**Appendix 1**](#appendix-1-name-generation-samples-for-ShortcutActions) below
shows a complete sample of the strings that will be generated for each of the existing
`ShortcutActions`, and many of the actions that have been proposed, but not yet
implemented.
These strings should be human-friendly versions of the actions and their
associated args. For some of these actions, with very few arguments, the strings
can be relatively simple. Take for example, `CopyText`:
JSON | Generated String
-- | --
`{ "action":"copyText" }` | "Copy text"
`{ "action":"copyText", "singleLine": true }` | "Copy text as a single line"
`{ "action":"copyText", "singleLine": false, "copyFormatting": false }` | "Copy text without formatting"
`{ "action":"copyText", "singleLine": true, "copyFormatting": true }` | "Copy text as a single line without formatting"
CopyText is a bit of a simplistic case however, with very few args or
permutations of argument values. For things like `newTab`, `splitPane`, where
there are many possible arguments and values, it will be acceptable to simply
append `", property:value"` strings to the generated names for each of the set
values.
For example:
JSON | Generated String
-- | --
`{ "action":"newTab", "profile": "Hello" }` | "Open a new tab, profile:Hello"
`{ "action":"newTab", "profile": "Hello", "directory":"C:\\", "commandline": "wsl.exe", title": "Foo" }` | "Open a new tab, profile:Hello, directory:C:\\, commandline:wsl.exe, title:Foo"
This is being chosen in favor of something that might be more human-friendly,
like "Open a new tab with profile {profile name} in {directory} with
{commandline} and a title of {title}". This string would be much harder to
synthesize, especially considering localization concerns.
#### Remove the resource key notation
Since we'll be using localized names for each of the actions in `GenerateName`,
we no longer _need_ to provide the `{ "name":{ "key": "SomeResourceKey" } }`
syntax introduced in the original spec. This functionality was used to allow us
to define localizable names for the default commands.
However, I think we should keep this functionality, to allow us additional
flexibility when defining default commands.
### Complete Defaults
Considering both of the above proposals, the default keybindings and commands
will be defined as follows:
* The current default keybindings will be untouched. These actions will
automatically be added to the Command Palette, using their names generated
from `GenerateName`.
- **TODO: FOR DISCUSSION**: Should we manually set the names for the default
"New Tab, profile index: 0" keybindings to `null`? This seems like a not
terribly helpful name for the Command Palette, especially considering the
iterable commands listed below.
* We'll add a few new commands:
- A nested, iterable command for "Open new tab with
profile..."/"Profile:{profile name}"
- A nested, iterable command for "Select color scheme..."/"{scheme name}"
- A nested, iterable command for "New Pane..."/"Profile:{profile
name}..."/["Automatic", "Horizontal", "Vertical"]
> 👉 NOTE: These default nested commands can be removed by the user defining
> `{ "name": "Open new tab with profile...", "action":null }` (et al) in their
> settings.
- If we so chose, in the future we can add further commands that we think are
helpful to `defaults.json`, without needing to give them keys. For example,
we could add
```json
{ "command": { "action": "copy", "singleLine": true } }
```
to `bindings`, to add a "copy text as a single line" command, without
necessarily binding it to a keystroke.
These changes to the `defaults.json` are represented in json as the following:
```json
"bindings": [
{
"icon": null,
"name": { "key": "NewTabWithProfileRootCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": "${profile.name}",
"command": { "action": "newTab", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
}
]
},
{
"icon": null,
"name": { "key": "SelectColorSchemeRootCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "schemes",
"icon": null,
"name": "${scheme.name}",
"command": { "action": "selectColorScheme", "scheme": "${scheme.name}" }
}
]
},
{
"icon": null,
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneWithProfileRootCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneWithProfileCommandName" },
"commands": [
{
"icon": null,
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "automatic" }
},
{
"icon": null,
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneVerticalName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "vertical" }
},
{
"icon": null,
"name": { "key": "SplitPaneHorizontalName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "horizontal" }
}
]
}
]
}
]
```
A complete diagram of what the default Command Palette will look like given the
default keybindings and these changes is given in [**Appendix
2**](#appendix-2-complete-default-command-palette).
## Concerns
**DISCUSSION**: "New tab with index {index}". How does this play with
the new tab dropdown customizations in [#5888]? In recent iterations of that
spec, we changed the meaning of `{ "action": "newTab", "index": 1 }` to mean
"open the first entry in the new tab menu". If that's a profile, then we'll open
a new tab with it. If it's an action, we'll perform that action. If it's a
nested menu, then we'll open the menu to that entry.
Additionally, how exactly does that play with something like `{ "action":
"newTab", "index": 1, "commandline": "wsl.exe" }`? This is really a discussion
for that spec, but is an issue highlighted by this spec. If the first entry is
anything other than a `profile`, then the `commandline` parameter doesn't really
mean anything anymore. I'm tempted to revert this particular portion of the new
tab menu customization spec over this.
We could instead add an `index` to `openNewTabDropdown`, and have that string
instead be "Open new tab dropdown, index:1". That would help disambiguate the
two.
Following discussion, it was decided that this was in fact the cleanest
solution, when accounting for both the needs of the new tab dropdown and the
command palette. The [#5888] spec has been updated to reflect this.
## Future considerations
* Some of these command names are starting to get _very_ long. Perhaps we need a
netting to display Command Palette entries on two lines (or multiple, as
necessary).
* When displaying the entries of a nested command to the user, should we display
a small label showing the name of the previous command? My gut says _yes_. In
the Proposal 1 example, pressing `ctrl+alt+e` to jump to "Split Pane..."
should probably show a small label that displays "Split Pane..." above the
list of nested commands.
* It wouldn't be totally impossible to allow keys to be bound to an iterable
command, and then simply have the key work as "open the command palette with
only the commands generated by this iterable command". This is left as a
future option, as it might require some additional technical plumbing.
## Appendix 1: Name generation samples for `ShortcutAction`s
### Current `ShortcutActions`
* `CopyText`
- "Copy text"
- "Copy text as a single line"
- "Copy text without formatting"
- "Copy text as a single line without formatting"
* `PasteText`
- "Paste text"
* `OpenNewTabDropdown`
- "Open new tab dropdown"
* `DuplicateTab`
- "Duplicate tab"
* `NewTab`
- "Open a new tab, profile:{profile name}, directory:{directory}, commandline:{commandline}, title:{title}"
* `NewWindow`
- "Open a new window"
- "Open a new window, profile:{profile name}, directory:{directory}, commandline:{commandline}, title:{title}"
* `CloseWindow`
- "Close window"
* `CloseTab`
- "Close tab"
* `ClosePane`
- "Close pane"
* `NextTab`
- "Switch to the next tab"
* `PrevTab`
- "Switch to the previous tab"
* `SplitPane`
- "Open a new pane, profile:{profile name}, split direction:{direction}, split size:{X%/Y chars}, resize parents, directory:{directory}, commandline:{commandline}, title:{title}"
- "Duplicate the current pane, split direction:{direction}, split size:{X%/Y chars}, resize parents, directory:{directory}, commandline:{commandline}, title:{title}"
* `SwitchToTab`
- "Switch to tab {index}"
* `AdjustFontSize`
- "Increase the font size"
- "Decrease the font size"
* `ResetFontSize`
- "Reset the font size"
* `ScrollUp`
- "Scroll up a line"
- "Scroll up {amount} lines"
* `ScrollDown`
- "Scroll down a line"
- "Scroll down {amount} lines"
* `ScrollUpPage`
- "Scroll up a page"
- "Scroll up {amount} pages"
* `ScrollDownPage`
- "Scroll down a page"
- "Scroll down {amount} pages"
* `ResizePane`
- "Resize pane {direction}"
- "Resize pane {direction} {percent}%"
* `MoveFocus`
- "Move focus {direction}"
* `Find`
- "Toggle the search box"
* `ToggleFullscreen`
- "Toggle fullscreen mode"
* `OpenSettings`
- "Open settings"
- "Open settings file"
- "Open default settings file"
* `ToggleCommandPalette`
- "Toggle the Command Palette"
- "Toggle the Command Palette in commandline mode"
### Other yet unimplemented actions:
* `SwitchColorScheme`
- "Select color scheme {name}"
* `ToggleRetroEffect`
- "Toggle the retro terminal effect"
* `ExecuteCommandline`
- "Run a wt commandline: {cmdline}"
* `ExecuteActions`
- OPINION: THIS ONE SHOULDN'T HAVE A NAME. We're not including any of these by
default. The user knows what they're putting in the settings by adding this
action, let them name it.
- Alternatively: "Run actions: {action.ToName() for action in actions}"
* `SendInput`
- OPINION: THIS ONE SHOULDN'T HAVE A NAME. We're not including any of these by
default. The user knows what they're putting in the settings by adding this
action, let them name it.
* `ToggleMarkMode`
- "Toggle Mark Mode"
* `NextTab`
- "Switch to the next most-recent tab"
* `SetTabColor`
- "Set the color of the current tab to {#color}"
* It would be _really_ cool if we could display a sample of the color
inline, but that's left as a future consideration.
- "Set the color for this tab..."
* this command isn't nested, but hitting enter immediately does something
with the UI, so that's _fine_
* `RenameTab`
- "Rename this tab to {name}"
- "Rename this tab..."
* this command isn't nested, but hitting enter immediately does something
with the UI, so that's _fine_
## Appendix 2: Complete Default Command Palette
This diagram shows what the default value of the Command Palette would be. This
assumes that the user has 3 profiles, "Profile 1", "Profile 2", and "Profile 3",
as well as 3 schemes: "Scheme 1", "Scheme 2", and "Scheme 3".
```
<Command Palette>
├─ Close Window
├─ Toggle fullscreen mode
├─ Open new tab dropdown
├─ Open settings
├─ Open default settings file
├─ Toggle the search box
├─ New Tab
├─ New Tab, profile index: 0
├─ New Tab, profile index: 1
├─ New Tab, profile index: 2
├─ New Tab, profile index: 3
├─ New Tab, profile index: 4
├─ New Tab, profile index: 5
├─ New Tab, profile index: 6
├─ New Tab, profile index: 7
├─ New Tab, profile index: 8
├─ Duplicate tab
├─ Switch to the next tab
├─ Switch to the previous tab
├─ Switch to tab 0
├─ Switch to tab 1
├─ Switch to tab 2
├─ Switch to tab 3
├─ Switch to tab 4
├─ Switch to tab 5
├─ Switch to tab 6
├─ Switch to tab 7
├─ Switch to tab 8
├─ Close pane
├─ Open a new pane, split: horizontal
├─ Open a new pane, split: vertical
├─ Duplicate the current pane
├─ Resize pane down
├─ Resize pane left
├─ Resize pane right
├─ Resize pane up
├─ Move focus down
├─ Move focus left
├─ Move focus right
├─ Move focus up
├─ Copy Text
├─ Paste Text
├─ Scroll down a line
├─ Scroll down a page
├─ Scroll up a line
├─ Scroll up a page
├─ Increase the font size
├─ Decrease the font size
├─ Reset the font size
├─ New Tab With Profile...
│ ├─ Profile 1
│ ├─ Profile 2
│ └─ Profile 3
├─ Select Color Scheme...
│ ├─ Scheme 1
│ ├─ Scheme 2
│ └─ Scheme 3
└─ New Pane...
├─ Profile 1...
| ├─ Split Automatically
| ├─ Split Vertically
| └─ Split Horizontally
├─ Profile 2...
| ├─ Split Automatically
| ├─ Split Vertically
| └─ Split Horizontally
└─ Profile 3...
├─ Split Automatically
├─ Split Vertically
└─ Split Horizontally
```
<!-- Footnotes -->
[Command Palette Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/doc/specs/%232046%20-%20Command%20Palette.md

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---
author: Carlos Zamora @carlos-zamora
created on: 2020-05-14
last updated: 2020-05-14
issue id: #2557
---
# Open Settings Keybinding
## Abstract
This spec outlines an expansion to the existing `openSettings` keybinding.
## Inspiration
As a Settings UI becomes more of a reality, the behavior of this keybinding will be expanded on to better interact with the UI. Prior to a Settings UI, there was only one concept of the modifiable user settings: settings.json.
Once the Settings UI is created, we can expect users to want to access the following scenarios:
- Settings UI: globals page
- Settings UI: profiles page
- Settings UI: color schemes page
- Settings UI: keybindings page
- settings.json
- defaults.json
These are provided as non-comprehensive examples of pages that might be in a future Settings UI. The rest of the doc assumes these are the pages in the Settings UI.
## Solution Design
Originally, #2557 was intended to allow for a keybinding arg to access defaults.json. I imagined a keybinding arg such as "openDefaults: true/false" to accomplish this. However, this is not expandable in the following scenarios:
- what if we decide to create more settings files in the future? (i.e. themes.json, extensions.json, etc...)
- when the Settings UI comes in, there is ambiguity as to what `openSettings` does (json? UI? Which page?)
### Proposition 1.1: the minimal `target` arg
Instead, what if we introduced a new `target` keybinding argument, that could be used as follows:
| Keybinding Command | Behavior |
|--|--|
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "settingsFile" }` | opens "settings.json" in your default text editor |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "defaultsFile" }` | opens "defaults.json" in your default text editor |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "allSettingsFiles" }` | opens all of settings files in your default text editor |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "settingsUI" }` | opens the Settings UI |
This was based on Proposition 1 below, but reduced the overhead of people able to define specific pages to go to.
### Other options we considered were...
#### Proposition 1: the `target` arg
We considered making target be more specific like this:
| Keybinding Command | Behavior |
|--|--|
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "settingsFile" }` | opens "settings.json" in your default text editor |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "defaultsFile" }` | opens "defaults.json" in your default text editor |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "uiSettings" }` | opens the Settings UI |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "uiGlobals" }` | opens the Settings UI to the Globals page |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "uiProfiles" }` | opens the Settings UI to the Profiles page |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "target": "uiColorSchemes" }` | opens the Settings UI to the Color Schemes page |
If the Settings UI does not have a home page, `uiGlobals` and `uiSettings` will do the same thing.
This provides the user with more flexibility to decide what settings page to open and how to access it.
#### Proposition 2: the `format` and `page` args
Another approach would be to break up `target` into `format` and `page`.
`format` would be either `json` or `ui`, dictating how you can access the setting.
`page` would be any of the categories we have for settings: `settings`, `defaults`, `globals`, `profiles`, etc...
This could look like this:
| Keybinding Command | Behavior |
|--|--|
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "format": "json", "page": "settings" }` | opens "settings.json" in your default text editor |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "format": "json", "page": "defaults" }` | opens "defaults.json" in your default text editor |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "format": "ui", "page": "settings" }` | opens the Settings UI |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "format": "ui", "page": "globals" }` | opens the Settings UI to the Globals page |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "format": "ui", "page": "profiles" }` | opens the Settings UI to the Profiles page |
| `"command": { "action": "openSettings", "format": "ui", "page": "colorSchemes" }` | opens the Settings UI to the Color Schemes page |
The tricky thing for this approach is, what do we do in the following scenario:
```js
{ "command": { "action": "openSettings", "format": "json", "page": "colorSchemes" } }
```
In situations like this, where the user wants a `json` format, but chooses a `page` that is a part of a larger settings file, I propose we simply open `settings.json` (or whichever file contains the settings for the desired feature).
#### Proposition 3: minimal approach
What if we don't need to care about the page, and we really just cared about the format: UI vs json? Then, we still need a way to represent opening defaults.json. We could simplify Proposition 2 to be as follows:
- `format`: `json`, `ui`
- ~`page`~ `openDefaults`: `true`, `false`
Here, we take away the ability to specifically choose which page the user wants to open, but the result looks much cleaner.
If there are concerns about adding more settings files in the future, `openDefaults` could be renamed to be `target`, and this would still serve as a hybrid of Proposition 1 and 2, with less possible options.
## UI/UX Design
The user has full control over modifying and adding these keybindings.
However, the question arises for what the default experience should be. I propose the following:
| Keychord | Behavior |
| <kbd>ctrl+,</kbd> | Open settings.json |
| <kbd>ctrl+alt+,</kbd> | Open defaults.json |
When the Settings UI gets added in, they will be updated to open their respective pages in the Settings UI.
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
None.
### Security
None.
### Reliability
None.
### Compatibility
Users that expect a json file to open would have to update their keybinding to do so.
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
## Potential Issues
None.
## Future considerations
When the Settings UI becomes available, a new value for `target` of `settingsUI` will be added and it will become the default target.
If the community finds value in opening to a specific page of the Settings UI, `target` will be responsible for providing that functionality.
## Resources
None.

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---
author: Mike Griese @zadjii-msft
created on: 2020-05-07
last updated: 2020-06-03
issue id: 4999
---
# Improved keyboard handling in Conpty
## Abstract
The Windows Console internally uses [`INPUT_RECORD`]s to represent the various
types of input that a user might send to a client application. This includes
things like keypresses, mouse events, window resizes, etc.
However, conpty's keyboard input is fundamentally backed by VT sequences, which
limits the range of keys that a terminal application can actually send relative
to what the console was capable of. This results in a number of keys that were
previously representable in the console as `INPUT_RECORD`s, but are impossible
to send to a client application that's running in conpty mode.
Some of these issues include, but are not limited to:
* Some keybindings used by PSReadLine aren't getting through [#879]
* Bug Report: Control+Space not sent to terminal emulator. [#2865]
* Shift+Enter always submits, breaking PSReadline features [#530]
* Powershell: Ctrl-Alt-? does not work in Windows Terminal [#3079]
* Bug: ctrl+break is not ctrl+c [#1119]
* Something wrong with keyboard modifiers processing? [#1694]
* Numeric input not accepted by choice.exe [#3608]
* Ctrl+Keys that can't be encoded as VT should still fall through as the unmodified character [#3483]
* Modifier keys are not properly propagated to application hosted in Windows Terminal [#4334] / [#4446]
This spec covers a mechanism by which we can add support to ConPTY so that a
terminal application could send `INPUT_RECORD`-like key events to conpty,
enabling client applications to receive the full range of keys once again.
Included at the bottom of this document is a collection of [options that were
investigated](#options-considered) as a part of preparing this document.
## Considerations
When evaluating existing encoding schemes for viability, the following things
were used to evaluate whether or not a particular encoding would work for our
needs:
* Would a particular encoding be mixable with other normal VT processing easily?
- How would the Terminal know when it should send a \<chosen_encoding> key vs
a normally encoded one?
- For ex, <kbd>Ctrl+space</kbd> - should we send `NUL` or
\<chosen_encoding's version of ctrl+space>
* If there's a scenario where Windows Terminal might _not_ be connected to a
conpty, then how does conpty enable \<chosen_encoding>?
* Is the goal "Full `INPUT_RECORD` fidelity" or "Make the above scenarios work"?
- One could imagine having the Terminal special-case the above keys, and send
the xterm modifyOtherKeys sequences just for those scenarios.
- This would _not_ work for <kbd>shift</kbd> all by itself.
- In my _opinion_, "just making the above work" is a subset of "full
INPUT_RECORD", and inevitably we're going to want "full INPUT_RECORD"
The goal we're trying to achieve is communicating `INPUT_RECORD`s from the
terminal to the client app via conpty. This isn't supposed to be a \*nix
terminal compatible communication, it's supposed to be fundamentally Win32-like.
Keys that we definitely need to support, that don't have unique VT sequences:
* <kbd>Ctrl+Space</kbd> ([#879], [#2865])
* <kbd>Shift+Enter</kbd> ([#530])
* <kbd>Ctrl+Break</kbd> ([#1119])
* <kbd>Ctrl+Alt+?</kbd> ([#3079])
* <kbd>Ctrl</kbd>, <kbd>Alt</kbd>, <kbd>Shift</kbd>, (without another keydown/up) ([#3608], [#4334], [#4446])
> 👉 NOTE: There are actually 5 types of events that can all be encoded as an
> `INPUT_RECORD`. This spec primarily focuses on the encoding of
> `KEY_EVENT_RECORD`s. It is left as a Future Consideration to add support for
> the other types of `INPUT_RECORD` as other sequences, which could be done
> trivially similarly to the following proposal.
## Solution Design
### Inspiration
The design we've settled upon is one that's highly inspired by a few precedents:
* `Application Cursor Keys (DECCKM)` is a long-supported VT sequence which a
client application can use to request a different input format from the
Terminal. This is the DECSET sequence `^[[?1h`/`^[[?1l` (for enable/disable,
respectively). This changes the sequences sent by keys like the Arrow keys
from a sequence like `^[[A` to `^[OA` instead.
* The `kitty` terminal emulator uses a similar DECSET sequence for enabling
their own input format, which they call ["full mode"]. Similar to DECCKM, this
changes the format of the sequences that the terminal should send for keyboard
input. Their "full mode" contains much more information when keys are pressed
or released (though, less than a full `INPUT_RECORD` worth of data). Instead
of input being sent to the client as a CSI or SS3 sequence, this `kitty` mode
uses "Application Program-Command" (or "APC") sequences , prefixed with `^[_`.
* [iTerm2](https://www.iterm2.com/documentation-escape-codes.html) has a region
of OSC's that they've carved for themselves all starting with the same initial
parameter, `1337`. They then have a number of commands that all use the second
parameter to indicate what command specific to iTerm2 they're actually
implementing.
### Requesting `win32-input-mode`
An application can request `win32-input-mode` with the following private mode sequence:
```
^[ [ ? 9001 h/l
l: Disable win32-input-mode
h: Enable win32-input-mode
```
Private mode `9001` seems unused according to the [xterm
documentation](https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html). This is
stylistically similar to how `DECKPM`, `DECCKM`, and `kitty`'s ["full mode"] are
enabled.
> 👉 NOTE: an earlier draft of this spec used an OSC sequence for enabling these
> sequences. This was abandoned in favor of the more stylistically consistent
> private mode params proposed above. Additionally, if implemented as a private
> mode, then a client app could query if this setting was set with `DECRQM`
When a terminal receives a `^[[?9001h` sequence, they should switch into
`win32-input-mode`. In `win32-input-mode`, the terminal will send keyboard input
to the connected client application in the following format:
### `win32-input-mode` sequences
The `KEY_EVENT_RECORD` portion of an input record (the part that's important for
us to encode in this feature) is defined as the following:
```c++
typedef struct _KEY_EVENT_RECORD {
BOOL bKeyDown;
WORD wRepeatCount;
WORD wVirtualKeyCode;
WORD wVirtualScanCode;
union {
WCHAR UnicodeChar;
CHAR AsciiChar;
} uChar;
DWORD dwControlKeyState;
} KEY_EVENT_RECORD;
```
To encode all of this information, I propose the following sequence. This is a
CSI sequence with a final terminator character of `_`. This character appears to
only be used as a terminator for the [SCO input
sequence](https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/chapter6.html) for
<kbd>Ctrl+Shift+F10</kbd>. This conflict isn't a real concern for us
compatibility wise. For more details, see [SCO
Compatibility](#SCO-compatibility) below.
```
^[ [ Vk ; Sc ; Uc ; Kd ; Cs ; Rc _
Vk: the value of wVirtualKeyCode - any number. If omitted, defaults to '0'.
Sc: the value of wVirtualScanCode - any number. If omitted, defaults to '0'.
Uc: the decimal value of UnicodeChar - for example, NUL is "0", LF is
"10", the character 'A' is "65". If omitted, defaults to '0'.
Kd: the value of bKeyDown - either a '0' or '1'. If omitted, defaults to '0'.
Cs: the value of dwControlKeyState - any number. If omitted, defaults to '0'.
Rc: the value of wRepeatCount - any number. If omitted, defaults to '1'.
```
> 👉 NOTE: an earlier draft of this spec used an APC sequence for encoding the
> input sequences. This was changed to a CSI for stylistic reasons. There's not
> a great body of reference anywhere that lists APC sequences in use, so there's
> no way to know if the sequence would collide with another terminal emulator's
> usage. Furthermore, using an APC seems to give a distinct impression that
> this is some "Windows Terminal" specific sequence, which is not intended. This
> is a Windows-specific sequence, but one that any Terminal/application could
> use.
In this way, a terminal can communicate input to a connected client application
as `INPUT_RECORD`s, without any loss of fidelity.
#### Example
When the user presses <kbd>Ctrl+F1</kbd> in the console, the console actually
send 4 input records to the client application:
* A <kbd>Ctrl</kbd> down event
* A <kbd>F1</kbd> down event
* A <kbd>F1</kbd> up event
* A <kbd>Ctrl</kbd> up event
Encoded in `win32-input-mode`, this would look like the following:
```
^[[17;29;0;1;8;1_
^[[112;59;0;1;8;1_
^[[112;59;0;0;8;1_
^[[17;29;0;0;0;1_
Down: 1 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x11 ScanCode: 0x1d Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x28
Down: 1 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x70 ScanCode: 0x3b Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x28
Down: 0 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x70 ScanCode: 0x3b Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x28
Down: 0 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x11 ScanCode: 0x1d Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x20
```
Similarly, for a keypress like <kbd>Ctrl+Alt+A</kbd>, which is 6 key events:
```
^[[17;29;0;1;8;1_
^[[18;56;0;1;10;1_
^[[65;30;0;1;10;1_
^[[65;30;0;0;10;1_
^[[18;56;0;0;8;1_
^[[17;29;0;0;0;1_
Down: 1 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x11 ScanCode: 0x1d Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x28
Down: 1 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x12 ScanCode: 0x38 Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x2a
Down: 1 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x41 ScanCode: 0x1e Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x2a
Down: 0 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x41 ScanCode: 0x1e Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x2a
Down: 0 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x12 ScanCode: 0x38 Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x28
Down: 0 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x11 ScanCode: 0x1d Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x20
```
Or, for something simple like <kbd>A</kbd> (which is 4 key events):
```
^[[16;42;0;1;16;1_
^[[65;30;65;1;16;1_
^[[16;42;0;0;0;1_
^[[65;30;97;0;0;1_
Down: 1 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x10 ScanCode: 0x2a Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x30
Down: 1 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x41 ScanCode: 0x1e Char: A (0x41) KeyState: 0x30
Down: 0 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x10 ScanCode: 0x2a Char: \0 (0x0) KeyState: 0x20
Down: 0 Repeat: 1 KeyCode: 0x41 ScanCode: 0x1e Char: a (0x61) KeyState: 0x20
```
> 👉 NOTE: In all the above examples, I had my NumLock key off. If I had the
> NumLock key instead pressed, all the KeyState parameters would have bits 0x20
> set. To get these keys with a NumLock, add 32 to the value.
These parameters are ordered based on how likely they are to be used. Most of
the time, the repeat count is not needed (it's almost always `1`), so it can be
left off when not required. Similarly, the control key state is probably going
to be 0 a lot of the time too, so that is second last. Even keydown will be 0 at
least half the time, so that can be omitted some of the time.
Furthermore, considering omitted values in CSI parameters default to the values
specified above, the above sequences could each be shortened to the following.
* <kbd>Ctrl+F1</kbd>
```
^[[17;29;;1;8_
^[[112;59;;1;8_
^[[112;59;;;8_
^[[17;29_
```
* <kbd>Ctrl+Alt+A</kbd>
```
^[[17;29;;1;8_
^[[18;56;;1;10_
^[[65;30;;1;10_
^[[65;30;;;10_
^[[18;56;;;8_
^[[17;29;;_
```
* <kbd>A</kbd> (which is <kbd>shift+a</kbd>)
```
^[[16;42;;1;16_
^[[65;30;65;1;16_
^[[16;42_
^[[65;30;97_
```
* Or even easier, just <kbd>a</kbd>
```
^[[65;30;97;1_
^[[65;30;97_
```
### Scenarios
#### User is typing into WSL from the Windows Terminal
`WT -> conpty[1] -> wsl`
* Conpty[1] will ask for `win32-input-mode` from the Windows Terminal when
conpty[1] first boots up. Conpty will _always_ ask for win32-input-mode -
Terminals that _don't_ support this mode will ignore this sequence on startup.
* When the user types keys in Windows Terminal, WT will translate them into
win32 sequences and send them to conpty[1]
* Conpty[1] will translate those win32 sequences into `INPUT_RECORD`s.
- When those `INPUT_RECORD`s are written to the input buffer, they'll be
converted into VT sequences corresponding to whatever input mode the linux
app is in.
* When WSL reads the input, it'll read (using `ReadConsoleInput`) a stream of
`INPUT_RECORD`s that contain only character information, which it will then
pass to the linux application.
- This is how `wsl.exe` behaves today, before this change.
#### User is typing into `cmd.exe` running in WSL interop
`WT -> conpty[1] -> wsl -> conpty[2] -> cmd.exe`
(presuming you start from the previous scenario, and launch `cmd.exe` inside wsl)
* Conpty[2] will ask for `win32-input-mode` from conpty[1] when conpty[2] first
boots up.
- As conpty[1] is just a conhost that knows how to handle
`win32-input-mode`, it will switch its own VT input handling into
`win32-input-mode`
* When the user types keys in Windows Terminal, WT will translate them into
win32 sequences and send them to conpty[1]
* Conpty[1] will translate those win32 sequences into `INPUT_RECORD`s. When
conpty[1] writes these to its buffer, it will translate the `INPUT_RECORD`s
into VT sequences for the `win32-input-mode`. This is because it believes the
client (in this case, the conpty[2] running attached to `wsl`) wants
`win32-input-mode`.
* When WSL reads the input, it'll read (using `ReadConsoleInput`) a stream of
`INPUT_RECORD`s that contain only character information, which it will then
use to pass a stream of characters to conpty[2].
* Conpty[2] will get those sequences, and will translate those win32 sequences
into `INPUT_RECORD`s
* When `cmd.exe` reads the input, they'll receive the full `INPUT_RECORD`s
they're expecting
## UI/UX Design
This is not a user-facing feature.
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
_(no change expected)_
### Security
_(no change expected)_
### Reliability
_(no change expected)_
### Compatibility
This isn't expected to break any existing scenarios. The information that we're
passing to conpty from the Terminal should strictly have _more_ information in
them than they used to. Conhost was already capable of translating
`INPUT_RECORD`s back into VT sequences, so this should work the same as before.
There's some hypothetical future where the Terminal isn't connected to conpty.
In that future, the Terminal will still be able to work correctly, even with
this ConPTY change. The Terminal will only switch into sending
`win32-input-mode` sequences when _conpty asks for them_. Otherwise, the
Terminal will still behave like a normal terminal emulator.
#### Terminals that don't support `?9001h`
Traditionally, whenever a terminal emulator doesn't understand a particular VT
sequence, they simply ignore the unknown sequence. This assumption is being
relied upon heavily, as ConPTY will _always_ emit a `^[[?9001h` on
initialization, to request `win32-input-mode`.
#### SCO Compatibility
As mentioned above, the `_` character is used as a terminator for the [SCO input
sequence](https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/chapter6.html) for
<kbd>Ctrl+Shift+F10</kbd>. This conflict would be a problem if a hypothetical
terminal was connected to conpty that sent input to conpty in SCO format.
However, if that terminal was only sending input to conpty in SCO mode, it would
have much worse problems than just <kbd>Ctrl+Shift+F10</kbd> not working. If we
did want to support SCO mode in the future, I'd even go so far as to say we
could maybe treat a `win32-input-mode` sequence with no params as
<kbd>Ctrl+Shift+F10</kbd>, considering that `KEY_EVENT_RECORD{0}` isn't really
valid anyways.
#### Remoting `INPUT_RECORD`s
A potential area of concern is the fact that VT sequences are often used to
remote input from one machine to another. For example, a terminal might be
running on machine A, and the conpty at the end of the pipe (which is running
the client application) might be running on another machine B.
If these two machines have different keyboard layouts, then it's possible that
the `INPUT_RECORD`s synthesized by the terminal on machine A won't really be
valid on machine B. It's possible that machine B has a different mapping of scan
codes \<-> characters. A client that's running on machine B that uses win32 APIs
to try and infer the vkey, scancode, or character from the other information in
the `INPUT_RECORD` might end up synthesizing the wrong values.
At the time of writing, we're not really sure what a good solution to this
problem would be. Client applications that use `win32-input-mode` should be
aware of this, and be written with the understanding that these values are
coming from the terminal's machine, which might not necessarily be the local
machine.
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
_(no change expected)_
## Potential Issues
_(no change expected)_
## Future considerations
* We could also hypothetically use this same mechanism to send Win32-like mouse
events to conpty, since similar to VT keyboard events, VT mouse events don't
have the same fidelity that Win32 mouse events do.
- We could enable this with a different terminating character, to identify
which type of `INPUT_RECORD` event we're encoding.
* Client applications that want to be able to read full Win32 keyboard input
from `conhost` _using VT_ will also be able to use `^[[?9001h` to do this. If
they emit `^[[?9001h`, then conhost will switch itself into
`win32-input-mode`, and the client will read `win32-input-mode` encoded
sequences as input. This could enable other cross-platform applications to
also use win32-like input in the future.
## Options Considered
_disclaimer: these notes are verbatim from my research notes in [#4999]_.
### Create our own format for `INPUT_RECORD`s
* If we wanted to do this, then we'd probably want to have the Terminal only
send input as this format, and not use the existing translator to synthesize
VT sequences
- Consider sending a ctrl down, '^A', ctrl up. We wouldn't want to send this
as three sequences, because conpty will take the '^A' and synthesize
_another_ ctrl down, ctrl up pair.
* With conpty passthrough mode, we'd still need the `InputStateMachineEngine`
to convert these sequences into INPUT_RECORDs to translate back to VT
* Wouldn't really expect client apps to ever _need_ this format, but it could
always be possible for them to need it in the future.
#### Pros:
* Definitely gets us all the information that we need.
* Can handle solo modifiers
* Can handle keydown and keyup separately
* We can make the sequence however we want to parse it.
#### Cons:
* No reference implementation, so we'd be flying blind
* We'd be defining our own VT sequences for these, which we've never done
before. This was _inevitable_, however, this is still the first time we'd be
doing this.
* By having the Terminal send all input as _this protocol_, VT Input passthrough
to apps that want VT input won't work anymore for the Terminal. That's _okay_
### kitty extension
[Reference](https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/protocol-extensions.html#keyboard-handling)
#### Pros:
* Not terribly difficult to decode
* Unique from anything else we'd be processing, as it's an APC sequence
(`\x1b_`)
* From their docs:
> All printable key presses without modifier keys are sent
just as in the normal mode. ... For non printable keys and key combinations
including one or more modifiers, an escape sequence encoding the key event is
sent
- I think I like this. ASCII and other keyboard layout chars (things that would
hit `SendChar`) would still just come through as the normal char.
#### Cons:
* Their encoding table is _odd_. [Look at
this](https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/key-encoding.html). What order is that
in? Obviously the first column is sorted alphabetically, but the mapping of
key->char is in a certainly hard to decipher order.
* I can't get it working locally, so hard to test 😐
* They do declare the `fullkbd` terminfo capability to identify that they
support this mode, but I'm not sure anyone else uses it.
- I'm also not sure that any _client_ apps are reading this currently.
* This isn't designed to be full `KEY_EVENT`s - where would we put the scancode
(for apps that think that's important)?
- We'd have to extend this protocol _anyways_
### `xterm` "Set key modifier options"
Notably looking at
[`modifyOtherKeys`](https://invisible-island.net/xterm/manpage/xterm.html#VT100-Widget-Resources:modifyOtherKeys).
#### Pros:
* `xterm` implements this so there's a reference implementation
* relatively easy to parse these sequences. `CSI 27 ; <modifiers> ; <key> ~`
#### Cons:
* Only sends the sequence on key-up
* Doesn't send modifiers all on their own
### `DECPCTERM`
[VT100.net doc](https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/DECPCTERM.html)
#### Pros:
* Enables us to send key-down and key-up keys independently
* Enables us to send modifiers on their own
* Part of the VT 510 standard
#### Cons:
* neither `xterm` nor `gnome-terminal` (VTE) seem to implement this. I'm not
sure if anyone's got a reference implementation for us to work with.
* Unsure how this would work with other keyboard layouts
- [this doc](https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/chapter8.html#S8.13) seems to
list the key-down/up codes for all the en-us keyboard keys, but the
scancodes for these are different for up and down. That would seem to
imply we couldn't just shove the Win32 scancode in those bits
### `DECKPM`, `DECSMKR`
[DECKPM](https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/DECKPM.html)
[DECSMKR](https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/DECSMKR.html)
[DECEKBD](https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/DECEKBD.html)
#### Pros:
* Enables us to send key-down and key-up keys independently
* Enables us to send modifiers on their own
* Part of the VT 510 standard
#### Cons:
* neither `xterm` nor `gnome-terminal` (VTE) seem to implement this. I'm not
sure if anyone's got a reference implementation for us to work with.
* not sure that "a three-character ISO key position name, for example C01" is
super compatible with our Win32 VKEYs.
### `libtickit` encoding
[Source](http://www.leonerd.org.uk/hacks/fixterms)
#### Pros:
* Simple encoding scheme
#### Cons:
* Doesn't differentiate between keydowns and keyups
* Unsure who implements this - not extensively investigated
## Resources
* The initial discussion for this topic was done in [#879], and much of the
research of available options is also available as a discussion in [#4999].
* [Why Is It so Hard to Detect Keyup Event on Linux?](https://blog.robertelder.org/detect-keyup-event-linux-terminal/)
- and the [HackerNews discussion](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19012132)
* [ConEmu specific OSCs](https://conemu.github.io/en/AnsiEscapeCodes.html#ConEmu_specific_OSC)
* [iterm2 specific sequences](https://www.iterm2.com/documentation-escape-codes.html)
* [terminal-wg draft list of OSCs](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/terminal-wg/specifications/-/issues/10)
<!-- Footnotes -->
[#530]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/530
[#879]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/879
[#1119]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1119
[#1694]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1694
[#2865]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2865
[#3079]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/3079
[#3483]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/3483
[#3608]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/3608
[#4334]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4334
[#4446]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4446
[#4999]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4999
[`INPUT_RECORD`]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/input-record-str
["full mode"]: https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/protocol-extensions.html#keyboard-handling

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---
author: Carlos Zamora @carlos-zamora
created on: 2020-07-10
last updated: 2020-07-10
issue id: [#885](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/885)
---
# Spec Title
## Abstract
This spec proposes a major refactor and repurposing of the TerminalSettings project. TerminalSettings would
be responsible for exposing, serializing, and deserializing settings as WinRT objects for Windows Terminal. In
doing so, Terminal's settings model is accessible as WinRT objects to existing components like TerminalApp,
TerminalControl, and TerminalCore. Additionally, Terminal Settings can be used by the Settings UI or
Shell Extensions to modify or reference Terminal's settings respectively.
## Inspiration
The main driver for this change is the Settings UI. The Settings UI will need to read and modify Terminal Settings.
At the time of writing this spec, the Terminal's settings are serialized as objects in the TerminalApp project.
To access these objects, the Settings UI would need to be a part of TerminalApp too, making it more bloated.
## Solution Design
The existing TerminalSettings project will be repurposed and renamed to be TerminalSettingsModel.
This project is responsible for the serialization, deserialization, and exposure of Windows Terminal's
settings. It will host a variety of WinRT settings objects within the `Microsoft.Terminal.Settings.Model`
namespace.
### Terminal Settings Model: Objects and Projections
The TerminalSettingsModel project will include the following WinRT objects (as well as various others):
- GlobalAppSettings: global settings that generally only affect TerminalApp
- Profile: profile-level settings
- ColorScheme: the color table used for a terminal instance
- AppKeyBindings: the key bindings to invoke actions
- Command: actions identified by a string (used in Command Palette)
- AppSettings: a top-level container and representation of Windows Terminal settings (formerly CascadiaSettings)
NOTE: All of these objects already exist in TerminalApp. The work to be done mainly
includes transforming them into WinRT objects and moving them out of the TerminalApp project.
Additionally, this refactor will expose these settings objects as observable WinRT types.
This allows for other components to subscribe to changes to the settings. A particular example of this
being used will be an embedded TermControl in the upcoming Settings UI previewing changes to the color
scheme.
Adjacent to the introduction of `AppSettings`, `IControlSettings` and `ICoreSettings` will be moved
to the `Microsoft.Terminal.TerminalControl` namespace. This allows for a better consumption of the
settings model that is covered later in the (Consumption section)[#terminal-settings-model:-consumption].
### Terminal Settings Model: Serialization and Deserialization
Introducing these `Microsoft.Terminal.Settings.Model` WinRT objects also allow the serialization and deserialization
logic from TerminalApp to be moved to TerminalSettings. `JsonUtils` introduces several quick and easy methods
for setting serialization. This will be moved into the `Microsoft.Terminal.Settings.Model` namespace too.
Deserialization will be an extension of the existing `JsonUtils` `ConversionTrait` struct template. `ConversionTrait`
already includes `FromJson` and `CanConvert`. Deserialization would be handled via the introduction of a `ToJson` function.
### Interacting with the Terminal Settings Model
Separate projects can construct an `AppSettings` to extract data, subscribe to changes, and commit changes
to the Terminal's settings. Today, Windows Terminal uses the settings.json file to load the user's preferences.
This process is a part of the `LoadAll()` function call, which constructs and returns an `AppSettings`
from defaults.json and settings.json.
Introducing the following `AppSettings` constructor will let users construct a settings object
from a different file path.
```c++
runtimeclass AppSettings
{
// Create an AppSettings based on the defaults.json file data
// and layer the settings file at "path" onto it
AppSettings(String path);
}
```
Today, the defaults.json text is injected directly as a string to improve performance. This will
be unchanged. The `path` parameter simply dictates where settings.json is located.
#### TerminalApp: Loading and Reloading Changes
TerminalApp will construct and reference an `AppSettings settings` as follows:
- TerminalApp will have a global reference to the "settings.json" filepath
- construct an `AppSettings` using `AppSettings("C:\path\to\settings.json")`. This builds an `AppSettings`
from the "defaults.json" file data (which is already compiled as a string literal)
and layers the settings.json data on top of it.
When TerminalApp detects a change to "settings.json", it'll repeat the steps above. We could cache the result from
constructing an `AppSettings` from "defaults.json" data to improve performance, if so desired.
#### TerminalControl: Acquiring and Applying the Settings
At the time of writing this spec, TerminalApp constructs `TerminalControl.TerminalSettings` WinRT objects
to expose `IControlSettings` and `ICoreSettings` to any hosted terminals. In moving `IControlSettings`
and `ICoreSettings` down to the TerminalControl layer, TerminalApp can now have better control over
how to expose relevant settings to a TerminalControl instance.
`TerminalSettings` (which implements `IControlSettings` and `ICoreSettings`) will be moved to
TerminalApp and act as a bridge connecting `AppSettings` to the TermControl. It will operate
very similarly as it does today. On construction of the TermControl or hot-reload,
`TerminalSettings` will be constructed by copying the relevant values of `AppSettings`.
Then, it will be passed to TermControl (and TermCore by extension).
To accomplish this new distribution of responsibilities, `CascadiaSettings::BuildSettings()` will be
moved to TerminalApp's AppLogic; it will use its reference of `AppSettings`
## UI/UX Design
N/A
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
N/A
### Security
N/A
### Reliability
N/A
### Compatibility
N/A
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
## Potential Issues
### Deserialization
After deserializing the settings, injecting the new json into settings.json
should not remove the existing comments or formatting.
The deserialization process takes place right after comparing the `settingsSource` and `settingsClone` objects.
For each setting found in the diff, we go to the relevant part of the JSON and see if the key is already there.
If it is, we update the value to be the one from `settingsClone`. Otherwise, we append the key/value pair
at the end of the section (much like we do with dynamic profiles in `profiles`).
## Future considerations
### TerminalSettings: passing by reference
`TermApp` synthesizes a `TerminalSettings` by copying the relevant values of `AppSettings`,
then giving it to a Terminal Control. Some visual keybindings and interactions like ctrl+scroll
and ctrl+shift+scroll to change the font size and acrylic opacity operate by directly modifying
the value of the instantiated `TerminalSettings`. However, when a settings reload occurs,
these instanced changes are lost.
`TerminalSettings` can be used as a WinRT object that references (instead of copies) the relevant
values of `AppSettings`. This would prevent those instanced changes from being lost on a settings
reload.
Since previewing commands like `setColorScheme` would require a clone of the existing `TerminalSettings`,
a `Clone` API can be added on `TerminalSettings` to accomplish that. When passing by value,
`TerminalSettings` can just overwrite the existing property (i.e.: color scheme). When passing
by reference, a slightly more complex mechanism is required to override the value.
Now, instead of overwriting the value, we need to override the reference to a constant value
(i.e.: `snapOnInput=true`) or a referenced value (i.e.: `colorScheme`).
### Layering Additional Settings
As we begin to introduce more sources that affect the settings (via extensions or themes),
we can introduce a `LayerSettings(String path)`. This layers the new settings file
onto the existing `AppSettings`. This is already done internally, we would just expose
it via C++/WinRT.
```c++
runtimeclass AppSettings
{
// Load a settings file, and layer those changes on top of the existing AppSettings
void LayerSettings(String path);
}
```
### Settings UI: Modifying and Applying the Settings (DRAFT)
```c++
runtimeclass AppSettings
{
// Create a copy of the existing AppSettings
AppSettings Clone();
// Compares object to "source" and applies changes to
// the settings file at "outPath"
void Save(String outPath);
}
```
The Settings UI will also have a reference to the `AppSettings settings` from TerminalApp
as `settingsSource`. When the Settings UI is opened up, the Settings UI will also have its own `AppSettings settingsClone`
that is a clone of TerminalApp's `AppSettings`.
```c++
settingsClone = settingsSource.Clone()
```
As the user navigates the Settings UI, the relevant contents of `settingsClone` will be retrieved and presented.
As the user makes changes to the Settings UI, XAML will update `settingsClone` using XAML data binding.
When the user saves/applies the changes in the XAML, `settingsClone.Save("settings.json")` is called;
this compares the changes between `settingsClone` and `settingsSource`, then injects the changes (if any) to `settings.json`.
As mentioned earlier, TerminalApp detects a change to "settings.json" to update its `AppSettings`.
Since the above triggers a change to `settings.json`, TerminalApp will also update itself. When
something like this occurs, `settingsSource` will automatically be updated too.
In the case that a user is simultaneously updating the settings file directly and the Settings UI,
`settingsSource` and `settingsClone` can be compared to ensure that the Settings UI, the TerminalApp,
and the settings files are all in sync.
**NOTE:** In the event that the user would want to export their current configuration, `Save`
can be used to export the changes to a new file.
## Resources
- [Preview Commands](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/6689)
- [New JSON Utils](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/6590)
- [Spec: Settings UI](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/6720)

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---
author: Carlos Zamora @carlos-zamora
created on: 2019-08-22
last updated: 2020-07-06
issue id: 980
---
# Snap On Output
## Abstract
The goal of this change is to determine the Terminal's scroll response to newly generated output.
Currently, new output causes the Terminal to always scroll to it. Some users want to be able to scroll through the buffer without interruptions.
## Inspiration
In ConHost, a selection causes the active process to be completely paused. When the selection is removed, the process continues.
Typical Unix terminals work differently. Rather than disabling the output, they disable the automatic scrolling. This allows the user to continue to see more output by choice.
## Solution Design
By default, the viewport will scroll to new output if the following conditions are met:
- no selection is active
- the viewport is at the "virtual bottom" (the bottom of the scroll history)
This behavior will not be configurable. If the user wants the viewport to stop autoscrolling, the user will simply create a selection or scroll any distance above the virtual bottom. Conversely, if the user wants the viewport to automatically scroll, the user must scroll to the bottom. Scrolling to the bottom is most easily achieved using the `snapOnInput` functionality.
Alternative solutions were considered and are recorded below. These solutions may be revisited if users desire an additional level of configurability.
Researching other terminal emulators has shown that this behavior is not configurable.
## Alternative Solutions
### Solution 1: `snapOnOutput` profile setting - enum flags
`SnapOnOutput` will be a profile-level `ICoreSettings` setting of type enum or enum array. It can be set to one or multiple of the following values:
- `never`: new output does not cause the viewport to update to the bottom of the scroll region
- `noSelection`: new output causes the viewport to update to the bottom of the scroll region **IF** no selection is active
- `atBottom`: new output causes the viewport to update **IF** the viewport is already at the virtual bottom
- `always`: new output causes the viewport to update to the bottom of the scroll region
The `TerminalCore` is responsible for moving the viewport on a scroll event. All of the logic for this feature should be handled here.
A new private enum array `_snapOnOutput` will be introduced to save which of these settings are included. The `_NotifyScrollEvent()` calls (and nearby code) will be surrounded by conditional checks for the enums above. This allows it to be used to determine if the viewport should update given a specific situation.
The `snapOnOutput` setting is introduced as a profile setting to match `snapOnInput`.
The default `snapOnOutput` value will be `[ "noSelection", "atBottom" ]`.
When an enum array is defined in the settings, it will be interpreted using boolean logic. The following scenarios will be invalid using the FlagMapper:
- `[ "always", "atBottom" ]`
- `[ "never", "atBottom" ]`
### Solution 2: `scrollLock` keybinding action
A `scrollLock` keybinding action would toggle automatically scrolling to new output.
**NOTE**: This can be easily confused with the <kbd>ScrollLock</kbd> key. Researching the use of the <kbd>ScrollLock</kbd> key has shown that programs rarely use this key. In most apps, pressing the <kbd>ScrollLock</kbd> key does not actually prevent scrolling the application. Additionally, finding a way to bing the `scrollLock` action to the <kbd>ScrollLock</kbd> key would be difficult. A physical keyboard may not necessarily have a <kbd>ScrollLock</kbd> key. Also, we would have to poll for the internal state of "is the scroll lock key enabled", which may change while the user is not necessarily using Terminal.
The introduction of a `scrollLock` action would require a visual indicator for the user to know when scrolling has been disabled. However, this introduces a number of problems:
- if the indicator is persistent, it may block the view
- if the indicator is not persistent, the user may be unaware of being in a state where scrolling doesn't work properly
**Additionally relevant research**:
- In Unix consoles, <kbd>ctrl+s</kbd> and <kbd>ctrl+q</kbd> freeze and unfreeze output respectively. However, this is a feature that is implemented outside of the scope for Terminal. Other shells like PowerShell do not have this feature, for example. There, <kbd>ctrl+s</kbd> does a 'Forward Search History' instead.
- Additionally, there is a <kbd>Pause</kbd> key that pauses the output in the conhost console. Pressing any other key will resume scrolling.
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
N/A
### Security
N/A
### Reliability
N/A
### Compatibility
N/A
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
N/A
## Potential Issues
### Circling the buffer
If the text buffer fills up, the text buffer begins 'circling'. This means that new output shifts lines of the buffer up to make space. In a case like this, if `snapOnOutput` is set to `never`, the viewport should actually scroll up to keep the same content on the viewport.
In the event that the buffer is circling and the viewport has been moved to the top of the buffer, that content of the buffer is now lost (as the 'Infinite Scrollback' feature does not exist or is disabled). At that point, the viewport will remain at the top of the buffer and the new output will push old output out of the buffer.
### Infinite Scrollback
See **Future considerations** > **Infinite Scrollback**.
## Future considerations
### Extensibility
The introduction of `enum SnapOnOutput` allows for this feature to be enabled/disabled in more complex scenarios. A potential extension would be to introduce a new UI element or keybinding to toggle this feature.
### Infinite Scrollback
At the time of introducing this, the infinite scrollback feature is not supported. This means that the buffer saves the history up to the `historySize` amount of lines. When infinite scrollback is introduced, the buffer needs to change its own contents to allow the user to scroll beyond the `historySize`. With infinite scrollback enabled and the mutable viewport **NOT** snapping to new output, the `TerminalCore` needs to keep track of...
- what contents are currently visible to the user (in the current location of the mutable viewport)
- how to respond to a user's action of changing the location of the mutable viewport (i.e.: snapOnInput, scroll up/down)
### Private Mode Escape Sequences
There are a couple of private mode escape sequences that some terminals use to control this kind of thing. DECSET 1010, for example, snaps the viewport to the bottom on output, whereas DECSET 1011 spans the viewport to the bottom on a keypress.
DECSET 1010 should set the `SnapOnOutput` value via a Terminal API.
DECSET 1011 should set the `SnapOnInput` value via a Terminal API.
## Resources
[GH#980](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/980)
[DECSET 1010](https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html#h4-Functions-using-CSI-_-ordered-by-the-final-character-lparen-s-rparen:CSI-?-Pm-h:Ps-=-1-0-1-0.1F79)
[DECSET 1011](https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html#h4-Functions-using-CSI-_-ordered-by-the-final-character-lparen-s-rparen:CSI-?-Pm-h:Ps-=-1-0-1-1.1F7A)

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---
author: Michael Niksa @miniksa/miniksa@microsoft.com
created on: 2019-07-24
last updated: 2019-07-24
issue id: #1256
---
# Tab Tearoff/Merge & Default App IPC
## Abstract
This spec describes the sort of interprocess communications that will be required to support features like tab tearoff and merge. It goes through some of the considerations that became apparent when I tried to prototype passing connections between `conhost` and `wt`.
## Inspiration
Two main drivers:
1. We want the ability to tear off a tab from one Windows Terminal instance and send it to another Windows Terminal instance
2. We want the ability for a launch of a command-line application to trigger a hosting environment that isn't the stock in-box `conhost.exe`.
Both of these concerns will require there to exist some sort of interprocess communication manager that can send/receive the system handles representing connections between client applications and the hosting environment.
I spent some time during the Microsoft Hackathon in July 2019 investigating these avenues with a branch I pushed and linked at the bottom. The work resulted in me finding more questions than answers and ultimately deciding that a Hackathon is good enough for exploration of the mechanisms and ideas behind this, but not a good time for a full implementation.
## Solution Design
### Common Pieces
There are several common pieces needed for both the tab tear-off scenario and the default application scenario.
#### Manager
We need some sort of server/manager code that sits there waiting for connections from `wt.exe` processes and potentially `conhost.exe` processes such that it can broker a connection between the processes. It either needs to run in its own process or it needs to run in one of the existing `wt.exe`s that is chosen as the primary manager at the time. It should create communication channels and a global mutex at the time of creation.
All other `wt.exe` processes starting after the primary should detect the existence of the server manager process and wait on the mutex handle. When the primary disappears, the OS scheduler should choose one of the others to wake up first on the mutex. It can take the lock and then set up the primary management channel.
Alternatively, if the manager process is completely isolated and we expect all `wt.exe`s to have to remain connected at all times, we can make it such that when the connections are broken between the individual processes and the manager that they all shut down. I would prefer that it is resilient (the previous option) over this one, but browsers must have a good reason for preferring this way.
I attempted one particular way in a prototype of communicating between processes by setting up a Multithreaded Pipe Server using a Message-type configuration. This is visible in the branch I linked at the bottom. However, ultimately I think we would want to formalize around something more structured, tested, and inherently secured like a COM server interface.
#### Connection details
There are several parameters to a connection and several different modes. In short, they summarize to the ability to pass kernel handles between two processes and/or the ability to pass arbitrary length structured information about paths and settings. Both tab tear off and default application will likely need both functionalities.
##### Fresh Start
For an application that is being freshly started, the information required to begin the session is one of three things:
1. A server (and maybe reference) handle that describes the driver connection between the console server and the command-line client process. A `conhost.exe` can wrap this and turn it into a PTY. This may also contain LNK file (shortcut file) preferences for the running session.
1. A command-line string and working directory that describes which command-line client process we want to start. A `conhost.exe` can start this up and create the server and reference handles along the way and then turn it into a PTY.
1. A PTY session with its read, write, and signal handles.
When transiting a connection, we need to be aware of all three of these modes and relay them to the destination `wt.exe`.
For system handles, we can use the manager to broker a request to the destination process to find its `PID` and tell the source process. We can then use the `PID` with the `OpenProcess` method and the `PROCESS_DUP_HANDLE` right to get a handle to `DuplicateHandle` any of the above handle types into the destination process. The act of opening and duplicating the handles already requires the OS to check our access tokens and rights to interfere with another process, so that should automatically handle some level of the security checking for us.
For command-line string and working directory, we can pass all of this information along to the destination `wt.exe` and let it attempt to start a new ConPTY normally as if someone had chosen to start an option from the dropdown menu. A minor trick here is that we may need to attempt to match the command-line string with one of the user profiles to line up the icon and user-preferences for how the session should launch.
Lastly, for things started from an LNK, a user might expect that a window launched inside `wt.exe` from an old shortcut that they had would still apply even if that shortcut's properties technically apply to `conhost.exe` preferences and not to `wt.exe` preferences. The behavior here would likely to be to transit the LNK file information along to the `wt.exe` process by the same mechanism as a command-line string or working directory and let `wt.exe` use the shortcut parsing shared libraries to extract this information and migrate it into a `Settings` preference. Whether we would store that `Settings` preference or not for future use in the drop down might be an option or a prompt.
##### Already Running
For an application that is already running, we will need to send several pieces of information to successfully migrate to a new tab location:
1. The ConPTY handles for read, write, and signal
1. The scroll-back history that is stored inside `wt.exe` but isn't actually a part of what the underlying PTY-mode `conhost.exe` re-renders at any given time
1. The user preferences and session information related to `Settings`.
We would send all of this over to the destination by whatever IPC mechanism and then let it stand up a new tab with all of the same parameters as the tab on the other end.
**ALTERNATIVELY**
If we move everything to an isolated process model where the individual tabs/panes have a process and their UI is hosted in another frame/shell process and then there's a manager process, we will presumably already have to architect a solution that allows the UIs to be remoted onto other interfaces (Component UI?). If this is true, then all we need to relay for an active session is the information required to redirect the drawing/input targets for a given tab/pane to a different shell. This may ultimately be easier and more reliable than moving and rebuilding all the pieces of what fundamentally makes a session to the other side.
### Separate Pieces
#### For Tab Tear-off
We add a handler to the on-drag for the tab bar. We also likely need to implement a drag and drop handler. Drag and drop handlers use OLE (COM) so this might be another reason why we should implement the entire manager as COM. Note, I have never used this before so this is a theoretical low-knowledge design that would have to be explored...
Presumably the tab control from WinUI will update to support reordering the tabs through its own drag/drop. But we would likely want to create some sort of drag source with the session GUID when a drag operation starts.
Then we can let the OS handle the drop operation with the session GUID information. If the drop handler drops onto another wt.exe, it can use the session GUID in the drop payload in order to convey connection information between the processes. If it drops somewhere else, presumably we can be made aware of that in the source of the drag/drop operation and instead spawn a new `wt.exe` with arguments that specify that it should start up doing the "drop" portion of the operation to the session GUID with the manager instead of launching the default tab.
#### For Default Application
For default application launches, `conhost.exe` will have to attempt to transfer the incoming connection to the registered terminal handler instead of launching its own UI window.
If the registered handler fails to start the connection, there is no registered handler, or any part of this mechanism fails. The `conhost.exe` needs to fall back to doing whatever it would have done prior to this development (launching a window if necessary, being hidden, etc.)
##### Interactive vs. Not
We would have to be able to detect the difference between an interactive and non-interactive mode here.
- Interactive is defined as the end-user is attempting to launch a command-line application with a visible window to see the output and enter input.
- Non-interactive is defined as tools, utilities, and services attempting to launch a command-line application with no visible window (and possibly some redirected handles).
We do not want to capture non-interactive sessions as compilers, scripts, and utilities run command-line tools all the time. These should not trigger the overhead of being transitioned into the terminal as they will not need output or display.
Additionally, we may need to identify ConPTYs being started and ensure that they don't accidentally attempt to hand off in an infinite loop.
The biggest trick here is that we don't know whether it is going to be interactive or not until we begin to accept the connection from the server handle. We have two choices here:
##### Inbox conhost handles it
The inbox `conhost.exe` can just accept the connection from the server handle, assure itself that a `wt.exe` could take over the UI hosting of the session, and then switch itself into `ConPTY` mode and give those handles over to `wt.exe` and remain invisible in the background in PTY mode (much the same as if `wt.exe` had started the connection itself).
The upside here is that most of the startup connection flow happens normally, the `conhost.exe` that was given the server handle is the one that will continue to service it for the lifetime of the command-line application session. I can then discard any concerns about how the driver reacts and how the applications grovel for the relationship between processes as it will be normal.
The downside here is that launching command-line applications from shortcuts, the shell, or the run box (as is what triggers the default application scenario) will be using an old version of the PTY. It is possible and even probable that we will make improvements to the PTY that we would want to leverage if they're on the system already inside the app package. However, if we try to transit the server connection to the PTY in the package, we will have to deal with:
1. Potentially leaving the original conhost.exe open until the other one exits in case someone is waiting on the process
1. Coming up with some sort of dance to have the delegated PTY conhost inside the package determine the interactivity on starting the connection **OR** having the outside conhost start the connection and passing the connection off part way through if it's interactive **OR** something of that ilk.
##### Conhost in the Terminal package handles it
We could just send the server connection from the `conhost.exe` in System32 into the one inside the package and let it deal with it. We can connect to the broker and pass along the server handle and let `wt.exe` create a `conhost.exe` in PTY mode with that specific server handle.
The upsides/downsides here are exactly opposite of those above, so I won't restate.
##### Making default app work on current and downlevel OS
There's a few areas to study here.
1. Replacing conhost.exe in system32 at install time
- The OS (via the code for `ConsoleInitialize` inside `kernelbase.dll`) will launch `C:\windows\system32\conhost.exe` to start a default application session with the server handle. We can technically replace this binary in `system32` with an `OpenConsole.exe` named `conhost.exe` to make newer code run on older OS (presuming that we have the CRTs installed, build against the in-OS-CRT, and otherwise have conditional feature detection properly performed for all APIs/references not accessible downlevel). This is how we test/develop locally inside Windows without a full nightly build, so we know it works to some degree. Replacing a binary in `system32` is a bit of a problem, though, because the OS actively works to defend against this through ACLs (Windows File Protection which detected and restored changes here is gone, I believe). Additionally, it works for us because we're using internal builds and signing our binaries with test certificates for which our machines have the root certificate installed. Not going to cut it outside. We probably also can't sign it officially with the app signing mechanism and have it work because I'm not sure the root certificates for app signing will be trusted the same way as the certificates for OS signing. Also, we can't build outside of Windows against the in-box CRT. So we'd have to have the MSVCRT redist, which is also gross.
2. Updating kernelbase.dll to look up the launch preference and/or to launch a console host via a protocol handler
- To make this work anywhere but the most recent OS build, we'd have to service downlevel. Given `kernelbase.dll` is fundamental to literally everything, there's virtually no chance that we would be allowed to service it backwards in time for the sake of adding a feature. It's too risky by any stretch of the imagination. It's even risky to change `kernelbase.dll` for an upcoming release edition given how fundamental it is. End of thought experiment.
3. Updating conhost.exe to look up the launch preference and/or to launch another console host via a protocol handler
- This would allow the `C:\windows\system32\conhost.exe` to effectively delegate the session to another `conhost.exe` that is hopefully newer than the inbox one. Given that the driver protocol in the box doesn't change and hasn't changed and we don't intend to change it, the forward/backward compatibility story is great here. Additionally, if for whatever reason the delegated `conhost.exe` fails to launch, we can just fall back and launch the old one like we would have prior to the change. It is significantly more likely, but still challenging, to argue for servicing `conhost.exe` back several versions in Windows to make this light up better for all folks. It might be especially more possible if it is a very targeted code snippet that can drop in to all the old versions of the `conhost.exe` code. We would still have the argument about spending resources developing for OS versions that are supposed to be dropped in favor of latest, but it's still a lesser argument than upending all of `kernelbase.dll`.
- A protocol handler is also well understood and relatively well handled/tested in Windows. Old apps can handle protocols. New apps can handle protocols. Protocol handlers can take arguments. We don't have to lean on any other team to get them to help change the way the rest of the OS works.
#### Communicating the launch
For the parameters passing, I see a few options:
1. `conhost.exe` can look up the package registration for `wt.exe` and call an entrypoint with arguments. This could be adapted to instead look up which package is registered as the default one instead of `wt.exe` for third party hosts. We would have to build provisions into the OS to select this, or use some sort of publically documented registry key mechanism. Somewhat gross.
1. `conhost.exe` can call the execution alias with parameters. WSL distro launchers use this.
1. We can define a protocol handler for these sorts of connections and let `wt.exe` register for it. Protocol handlers are already well supported and understood both by classic applications and by packaged/modern applications on Windows. They must have provisions to communicate at least some semblance of argument data as well. This is the route I'd probably prefer. `ms-term://incoming/<session-id>` or something like that. The receiving `wt.exe` can contact the manager process (or set one up if it is the first) and negotiate receiving the session that was specified into a new tab.
## UI/UX Design
### For Tab Tear-off
#### Ideal World
The UX would be just as one might expect from a browser application.
- Mouse down and drag on a tab should provide some visual indication that it is being dragged.
- Dragging left/right should provide a visual indicator of the tabs reordering on the bar and otherwise not involve the IPC manager service.
- Dragging up/down to break free from the tab bar should launch a new instance of `wt.exe` passing in the state of the dragging tab as the initial launch point (ignoring other default launch aspects). The drag/mouse-down would be passed to that new instance which would chase the mouse.
- Continuing to drag the loose tab onto the tab bar of another running instance of `wt.exe` would merge the tab with that copy of the application. The interim new/loose frame instance of `wt.exe` would close when it transferred out the last tab to the drop location.
#### Simplified V1
To simplify this for a first iteration, we could just make it so the transfer does not happen live.
- Mouse down and drag on a tab should provide a visual indication that it is being dragged by changing the cursor (or something of that ilk)
- Nothing would actually happen in terms of transitioning the tab until it is released
- If released onto the same `wt.exe` instance in a different spot on the tab bar, we reorder the tabs in the tab control
- If released onto a different `wt.exe` instance, we relay the communications channel and details through the IPC manager to the other instance. It opens the tab on the destination instance; we close the tab on the source instance.
- If released onto anything that isn't a `wt.exe` instance, we create a new `wt.exe` instance and send in the connection as the default startup parameter.
#### Component UI
It is also theoretically possible that if we could find a Component UI style solution (where the tab/panes live in their own process and just remote the UI/input into the shell) that it would be easy and even trivial to change out which shell/frame host is holding that element at any given time.
### For Default Application
The UX would make it look exactly like the user had started `wt.exe` from a shortcut or launch tile, but would launch the first tab differently than the defaults.
#### No WT already started
If no `wt.exe` is already started, the `conhost.exe` triggered by the system to host the client application would find the installed `wt.exe` package and launch it with parameters to use as its first connection (in lieu of launching the default tab). `conhost.exe` wouldn't show a window, it would drop into ConPTY mode and only the new `wt.exe` and its tab would be visible.
#### WT already started
If a `wt.exe` is already started, `conhost.exe` would find the running instance and just add a new tab at the end of the tab bar by the same mechanism.
#### Multiple WTs already started
If multiple `wt.exe`s are already started, `conhost.exe` would have to find the foreground one, the active one, or the primary/manager one and send the tab there. I'm not sure how other tabbing things to do this. We could research/study.
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
I don't believe it changes anything for accessibility. The only concern I'd have to call out is the knowledge I have that the UIA framework makes its connections and some of its logic/reasoning based on PIDs, HWNDs, and the hierarchy thereof. Playing with these might impact the ability of screen reading applications to get the UIA tree when tabs have been shuffled around.
### Security
This particular feature will have to go through a security review/audit. It is unclear what level of control we will need over the IPC communication channels. A few things come to mind:
1. We need to ensure that the mutexes/pipes/communications are restricted inside of one particular session to one particular user. If another user is also running WT in their session, it should involve a completely different manager process and system objects.
1. We MAY have to enforce a scenario where we inhibit cross-integrity-level connections from being passed around. Generally speaking, processes at a higher integrity level have the authority to perform actions on those with a lower integrity level. This means that an elevated `wt.exe` could theoretically send a tab to a standard level `wt.exe`. We may be required to inhibit/prohibit this. We may also need to have one manager per integrity level.
1. I'm not sure what sorts of ACL/DACL/SACLs we would need to apply to all the kernel objects involved.
1. My initial prototype here used message-passing type pipes with a custom rolled protocol. If I make my own protocol, it needs to be fuzzed. And I'm probably missing something. Many/most of these concerns for security are probably eliminated if we use a well-known mechanism for this sort of IPC. My thoughts go to a COM server. More complicated to implement than message pipes, but probably brings a lot of security benefits and eliminates the need to fuzz the protocol (probably).
### Reliability
In the simple implementation, it will decrease reliability. We'll be shuffling connections back and forth between application instances. By default, that's more risky than leaving things alone. The only reason it is worth it is the user experience.
We might be able to mitigate some of the reliability concerns here or even improve reliability by going a step further with the process/containerization model like browsers do and standing up each individual tab as its own process host.
```
wt.exe - Manager Mode
|- wt.exe - Frame Host Mode
| |- wt.exe - Tab Host Mode
| | |- conhost.exe - ConPTY mode
| | |- pwsh.exe - Client application
| |- wt.exe - Tab Host Mode
| |- conhost.exe - ConPTY mode
| |- cmd.exe - Client application
|- wt.exe - Frame Host Mode
|- wt.exe - Tab Host Mode
|- conhost.exe - ConPTY mode
|- pwsh.exe - Client application
```
The current structure of `wt.exe` has everything hosted within the one process. To improve reliability, we would likely have to make `wt.exe` run in three modes.
1. Manager Mode - no UI, just sits there as a broker to hold the kernel objects for a given window station/session and integrity level, accepts protocol handler routines, helps relay connections between various frame hosts when tabs move and determines where to instantiate new default-app tabs
1. Frame Host Mode - The complete outer shell of the application outside of an individual tab. Hosts the tab bar, settings drop downs, title bar, etc.
1. Tab Host Mode - The inner shell of an individual tab including the rendering area, scroll bar, inputs, etc.
1. Pane Host Mode - Now that panes are a thing, we might need to go even one level deeper. Or maybe it's just a recursion on Tab Host mode.
How these connect to each other is unexplored at this time.
### Compatibility
There are a few compatibility concerns here, primarily related to how client applications or outside utilities detect the relationship between a command-line client application and its console hosting environment.
We're well aware that the process tree/hierarchy is one of the major methods used for understanding the relationship between the client and server application. However, in order to accomplish our goals here, it is inevitable that the original hosting `conhost.exe` (either started in ConPTY mode by a `wt.exe` or started by the operating system in response to an otherwise unhosted command-line application) will become orphaned or otherwise disassociated with the UI that is actually presenting it.
It is possible (but would need to be explored) that the APIs available to us to reorder the parenting of the processes to put the `conhost.exe` as the parent of the `cmd.exe` (despite the fact that `cmd.exe` usually starts first as the default application and the `ConsoleInitialize` routines inside `kernelbase.dll` create the `conhost.exe`) could be reused here to shuffle around the parent/child relationships. However, it could also introduce new problems. One prior example was that the UIA trees for accessibility do **NOT** tolerate the shuffling of the parent child relationship because their communication channel sessions are often tied to the relationships of HWNDs and PIDs.
#### Hierarchy Example between two Terminals (tab tearoff/merge)
In the one instance, we have this process hierarchy. Two instances of Windows Terminal exist. In Terminal A, the user has started a `cmd.exe` and a `pwsh.exe` tab. In the second instance, the user has started just one `cmd.exe` tab.
```
- wt.exe (Terminal Instance A)
|- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to A
| |- cmd.exe
|- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to A
|- pwsh.exe <-- I will be dragged out
- wt.exe (Terminal Instance B)
|- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to B
|- cmd.exe
```
When the `pwsh.exe` tab is torn off from Instance A and is dropped onto Instance B, the process hierarchy doesn't actually change. The connection details, preferences, and session metadata are passed via the IPC management channels, but to an outside observer, nothing has actually changed.
```
- wt.exe (Terminal Instance A)
|- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to A
| |- cmd.exe
|- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to B
|- pwsh.exe <-- I am hosted in B but I'm parented to A
- wt.exe (Terminal Instance B)
|- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to B
|- cmd.exe
```
I don't believe there are provisions in the Windows OS to reparent applications to a different process.
Additionally, this becomes more interesting when Terminal Instance A dies and B is still running:
```
- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to B
|- pwsh.exe <-- I am hosted in B but I'm parented to A
- wt.exe (Terminal Instance B)
|- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to B
|- cmd.exe
```
When instance A dies, the `conhost.exe` that was reparented keeps running and now just appears orphaned within the process hierarchy, reporting to the top level under utilities like Process Explorer.
I believe the action plan here would be to implement what we can, observe the state of the world, and correct going forward. We don't have a solid understanding of how many client applications might be impacted by this apparent change. It also might be perfectly OK because the client applications will always remain parented to the same `conhost.exe` even if those `conhost.exe`s don't report up to the correct `wt.exe`.
It is also unclear whether someone might want to write a utility from the outside to discover this hierarchy. I would be inclined to not provide a way to do this without a strong case otherwise because attempting to understand the local machine process hierarchy is a great way to box yourself in when attempting to expand later to encompass remote connections.
#### Hierarchy Example between Conhost and a Terminal (default application)
This looks very much like the previous section where Terminal Instance B died.
```
- conhost.exe (in PTY mode) - Hosted to A
|- pwsh.exe
- wt.exe (Terminal Instance A)
```
The `conhost.exe` was started in response to a `pwsh.exe` being started with no host. It then put itself into PTY mode and launched into a connection of `wt.exe` instance A.
**ALTERNATIVELY**
```
- conhost.exe - idling
- wt.exe (Terminal Instance A)
|- conhost.exe (in PTY mode)
|- pwsh.exe
```
The `conhost.exe` at the top was launched in response to `pwsh.exe` being started with no host. It identified that `wt.exe` was running and instead shuttled the incoming connection into that `wt.exe`. `wt.exe` stood up the `conhost.exe` in PTY mode beneath itself and the client `pwsh.exe` call below that. The PTY mode `conhost.exe` uses its reparenting commands on startup to make the tree look like the above. The orphaned (originally started) `conhost.exe` waits until the connection exits before exiting itself in case someone was waiting on it.
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
This is obviously less efficient than not doing it as we have to stand up servers and protocols and handlers for shuffling things about.
But as long as we're creating threads and services that sleep most of the time and are only awakened on some kernel/system event, we shouldn't be wasting too much in terms of power and background resources.
Additionally, `wt.exe` is worse than `conhost.exe` alone in all efficiency categories simply because it not only requires more resources to display in a "pretty" manner, but it also requires a `conhost.exe` under it in PTY mode to adapt the API calls. This is generally acceptable for end users who care more about the experience than the total performance.
It is, however, not likely to be much if any worse than just choosing to use `wt.exe` anyway over `conhost.exe`.
## Potential Issues
I've listed most of the issues above in their individual sections. The primary highlights are:
1. Process tree layout - The processes in hierarchy may not make sense to someone inspecting them either visually with a tool or programmatically
1. Process and kernel object lifetime - Applications may be counting on a specific process or object lifetime in regards to their hosting window and we might be tampering with that in how we apply job objects or shuffle around ownership to make tabs happen
1. Default launch expectations - It is possible that test utilities or automation are counting on `conhost.exe` being the host application or that they're not ready to tolerate the potential for other applications to start. I think the interactive/non-interactive check mitigates this, but we'd have to remain concerned here.
1. `AttachConsole` and `DetachConsole` and `AllocConsole` - I don't have the slightest idea what happens for these APIs. We would have to explore. `AttachConsole` has restrictions based on the process hierarchy. It would likely behave in interesting ways with the strange parenting order and might be a driver to why we would have to adjust the parenting of the processes (or change the API under the hood). `DetachConsole` might create an issue where a tab disappears out of the terminal and the job object causes everything to die. `AttachConsole` wouldn't necessarily be guaranteed to go back into the same `wt.exe` or a `wt.exe` at all.
## Future considerations
This might unlock some sort of isolation for extensions as well. Extensions of some sort our on our own long term roadmap, but they're inherently risky to the stability and integrity of the application. If we have to go through a lot of gyrations to enable process containerization and an interprocess communication model for tab tear off and default application work, we might also be able to contain extensions the same way. This derives further from the idea of what browsers do.
## Resources
- [Manager Prototype](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/dev/miniksa/manager/src/types/Manager.cpp)
- [Pipe Server documentation](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/ipc/multithreaded-pipe-server)
- [OLE Drag and Drop](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/ole2/nf-ole2-registerdragdrop)
- [OpenProcess](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/processthreadsapi/nf-processthreadsapi-openprocess)
- [DuplicateHandle](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/handleapi/nf-handleapi-duplicatehandle)

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---
author: Mike Griese @zadjii-msft
created on: 2019-08-01
last updated: 2020-04-13
issue id: 2046
---
_This is a draft spec. It should be considered a work-in-progress._
# Command Palette
## Abstract
This spec covers the addition of a "command palette" to the Windows Terminal.
The Command Palette is a GUI that the user can activate to search for and
execute commands. Beneficially, the command palette allows the user to execute
commands _even if they aren't bound to a keybinding_.
## Inspiration
This feature is largely inspired by the "Command Palette" in text editors like
VsCode, Sublime Text and others.
This spec was initially drafted in [a
comment](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046#issuecomment-514219791)
in [#2046]. That was authored during the annual Microsoft Hackathon, where I
proceeded to prototype the solution. This spec is influenced by things I learned
prototyping.
## Solution Design
First off, for the sake of clarity, we'll rename the `command` of a keybinding
to `action`. This will help keep the mental model between commands and actions
clearer. When deserializing keybindings, we'll include a check for the old
`command` key to migrate it.
We'll introduce a new top-level array to the user settings, under the key
`commands`. `commands` will contain an array of commands, each with the
following schema:
```js
{
"name": string,
"action": string,
"icon": string
"args": object?,
}
```
Command names should be human-friendly names of actions, though they don't need
to necessarily be related to the action that it fires. For example, a command
with `newTab` as the action could have `"Open New Tab"` as the name.
The command will be parsed into a new class, `Command`:
```c++
class Command
{
winrt::hstring Name();
winrt::TerminalApp::ActionAndArgs ActionAndArgs();
winrt::hstring IconSource();
}
```
We'll add another structure in GlobalAppSettings to hold all these actions. It
will just be a `std::vector<Command>` in `GlobalAppSettings`.
We'll need app to be able to turn this vector into a `ListView`, or similar, so
that we can display this list of actions. Each element in the view will be
intrinsically associated with the `Command` object it's associated with. In
order to support this, we'll make `Command` a winrt type that implements
`Windows.UI.Xaml.Data.INotifyPropertyChanged`. This will let us bind the XAML
element to the winrt type.
When an element is clicked on in the list of commands, we'll raise the event
corresponding to that `ShortcutAction`. `AppKeyBindings` already does a great
job of dispatching `ShortcutActions` (and their associated arguments), so we'll
re-use that. We'll pull the basic parts of dispatching `ActionAndArgs`
callbacks into another class, `ShortcutActionDispatch`, with a single
`PerformAction(ActionAndArgs)` method (and events for each action).
`AppKeyBindings` will be initialized with a reference to the
`ShortcutActionDispatch` object, so that it can call `PerformAction` on it.
Additionally, by having a singular `ShortcutActionDispatch` instance, we won't
need to re-hook up the ShortcutAction keybindings each time we re-load the
settings.
In `App`, when someone clicks on an item in the list, we'll get the
`ActionAndArgs` associated with that list element, and call PerformAction on
the app's `ShortcutActionDispatch`. This will trigger the event handler just the
same as pressing the keybinding.
### Commands for each profile?
[#3879] Is a request for being able to launch a profile directly, via the
command palette. Essentially, the user will type the name of a profile, and hit
enter to launch that profile. I quite like this idea, but with the current spec,
this won't work great. We'd need to manually have one entry in the command
palette for each profile, and every time the user adds a profile, they'd need to
update the list of commands to add a new entry for that profile as well.
This is a fairly complicated addition to this feature, so I'd hold it for
"Command Palette v2", though I believe it's solution deserves special
consideration from the outset.
I suggest that we need a mechanism by which the user can specify a single
command that would be expanded to one command for every profile in the list of
profiles. Consider the following sample:
```json
"commands": [
{
"expandOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": "New Tab with ${profile.name}",
"command": { "action": "newTab", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
},
{
"expandOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": "New Vertical Split with ${profile.name}",
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"vertical", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
}
],
```
In this example:
* The `"expandOn": "profiles"` property indicates that each command should be
repeated for each individual profile.
* The `${profile.name}` value is treated as "when expanded, use the given
profile's name". This allows each command to use the `name` and `icon`
properties of a `Profile` to customize the text of the command.
To ensure that this works correctly, we'll need to make sure to expand these
commands after all the other settings have been parsed, presumably in the
`Validate` phase. If we do it earlier, it's possible that not all the profiles
from various sources will have been added yet, which would lead to an incomplete
command list.
We'll need to have a placeholder property to indicate that a command should be
expanded for each `Profile`. When the command is first parsed, we'll leave the
format strings `${...}` unexpanded at this time. Then, in the validate phase,
when we encounter a `"expandOn": "profiles"` command, we'll remove it from the
list, and use it as a prototype to generate commands for every `Profile` in our
profiles list. We'll do a string find-and-replace on the format strings to
replace them with the values from the profile, before adding the completed
command to the list of commands.
Of course, how does this work with localization? Considering the [section
below](#localization), we'd update the built-in commands to the following:
```json
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "NewTabWithProfileCommandName" },
"command": { "action": "newTab", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
},
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"icon": "${profile.icon}",
"name": { "key": "NewVerticalSplitWithProfileCommandName" },
"command": { "action": "splitPane", "split":"vertical", "profile": "${profile.name}" }
}
],
```
In this example, we'll look up the `NewTabWithProfileCommandName` resource when
we're first parsing the command, to find a string similar to `"New Tab with
${profile.name}"`. When we then later expand the command, we'll see the
`${profile.name}` bit from the resource, and expand that like we normally would.
Trickily, we'll need to make sure to have a helper for replacing strings like
this that can be used for general purpose arg parsing. As you can see, the
`profile` property of the `newTab` command also needs the name of the profile.
Either the command validation will need to go through and update these strings
manually, or we'll need another of enabling these `IActionArgs` classes to fill
those parameters in based on the profile being used. Perhaps the command
pre-expansion could just stash the json for the action, then expand it later?
This implementation detail is why this particular feature is not slated for
inclusion in an initial Command Palette implementation.
## UI/UX Design
We'll add another action that can be used to toggle the visibility of the
command palette. Pressing that keybinding will bring up the command palette.
When the command palette appears, we'll want it to appear as a single overlay
over all of the panes of the Terminal. The drop-down will be centered
horizontally, dropping down from the top (from the tab row). When commands are
entered, it will be implied that they are delivered to the focused terminal
pane. This will help avoid two problematic scenarios that could arise from
having the command palette attache to a single pane:
* When attached to a single pane, it might be very easy for the UI to quickly
become cluttered, especially at smaller pane sizes.
* This avoids the "find the overlay problem" which is common in editors like
VS where the dialog appears attached to the active editor pane.
The palette will consist of two main UI elements: a text box for searching for
commands, and a list of commands.
The list of commands will be populated with all the commands by default. Each
command will appear like a `MenuFlyoutItem`, with an icon at the left (if it has
one) and the name visible. When opened, the palette will automatically highlight
the first entry in the list.
The user can navigate the list of entries with the arrow keys. Hitting enter
will close the palette and execute the action that's highlighted. Hitting escape
will dismiss the palette, returning control to the terminal. When the palette is
closed for any reason (executing a command, dismissing with either escape or the
`toggleCommandPalette` keybinding), we'll clear out any search text from the
palette, so the user can start fresh again.
We'll also want to enable the command palette to be filterable, so that the user
can type the name of a command, and the command palette will automatically
filter the list of commands. This should be more powerful then just a simple
string compare - the user should be able to type a search string, and get all
the commands that match a "fuzzy search" for that string. This will allow users
to find the command they're looking for without needing to type the entire
command.
For example, consider the following list of commands:
```json
"commands": [
{ "icon": null, "name": "New Tab", "action": "newTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Close Tab", "action": "closeTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Close Pane", "action": "closePane" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "[-] Split Horizontal", "action": "splitHorizontal" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "[ | ] Split Vertical", "action": "splitVertical" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Next Tab", "action": "nextTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Prev Tab", "action": "prevTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Open Settings", "action": "openSettings" },
{ "icon": null, "name": "Open Media Controls", "action": "openTestPane" }
],
```
* "open" should return both "**Open** Settings" and "**Open** Media Controls".
* "Tab" would return "New **Tab**", "Close **Tab**", "Next **Tab**" and "Prev
**Tab**".
* "P" would return "Close **P**ane", "[-] S**p**lit Horizontal", "[ | ]
S**p**lit Vertical", "**P**rev Tab", "O**p**en Settings" and "O**p**en Media
Controls".
* Even more powerfully, "sv" would return "[ | ] Split Vertical" (by matching
the **S** in "Split", then the **V** in "Vertical"). This is a great example
of how a user could execute a command with very few keystrokes.
As the user types, we should **bold** each matching character in the command
name, to show how their input correlates to the results on screen.
## Capabilities
### Accessibility
As the entire command palette will be a native XAML element, it'll automatically
be hooked up to the UIA tree, allowing for screen readers to naturally find it.
* When the palette is opened, it will automatically receive focus.
* The terminal panes will not be able to be interacted with while the palette
is open, which will help keep the UIA tree simple while the palette is open.
### Security
This should not introduce any _new_ security concerns. We're relying on the
security of jsoncpp for parsing json. Adding new keys to the settings file
will rely on jsoncpp's ability to securely parse those json values.
### Reliability
We'll need to make sure that invalid commands are ignored. A command could be
invalid because:
* it has a null `name`, or a name with the empty string for a value.
* it has a null `action`, or an action specified that's not an actual
`ShortcutAction`.
We'll ignore invalid commands from the user's settings, instead of hard
crashing. I don't believe this is a scenario that warrants an error dialog to
indicate to the user that there's a problem with the json.
### Compatibility
We will need to define default _commands_ for all the existing keybinding
commands. With #754, we could add all the actions (that make sense) as commands
to the commands list, so that everyone wouldn't need to define them manually.
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
We'll be adding a few extra XAML elements to our tree which will certainly
increase our runtime memory footprint while the palette is open.
We'll additionally be introducing a few extra json values to parse, so that could
increase our load times (though this will likely be negligible).
## Potential Issues
This will first require the work in [#1205] to work properly. Right now we
heavily lean on the "focused" element to determine which terminal is "active".
However, when the command palette is opened, focus will move out of the terminal
control into the command palette, which leads to some hard to debug crashes.
Additionally, we'll need to ensure that the "fuzzy search" algorithm proposed
above will work for non-english languages, where a single character might be
multiple `char`s long. As we'll be using a standard XAML text box for input, we
won't need to worry about handling the input ourselves.
### Localization
Because we'll be shipping a set of default commands with the terminal, we should
make sure that list of commands can be localizable. Each of the names we'll give
to the commands should be locale-specific.
To facilitate this, we'll use a special type of object in JSON that will let us
specify a resource name in JSON. We'll use a syntax like the following to
suggest that we should load a string from our resources, as opposed to using the
value from the file:
```json
"commands": [
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "NewTabCommandName" }, "action": "newTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "CloseTabCommandKey" }, "action": "closeTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "ClosePaneCommandKey" }, "action": "closePane" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "SplitHorizontalCommandKey" }, "action": "splitHorizontal" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "SplitVerticalCommandKey" }, "action": "splitVertical" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "NextTabCommandKey" }, "action": "nextTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "PrevTabCommandKey" }, "action": "prevTab" },
{ "icon": null, "name": { "key": "OpenSettingsCommandKey" }, "action": "openSettings" },
],
```
We'll check at parse time if the `name` property is a string or an object. If
it's a string, we'll treat that string as the literal text. Otherwise, if it's
an object, we'll attempt to use the `key` property of that object to look up a
string from our `ResourceDictionary`. This way, we'll be able to ship localized
strings for all the built-in commands, while also allowing the user to easily
add their own commands.
During the spec review process, we considered other options for localization as
well. The original proposal included options such as having one `defaults.json`
file per-locale, and building the Terminal independently for each locale. Those
were not really feasible options, so we instead settled on this solution, as it
allowed us to leverage the existing localization support provided to us by the
platform.
The `{ "key": "resourceName" }` solution proposed here was also touched on in
[#5280].
## Future considerations
* Commands will provide an easy point for allowing an extension to add its
actions to the UI, without forcing the user to bind the extension's actions to
a keybinding
* Also discussed in [#2046] was the potential for adding a command that inputs a
certain commandline to be run by the shell. I felt that was out of scope for
this spec, so I'm not including it in detail. I believe that would be
accomplished by adding a `inputCommand` action, with two args: `commandline`,
a string, and `suppressNewline`, an optional bool, defaulted to false. The
`inputCommand` action would deliver the given `commandline` as input to the
connection, followed by a newline (as to execute the command).
`suppressNewline` would prevent the newline from being added. This would work
relatively well, so long as you're sitting at a shell prompt. If you were in
an application like `vim`, this might be handy for executing a sequence of
vim-specific keybindings. Otherwise, you're just going to end up writing a
commandline to the buffer of vim. It would be weird, but not unexpected.
* Additionally mentioned in [#2046] was the potential for profile-scoped
commands. While that's a great idea, I believe it's out of scope for this
spec.
* Once [#754] lands, we'll need to make sure to include commands for each action
manually in the default settings. This will add some overhead that the
developer will need to do whenever they add an action. That's unfortunate, but
will be largely beneficial to the end user.
* We could theoretically also display the keybinding for a certain command in
the `ListViewItem` for the command. We'd need some way to correlate a
command's action to a keybinding's action. This could be done in a follow-up
task.
* We might want to alter the fuzzy-search algorithm, to give higher precedence
in the results list to commands with more consecutive matching characters.
Alternatively we could give more weight to commands where the search matched
the initial character of words in the command.
- For example: `ot` would give more weight to "**O**pen **T**ab" than
"**O**pen Se**t**tings").
* Another idea for a future spec is the concept of "nested commands", where a
single command has many sub-commands. This would hide the children commands
from the entire list of commands, allowing for much more succinct top-level
list of commands, and allowing related commands to be grouped together.
- For example, I have a text editor plugin that enables rendering markdown to
a number of different styles. To use that command in my text editor, first I
hit enter on the "Render Markdown..." command, then I select which style I
want to render to, in another list of options. This way, I don't need to
have three options for "Render Markdown to github", "Render Markdown to
gitlab", all in the top-level list.
- We probably also want to allow a nested command set to be evaluated at
runtime somehow. Like if we had a "Open New Tab..." command that then had a
nested menu with the list of profiles.
* We may want to add a button to the New Tab Button's dropdown to "Show Command
Palette". I'm hesitant to keep adding new buttons to that UI, but the command
palette is otherwise not highly discoverable.
- We could add another button to the UI to toggle the visibility of the
command palette. This was the idea initially proposed in [#2046].
- For both these options, we may want a global setting to hide that button, to
keep the UI as minimal as possible.
* [#1571] is a request for customizing the "new tab dropdown" menu. When we get
to discussing that design, we should consider also enabling users to add
commands from their list of commands to that menu as well.
## Resources
Initial post that inspired this spec: #[2046](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046)
Keybindings args: #[1349](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/1349)
Cascading User & Default Settings: #[754](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/754)
Untie "active control" from "currently XAML-focused control" #[1205](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1205)
Allow dropdown menu customization in profiles.json [#1571](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1571)
Search or run a command in Dropdown menu [#3879]
Spec: Introduce a mini-specification for localized resource use from JSON [#5280]
<!-- Footnotes -->
[#754]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/754
[#1205]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1205
[#1142]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/1349
[#2046]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046
[#1571]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1571
[#3879]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/3879
[#5280]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/5280

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---
author: Mike Griese @zadjii-msft
created on: 2019-05-31
last updated: 2019-05-31
issue id: #997
---
# Non-Terminal Panes
## Abstract
This spec hopes to cover the work necessary to enable panes to host non-terminal
content. It'll describe changes to the `Pane` class to support hosting arbitrary
controls in addition to terminals.
## Inspiration
The primary driver for this change is to enable testing of the pane code. If a
`Pane` can host an arbitrary class, then a use case for that would be the
hosting of a non-xaml test class that acts like a control. This test class could
be have its state queried, to make sure that the panes are properly delivering
focus to the correct pane content.
Additionally, non-terminal panes could be used to host a variety of other
content, such as browser panes, sticky notes, text editor scratch-pads, etc.
Some discussion of these ideas are in #644.
## Solution Design
We'll change the TermControl class to derive from the
`Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls.Control` runtime class.
* We may need to override its `FocusState` and `Focus` methods, and implement
them by plumbing them straight through to the fake Control the `TermControl`
hosts.
* Otherwise, it might be possible that we could just remove that fake control
entirely.
* We'll remove the `GetControl` method from the `TermControl`, as the
`TermControl` itself will now be used as the control.
We'll change the Pane class to accept a `Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls.Control`
instead of a `TermControl`.
We'll additionally change the `Pane` constructor to accept an `optional<GUID>`
as opposed to needing a GUID. For constructing panes with Terminals, we should
pass a GUID corresponding to that settings profile. For panes that aren't
hosting terminals however, we should pass `nullopt` as the GUID. For panes that
are leaf nodes (panes which are hosting a control, not another pair of panes),
if the pane has a GUID, we can assume that the control is a TermControl.
When we want to host other types of content, we'll simply pass any other control
to the Pane, and it'll render it just as it would the `TermControl`.
## UI/UX Design
Instead of a pane hosting a terminal, it could host _any arbitrary control_. The
control would still be subject to the sizing provided to it by the `Pane`, but
it could host any arbitrary content.
## Capabilities
### Security
I don't forsee this implementation by itself raising security concerns. This
feature is mostly concerned with adding support for arbitrary controls, not
actually implementing some arbitrary controls.
### Reliability
With more possible controls in a pane than just a terminal, it's possible that
crashes in those controls could impact the entire Terminal app's reliability.
This would largely be out of our control, as we only author the TermControl.
We may want to consider hosting each pane in it's own process, similar to how
moder browsers will host each tab in its own process, to help isolate tabs. This
is a bigger discussion than the feature at hand, however.
### Performance, Power, and Efficiency
decide to host a WebView in a pane, then it surely could impact these measures.
I don't believe this will have a noticable impact _on its own_. Should the user
However, I leave that discussion to the implementation of the actual alternative
pane content itself.
### Accessibility
When implementing the accessibility tree for Panes, we'll need to make sure that
for panes with arbitrary content, we properly activate their accessibility,
should the control provide some sort of accessibility pattern.
## Potential Issues
* [ ] It's entirely possible that panes with non-terminal content will not be
able to activate keybindings from the terminal application. For example, what
if the hosted control wants to use Ctrl+T for its own shortcut? The current
keybindings model has the `TermControl` call into the App layer to see if a
keystroke should be handled by the app first. We may want to make sure that
for non-terminal controls, we add a event handler to try and have the
`AppKeyBindings` handle the keypress if the control doesn't. This won't solve
the case where the control wants to use a keybinding that is mapped by the
Terminal App. In that case, non-terminal controls will actually behave
differently from the `TermControl`. The `TermControl` will give the app the
first chance to handle a keybinding, while for other controls, the app will
give the control the first chance to handle the keypress. This may be mildly
confusing to end users.
## Future considerations
I expect this to be a major part of our (eventual) extensibility model. By
allowing arbitrary controls to be hosted in a Tab/Pane, this will allow
extension authors to embed their own UI experiences alongside the terminal.
See #555 for more discussion on the extensibility/plugin subject.
## Resources
N/A

110
doc/terminal-v2-roadmap.md Normal file
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# Terminal 2.0 Roadmap
## Overview
This document outlines the roadmap towards delivering Windows Terminal 2.0 by Spring 2021.
## Milestones
The Windows Terminal project is engineered and delivered as a set of 4-week milestones. New features will go into [Windows Terminal Preview](https://aka.ms/terminal-preview) first, then a month after they've been in Preview, those features will move into [Windows Terminal](https://aka.ms/terminal).
| Duration | Activity | Releases |
| --- | --- | --- |
| 2 weeks | Dev Work<br/> <ul><li>Fixes / Features for future Windows Releases</li><li>Fixes / Features for Windows Terminal</li></ul> | Release to Internal Selfhosters at end of week 2 |
| 1 week | Quality & Stability<br/> <ul><li>Bug Fixes</li><li>Perf & Stability</li><li>UI Polish</li><li>Tests</li><li>etc.</li></ul>| Push to Microsoft Store at end of week 3 |
| 1 week | Release <br/> <ul><li>Available from [Microsoft Store](https://aka.ms/terminal) & [GitHub Releases](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/releases)</li><li>Release Notes & Announcement Blog published</li><li>Engineering System Maintenance</li><li>Community Engagement</li><li>Docs</li><li>Future Milestone Planning</li></ul> | Release available from Microsoft Store & GitHub Releases |
## Terminal Roadmap / Timeline
Below is the schedule for when milestones will be included in release builds of Windows Terminal and Windows Terminal Preview. The dates are rough estimates and are subject to change.
| Milestone End Date | Milestone Name | Preview Release Blog Post |
| ------------------ | -------------- | ------------------------- |
| 2020-06-18 | [1.1] in Windows Terminal Preview | [Windows Terminal Preview 1.1 Release](https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/windows-terminal-preview-1-1-release/) |
| 2020-07-31 | [1.2] in Windows Terminal Preview<br>[1.1] in Windows Terminal | |
| 2020-08-31 | 1.3 in Windows Terminal Preview<br>[1.2] in Windows Terminal | |
| 2020-09-30 | 1.4 in Windows Terminal Preview<br>1.3 in Windows Terminal | |
| 2020-10-31 | 1.5 in Windows Terminal Preview<br>1.4 in Windows Terminal | |
| 2020-11-30 | 1.6 in Windows Terminal Preview<br>1.5 in Windows Terminal | |
| 2020-12-31 | 1.7 in Windows Terminal Preview<br>1.6 in Windows Terminal | |
| 2021-01-31 | 1.8 in Windows Terminal Preview<br>1.7 in Windows Terminal | |
| 2021-02-28 | 1.9 in Windows Terminal Preview<br>1.8 in Windows Terminal | |
| 2021-03-31 | 1.10 in Windows Terminal Preview<br>1.9 in Windows Terminal | |
| 2021-04-30 | 2.0 RC in Windows Terminal Preview<br>2.0 RC in Windows Terminal | |
| 2021-05-31 | [2.0] in Windows Terminal Preview<br>[2.0] in Windows Terminal | |
## Issue Triage & Prioritization
Incoming issues/asks/etc. are triaged several times a week, labeled appropriately, and assigned to a milestone in priority order:
* P0 (serious crashes, data loss, etc.) issues are scheduled to be dealt with ASAP
* P1/2 issues/features/asks assigned to the current or future milestone, or to the [Terminal 2.0 milestone](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/milestone/22) for future assignment, if required to deliver a 2.0 feature
* Issues/features/asks not on our list of 2.0 features are assigned to the [Terminal Backlog](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/milestone/7) for subsequent triage, prioritization & scheduling.
## 2.0 Scenarios
The following are a list of the key scenarios we're aiming to deliver for Terminal 2.0.
> 👉 Note: There are many other features that don't fit within 2.0, but will be re-assessed and prioritized for 3.0, the plan for which will be published in 2021.
| Priority\* | Scenario | Description/Notes |
| ---------- | -------- | ----------------- |
| 0 | Settings UI | A user interface that connects to settings.json. This provides a way for people to edit their settings without having to edit a JSON file.<br><br>Issue: [#1564] |
| 0 | Command palette | A popup menu to list possible actions and commands.<br><br>Issues: [#5400], [#2046]<br>Spec: [#2193] |
| 1 | Tab tear-off | The ability to tear a tab out of the current window and spawn a new window or attach it to a separate window.<br><br>Issue: [#1256]<br>Spec: [#2080] |
| 1 | Clickable links | Hyperlinking any links that appear in the text buffer. When clicking on the link, the link will open in your default browser.<br><br>Issue: [#574] |
| 1 | Default terminal | If a command-line application is spawned, it should open in Windows Terminal (if installed) or your preferred terminal<br><br>Issue: [#492]<br>Spec: [#2080] |
| 1 | Overall theme support | Tab coloring, title bar coloring, pane border coloring, pane border width, definition of what makes a theme<br><br>Issue: [#3327]<br>Spec: [#5772] |
| 1 | Open tab as admin/other user | Open tab in existing Windows Terminal instance as admin (if Terminal was run unelevated) or as another user.<br><br>Issue: [#5000] |
| 1 | Traditional opacity | Have a transparent background without the acrylic blur.<br><br>Issue: [#603] |
| 2 | SnapOnOutput, scroll lock | Pause output or scrolling on click.<br><br>Issue: [#980]<br>Spec: [#2529]<br>Implementation: [#6062] |
| 2 | Infinite scrollback | Have an infinite history for the text buffer.<br><br>Issue: [#1410] |
| 2 | Pane management | All issues listed out in the original issue. Some features include pane resizing with mouse, pane zooming, and opening a pane by prompting which profile to use.<br><br>Issue: [#1000] |
| 2 | Theme marketplace | Marketplace for creation and distribution of themes.<br>Dependent on overall theming |
| 2 | Jump list | Show profiles from task bar (on right click)/start menu.<br><br>Issue: [#576] |
| 2 | Open with multiple tabs | A setting that allows Windows Terminal to launch with a specific tab configuration (not using only command line arguments).<br><br>Issue: [#756] |
| 3 | Open in Windows Terminal | Functionality to right click on a file or folder and select Open in Windows Terminal.<br><br>Issue: [#1060]<br>Implementation: [#6100] |
| 3 | Session restoration | Launch Windows Terminal and the previous session is restored with the proper tab and pane configuration and starting directories.<br><br>Issues: [#961], [#960], [#766] |
| 3 | Quake mode | Provide a quick launch terminal that appears and disappears when a hotkey is pressed.<br><br>Issue: [#653] |
| 3 | Settings migration infrastructure | Migrate people's settings without breaking them. Hand-in-hand with settings UI. |
| 3 | Pointer bindings | Provide settings that can be bound to the mouse.<br><br>Issue: [#1553] |
Feature Notes:
\* Feature Priorities:
0. Mandatory <br/>
1. Optimal <br/>
2. Optional / Stretch-goal <br/>
[1.1]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/milestone/24
[1.2]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/milestone/25
[2.0]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/milestone/22
[#1564]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1564
[#5400]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/5400
[#2046]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2046
[#2193]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/2193
[#1256]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1256
[#2080]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/2080
[#574]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/574
[#492]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/492
[#2080]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/2080
[#3327]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/3327
[#5772]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/5772
[#5000]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/5000
[#603]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/603
[#980]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/980
[#2529]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/2529
[#6062]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/6062
[#1410]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1410
[#1000]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1000
[#576]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/576
[#756]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/756
[#1060]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1060
[#6100]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/6100
[#961]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/961
[#960]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/960
[#766]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/766
[#653]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/653
[#1553]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1553

View File

@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ Display the help message.
Opens a new tab with the given customizations. On its _first_ invocation, also
opens a new window. Subsequent `new-tab` commands will all open new tabs in the
same window.
same window. <sup>[[1](#footnote-1)]</sup>
**Parameters**:
@@ -41,17 +41,18 @@ same window.
#### `split-pane`
`split-pane [-H]|[-V] [terminal_parameters]`
`split-pane [-H,--horizontal|-V,--vertical] [terminal_parameters]`
Creates a new pane in the currently focused tab by splitting the given pane
vertically or horizontally.
vertically or horizontally. <sup>[[1](#footnote-1)]</sup>
**Parameters**:
* `-H`, `-V`: Used to indicate which direction to split the pane. `-V` is
"vertically" (think `[|]`), and `-H` is "horizontally" (think `[-]`). If
omitted, defaults to "auto", which splits the current pane in whatever the
larger dimension is. If both `-H` and `-V` are provided, defaults to vertical.
* `-H,--horizontal`, `-V,--vertical`: Used to indicate which direction to split
the pane. `-V` is "vertically" (think `[|]`), and `-H` is "horizontally"
(think `[-]`). If omitted, defaults to "auto", which splits the current pane
in whatever the larger dimension is. If both `-H` and `-V` are provided,
defaults to vertical.
* `[terminal_parameters]`: See [[terminal_parameters]](#terminal_parameters).
#### `focus-tab`
@@ -89,6 +90,10 @@ following:
selected profile. If the user wants to use a `;` in this commandline, it
should be escaped as `\;`.
### Notes
* <span id="footnote-1"></span> [1]: If you try to run a `wt` commandline while running in a Windows Terminal window, the commandline will _always_ create a new window by default. Being able to run `wt` commandlines in the _current_ window is planned in the future - for more information, refer to [#4472].
## Examples
### Open Windows Terminal in the current directory
@@ -120,9 +125,77 @@ This creates a new Windows Terminal window with one tab, and 3 panes:
* `split-pane -p "Windows PowerShell"`: This will create a new pane, split from
the parent with the default profile. This pane will open with the "Windows
PowerShell" profile
* `split-pane -H wsl.exe`: This will create a third pane, slit _horizontally_
* `split-pane -H wsl.exe`: This will create a third pane, split _horizontally_
from the "Windows PowerShell" pane. It will be running the default profile,
and will use `wsl.exe` as the commandline (instead of the default profile's
`commandline`).
### Using multiple commands from PowerShell
The Windows Terminal uses the semicolon character `;` as a delimiter for
separating subcommands in the `wt` commandline. Unfortunately, `powershell` also
uses `;` as a command separator. To work around this you can use the following
tricks to help run multiple wt sub commands from powershell. In all the
following examples, we'll be creating a new Terminal window with three panes -
one running `cmd`, one with `powershell`, and a last one running `wsl`.
In each of the following examples, we're using the `Start-Process` command to
run `wt`. For more information on why we're using `Start-Process`, see ["Using
`start`"](#using-start) below.
#### Single quoted parameters (if you aren't calculating anything):
In this example, we'll wrap all the parameters to `wt` in single quotes (`'`)
```PowerShell
start wt 'new-tab "cmd"; split-pane -p "Windows PowerShell" ; split-pane -H wsl.exe'
```
#### Escaped quotes (if you need variables):
If you'd like to pass a value contained in a variable to the `wt` commandline,
instead use the following syntax:
```PowerShell
$ThirdPane = "wsl.exe"
start wt "new-tab cmd; split-pane -p `"Windows PowerShell`" ; split-pane -H $ThirdPane"
```
Note the usage of `` ` `` to escape the double-quotes (`"`) around "Windows
Powershell" in the `-p` parameter to the `split-pane` sub-command.
#### Using `start`
All the above examples explicitly used `start` to launch the Terminal.
In the following examples, we're going to not use `start` to run the
commandline. Instead, we'll try two other methods of escaping the commandline:
* Only escaping the semicolons so that `powershell` will ignore them and pass
them straight to `wt`.
* Using `--%`, so powershell will treat the rest of the commandline as arguments
to the application.
```PowerShell
wt new-tab "cmd" `; split-pane -p "Windows PowerShell" `; split-pane -H wsl.exe
```
```Powershell
wt --% new-tab cmd ; split-pane -p "Windows PowerShell" ; split-pane -H wsl.exe
```
In both these examples, the newly created Windows Terminal window will create
the window by correctly parsing all the provided commandline arguments.
However, these methods are _not_ recommended currently, as Powershell will wait
for the newly-created Terminal window to be closed before returning control to
Powershell. By default, Powershell will always wait for Windows Store
applications (like the Windows Terminal) to close before returning to the
prompt. Note that this is different than the behavior of `cmd`, which will return
to the prompt immediately. See
[Powershell/PowerShell#9970](https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/issues/9970)
for more details on this bug.
[#4023]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/4023
[#4472]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/4472

View File

@@ -38,16 +38,17 @@ not affect a particular terminal instance.
Example settings include
```json
{
"defaultProfile" : "{58ad8b0c-3ef8-5f4d-bc6f-13e4c00f2530}",
"initialCols" : 120,
"initialRows" : 50,
"requestedTheme" : "system",
"theme" : "system",
"keybindings" : []
...
}
```
These global properties can exist either in the root json object, or in an
object under a root property `"globals"`.
These global properties should exist in the root json object.
## Key Bindings
@@ -87,7 +88,7 @@ This will allow you to simplify the above snippet as follows:
}
```
A list of default key bindings is available [here](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/src/cascadia/TerminalApp/defaults.json#L204).
### Unbinding keys
@@ -159,7 +160,7 @@ Example settings include
The profile GUID is used to reference the default profile in the global settings.
The values for background image stretch mode are documented [here](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/api/windows.ui.xaml.media.stretch)
The values for background image stretch mode are documented [here](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/api/windows.ui.xaml.media.stretch).
### Hiding a profile
@@ -251,6 +252,12 @@ like to hide all the WSL profiles, you could add the following setting:
```
> 👉 **NOTE**: On launch, if a dynamic profile generator is enabled, it will
> always add new profiles it detects to your list of profiles. If you delete a
> dynamically generated profile from your list of profiles, it will just get
> re-added the next time the Terminal is launched! To remove a dynamic profile
> from your list of profiles, make sure to set `"hidden": true` in the profile.
### Default settings
In [#2325](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/2325), we introduced the

View File

@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ NOTE: The default shell is PowerShell; you can change this using the _Running a
### Command line options
None at this time. See issue [#607](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/607)
Windows Terminal has implemented a rich set of command-line options in part as response to issue [#607](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/607). See [UsingCommandlineArguments.md](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/doc/user-docs/UsingCommandlineArguments.md) for details.
## Multiple Tabs
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ To customize the shell list, see the _Configuring Windows Terminal_ section belo
## Starting a new PowerShell tab with admin privilege
There is no current plan to support this feature for security reasons. See issue [#623](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/632)
There is no current plan to support this feature for security reasons. See issue [#632](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/632)
## Selecting and Copying Text in Windows Terminal
@@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ Copy and paste operations can also be keybound. For more information on how to b
## Add a "Open Windows Terminal Here" to File Explorer
Not currently supported "out of the box". See issue [#1060](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1060)
Not currently supported "out of the box" (See issue [#1060](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/1060)). However, you can open Windows Terminal in current directory by typing `wt -d .` in the Explorer address bar.
## Configuring Windows Terminal
@@ -87,4 +87,5 @@ For an introduction to the various settings, see [Using Json Settings](UsingJson
2. Terminal zoom can be changed by holding <kbd>Ctrl</kbd> and scrolling with mouse.
3. Background opacity can be changed by holding <kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>Shift</kbd> and scrolling with mouse. Note that acrylic transparency is limited by the OS only to focused windows.
4. Open Windows Terminal in current directory by typing `wt -d .` in the address bar.
5. Please add more Tips and Tricks.
5. Pin the Windows Terminal to the taskbar. Now it can be launched using the Windows shortcut <kbd>Win</kbd>+<kbd>Number</kbd> (e.g. <kbd>Win</kbd>+<kbd>1</kbd> or any other number based on the position in the taskbar!). Press <kbd>Win</kbd>+<kbd>Shift</kbd>+<kbd>Number</kbd> to always launch a new window.
6. Please add more Tips and Tricks.

8
oss/README.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
### Component-Governance-tracked OSS dependencies
This directory contains mirrored open-source projects that are used by the
console host and Windows Terminal. Code in this directory will be replicated
into the Windows OS repository.
All projects in this directory **must** bear Component Governance Manifests
(`cgmanifest.json` files) indicating their provenance.

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