Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Keeping the license as part of every file bloats up the files
unnecessarily and introduces an additional overhead to the creation of
new modules.
Since cargo already provides excellent dependency management, most of
the code-reuse of Alacritty should occur through Rust's dependency
management instead of copying it source.
If code is copied partially, copying the license from the main license
file should be just as easy as copying from the top of the file and
making some adjustments based on where it is used is likely necessary
anyways.
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Fixes #1754.
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Fixes resize regression from 15cc07c069b09f109ed18fb94e02e9650be7fa33.
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Fixes #3257.
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Previous implementation was querying Fontconfig using `charset` in a pattern,
which was leading to unpredictable fallbacks in some cases, since Fontconfig
was picking the font with the most coverage for a given charset, regardless of
user configuration. Moreover all fallback was based on font_match which is
extremely slow for such performance sensitive task as a fallback, so alacritty
had a hard times on vtebench's unicode-random-write.
The new approach is to use some internal fallback list from font_sort
and iterate over it to get a proper fallback font, since it matches the
following example query from `fc-match`:
`fc-match -s "monospace:pixelsize=X:style=Y"
That being said it's more intuitive for users to setup their system Fontconfig
fallback, and also most applications are doing similar things. Moreover the new
implementation uses internal caches over Fontconfig API when possible and
performs font matches only once during load of requested font with font_sort,
which leads to dramatically improved performance on already mentioned
vtebench's unicode-random-write.
Fixes #3176.
Fixes #3134.
Fixes #2657.
Fixes #1560.
Fixes #965.
Fixes #511.
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Clippy[1] says that `.next()` is more readable than `.nth(0)`.
[1]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#iter_nth_zero
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Fixes #153.
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By setting the minimum Rust version and enforcing it with CI, Alacritty
should hopefully make it possible for maintainers to package the
application even on distributions which are not rolling release.
The 1.31.0 target has been chosen here because it's the first version of
the Rust 2018 release. Bumping this version in the future should be
considered to be a breaking change and should only be done with caution
and in consideration of the supported Rust versions of the major
distributions available.
This fixes #2277.
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Using clippy as a library has been deprecated, instead the `cargo
clippy` command should be used instead. To comply with this change
clippy has been removed from the `Cargo.toml` and is now installed with
cargo when building in CI.
This has also lead to a few new clippy issues to show up, this includes
everything in the `font` subdirectory. This has been fixed and `font`
should now be covered by clippy CI too.
This also upgrades all dependencies, as a result this fixes #1341 and
this fixes #1344.
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To allow FontConfig to work with Bitmap font, we shall pass the size
we are interested in, and account for the size returned in the font
matching process. This is, because we cannot scale those fonts.
FontConfig will return the closest match, and we take its returned
pixel size back when we are rendering the glyphs.
There's an oddity when call set_char_size in TrueType - we need to
behave as if the DPI is 72. It is due to the following macro:
#define FT_REQUEST_HEIGHT( req ) \
( (req)->vertResolution \
? ( (req)->height * (FT_Pos)(req)->vertResolution + 36 ) / 72 \
: (req)->height )
Further work can allow for integer scaling of the largest bitmap
font variant.
Tested with Terminus PCF-type font under Linux.
This addresses issue #582 .
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The FreeType rasterizer now reads settings like antialias, rgba,
lcdfilter, and hintstyle and chooses FreeType settings accordingly. The
result is that Alacritty fonts should look similar to the rest of the
system.
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The fontconfig `FcPattern` type is wrapped as `fc::Pattern` and
`fc::Pattern` ref. All methods for accessing data on the pattern now
return an `Iterator`. This API turns out to be much more ergonomic than
providing an integer index. We also override the default `nth`
implementation of `Iterator` on these accessors to allow random
(incremental only) access.
For instance, accessing `family` attributes from a pattern:
let families = pattern.family();
let second = pattern.nth(1);
Or printing available styles
for style in pattern.style() {
println!("style={}", style);
}
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Each Fc type is split into a separate file. This organization will help
as features are added to the bindings.
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