eterm/src/pixmap.h

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/*
* Copyright (C) 1997-2009, Michael Jennings
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
* of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
* deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
* rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
* sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
* all copies of the Software, its documentation and marketing & publicity
* materials, and acknowledgment shall be given in the documentation, materials
* and software packages that this Software was used.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
* THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER
* IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#ifndef _PIXMAP_H
# define _PIXMAP_H
#include <X11/Xatom.h>
Fri May 26 20:43:03 PDT 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> Okay, there are a few changes here. First off, I made multi-byte font support the default now, as long as you have ISO 10646 fonts. In order to do this, I made the default encoding type "Latin1" so as not to interfere with 8-bit ISO 8859-1 characters. This means that if you relied on the default multi-byte encoding method to be SJIS, you'll need to update your theme files. I also set it up so that Eterm will ignore SIGHUP, at least until I do something with it (like reloading the theme or something). I fixed the proportional font size algorithm. If there is more than a 3-pixel variance between the minimum and maximum sizes for glyphs in a proportional font, Eterm will set the size to 2 standard deviations above the average width. This is so that they won't look so spread out and ugly, but it still doesn't look perfect. Not much I can do on that front...terminals must have fixed-width columns. And then there's the biggie. I put in the ability to configure the now-infamous font effects. I left a black drop shadow in as the default, but you can now customize it via the --font-fx option or in the config file using "font effects <stuff>" in the attributes context. You can even use "fx" instead of "effects" for short. So what goes in the <stuff> part? Well, you have several options. To use a single-color outline, say "outline <color>". Likewise, a single-color drop shadow is "shadow [corner] <color>"; "bottom_right" is the default corner if you don't specify one. For a 3-D embossed look, "emboss <dark_color> <light_color>". The opposite, a carved- out look, can be had with "carved <dark_color> <light_color>". (Of course, with those last two, the 3-D look will only work if you choose the colors wisely.) Those are all the shortcuts. The long way is to specify a series of corner/color pairs, like "tl blue" for top-left blue, or "bottom_right green". You can abbreviate using "tl," "tr," "bl," or "br," or you can spell out "top_left," "top_right," "bottom_left," or "bottom_right." If you omit a corner name, the first one defaults to top-left, the second to top-right, and so on as listed above. SVN revision: 2714
2000-05-26 20:41:22 -07:00
#ifdef PIXMAP_SUPPORT
# include <Imlib2.h>
#elif !defined(DATA64)
typedef struct {
int left, top, right, bottom;
} Imlib_Border;
typedef void *Imlib_Image;
typedef void *Imlib_Color_Modifier;
Fri May 26 20:43:03 PDT 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> Okay, there are a few changes here. First off, I made multi-byte font support the default now, as long as you have ISO 10646 fonts. In order to do this, I made the default encoding type "Latin1" so as not to interfere with 8-bit ISO 8859-1 characters. This means that if you relied on the default multi-byte encoding method to be SJIS, you'll need to update your theme files. I also set it up so that Eterm will ignore SIGHUP, at least until I do something with it (like reloading the theme or something). I fixed the proportional font size algorithm. If there is more than a 3-pixel variance between the minimum and maximum sizes for glyphs in a proportional font, Eterm will set the size to 2 standard deviations above the average width. This is so that they won't look so spread out and ugly, but it still doesn't look perfect. Not much I can do on that front...terminals must have fixed-width columns. And then there's the biggie. I put in the ability to configure the now-infamous font effects. I left a black drop shadow in as the default, but you can now customize it via the --font-fx option or in the config file using "font effects <stuff>" in the attributes context. You can even use "fx" instead of "effects" for short. So what goes in the <stuff> part? Well, you have several options. To use a single-color outline, say "outline <color>". Likewise, a single-color drop shadow is "shadow [corner] <color>"; "bottom_right" is the default corner if you don't specify one. For a 3-D embossed look, "emboss <dark_color> <light_color>". The opposite, a carved- out look, can be had with "carved <dark_color> <light_color>". (Of course, with those last two, the 3-D look will only work if you choose the colors wisely.) Those are all the shortcuts. The long way is to specify a series of corner/color pairs, like "tl blue" for top-left blue, or "bottom_right green". You can abbreviate using "tl," "tr," "bl," or "br," or you can spell out "top_left," "top_right," "bottom_left," or "bottom_right." If you omit a corner name, the first one defaults to top-left, the second to top-right, and so on as listed above. SVN revision: 2714
2000-05-26 20:41:22 -07:00
#endif
#include "misc.h"
/************ Macros and Definitions ************/
#ifdef PIXMAP_SUPPORT
# define background_is_image() ((buffer_pixmap) || (images[image_bg].current && images[image_bg].current->iml && images[image_bg].current->iml->im))
# define background_is_trans() (images[image_bg].mode & MODE_TRANS)
# define background_is_viewport() (images[image_bg].mode & MODE_VIEWPORT)
# define background_is_auto() (images[image_bg].mode & MODE_AUTO)
# define background_is_pixmap() (background_is_image() || (images[image_bg].mode & (MODE_TRANS | MODE_VIEWPORT | MODE_AUTO)))
# define delete_simage(simg) do { \
IMLIB_FREE_PIXMAP((simg)->pmap->pixmap); \
imlib_context_set_image((simg)->iml->im); \
imlib_free_image_and_decache(); \
(simg)->pmap->pixmap = None; (simg)->iml->im = NULL; \
} while (0)
# define CONVERT_SHADE(s) (0xff - (((s) * 0xff) / 100))
# define CONVERT_TINT_RED(t) (((t) & 0xff0000) >> 16)
# define CONVERT_TINT_GREEN(t) (((t) & 0x00ff00) >> 8)
# define CONVERT_TINT_BLUE(t) ((t) & 0x0000ff)
#else
# define background_is_image() (0)
# define background_is_trans() (0)
# define background_is_viewport() (0)
# define background_is_auto() (0)
# define background_is_pixmap() (0)
# define get_image_type_string(t) ((char *) "")
# define delete_simage(simg) NOP
#endif
#define LIBAST_X_CREATE_PIXMAP(w, h) X_CREATE_PIXMAP(Xdisplay, (TermWin.parent ? TermWin.parent : Xroot), (w), (h), Xdepth)
#define LIBAST_X_FREE_PIXMAP(p) X_FREE_PIXMAP(Xdisplay, p)
#define LIBAST_X_CREATE_GC(f, gcv) X_CREATE_GC(Xdisplay, (TermWin.parent ? TermWin.parent : Xroot), (f), (gcv))
#define LIBAST_X_FREE_GC(gc) X_FREE_GC(Xdisplay, gc)
#define GEOM_LEN 19
enum {
image_bg,
image_up,
image_down,
image_left,
image_right,
image_sb,
image_sa,
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
image_st,
image_menu,
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
image_menuitem,
image_submenu,
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
image_button,
image_bbar,
image_gbar,
image_dialog,
image_max
};
/* Image manipulation operations */
#define OP_NONE 0x00
#define OP_TILE 0x01
#define OP_HSCALE 0x02
#define OP_VSCALE 0x04
#define OP_PROPSCALE 0x08
#define OP_SCALE (OP_HSCALE | OP_VSCALE)
/* Image modes */
#define MODE_SOLID 0x00
#define MODE_IMAGE 0x01
#define MODE_TRANS 0x02
#define MODE_VIEWPORT 0x04
#define MODE_AUTO 0x08
#define MODE_MASK 0x0f
#define ALLOW_SOLID 0x00
#define ALLOW_IMAGE 0x10
#define ALLOW_TRANS 0x20
#define ALLOW_VIEWPORT 0x40
#define ALLOW_AUTO 0x80
#define ALLOW_MASK 0xf0
/* Image states */
#define IMAGE_STATE_CURRENT (0)
#define IMAGE_STATE_NORMAL (1)
#define IMAGE_STATE_SELECTED (2)
#define IMAGE_STATE_CLICKED (3)
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
#define IMAGE_STATE_DISABLED (4)
/* Render options */
#define RENDER_NORMAL (0)
#define RENDER_FORCE_PIXMAP (1 << 0)
/* Helper macros */
#define FOREACH_IMAGE(x) do {unsigned char idx; for (idx = 0; idx < image_max; idx++) { x } } while (0)
#define image_set_mode(which, bit) do {images[which].mode &= ~(MODE_MASK); images[which].mode |= (bit);} while (0)
#define image_allow_mode(which, bit) (images[which].mode |= (bit))
#define image_disallow_mode(which, bit) (images[which].mode &= ~(bit))
#define image_mode_is(which, bit) (images[which].mode & (bit))
#define image_mode_fallback(which) do {if (image_mode_is((which), ALLOW_IMAGE)) {image_set_mode((which), MODE_IMAGE);} else {image_set_mode((which), MODE_SOLID);}} while (0)
#define redraw_all_images() do {render_simage(images[image_bg].current, TermWin.vt, TermWin_TotalWidth(), TermWin_TotalHeight(), image_bg, 0); \
scr_touch(); scrollbar_draw(IMAGE_STATE_CURRENT, MODE_MASK); if (image_mode_any(MODE_AUTO)) enl_ipc_sync(); \
} while (0)
#define reload_image(iml) do {Imlib_Image tmp_im; \
if ((iml) && ((iml)->im)) { \
imlib_context_set_image((iml)->im); \
tmp_im = imlib_load_image_immediately(imlib_image_get_filename()); \
imlib_free_image_and_decache(); (iml)->im = tmp_im; \
} \
} while (0)
/* Elements of an simage to be reset */
#define RESET_NONE (0UL)
#define RESET_IMLIB_MOD (1UL << 0)
#define RESET_IMLIB_RMOD (1UL << 1)
#define RESET_IMLIB_GMOD (1UL << 2)
#define RESET_IMLIB_BMOD (1UL << 3)
#define RESET_ALL_TINT (RESET_IMLIB_RMOD | RESET_IMLIB_GMOD | RESET_IMLIB_BMOD)
#define RESET_ALL_MOD (RESET_IMLIB_MOD | RESET_IMLIB_RMOD | RESET_IMLIB_GMOD | RESET_IMLIB_BMOD)
#define RESET_IMLIB_BORDER (1UL << 4)
#define RESET_IMLIB_BEVEL (1UL << 5)
#define RESET_IMLIB_PAD (1UL << 6)
#define RESET_IMLIB_IM (1UL << 7)
#define RESET_ALL_IMLIB (RESET_ALL_MOD | RESET_IMLIB_BORDER | RESET_IMLIB_BEVEL | RESET_IMLIB_PAD | RESET_IMLIB_IM)
#define RESET_PMAP_GEOM (1UL << 8)
#define RESET_PMAP_PIXMAP (1UL << 9)
#define RESET_PMAP_MASK (1UL << 10)
#define RESET_ALL_PMAP (RESET_PMAP_GEOM | RESET_PMAP_PIXMAP | RESET_PMAP_MASK)
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
#define RESET_ALL_SIMG (RESET_ALL_IMLIB | RESET_ALL_PMAP)
#define RESET_NORM (1UL << 11)
#define RESET_SELECTED (1UL << 12)
#define RESET_CLICKED (1UL << 13)
#define RESET_DISABLED (1UL << 14)
#define RESET_MODE (1UL << 15)
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
#define RESET_ALL (RESET_NORM | RESET_SELECTED | RESET_CLICKED | RESET_DISABLED | RESET_MODE)
/************ Structures ************/
typedef struct {
unsigned short op;
short w, h, x, y;
Pixmap pixmap;
Pixmap mask;
} pixmap_t;
typedef struct {
Wed Apr 12 21:18:19 PDT 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the initial commit with Imlib2 support. READ THIS CAREFULLY. There is important information in this commit message that will keep you from getting screwed. First off, support for Imlib 1.x is GONE. It is no longer supported as of now. If you want to continue using it, do NOT install this version. I tried to support both for awhile, but the code ended up being way too ugly and hackish. Imlib2 is the future. And trust me, when you see what we do with this future, you'll be happy for the switch. The good news is that most of the basics work. Transparency still works, and the basic image stuff works. Most users won't notice any major problems, so long as your Imlib2 is 100% up-to-date. However, a few things still don't work: 1. Auto mode is a bit broken. You'll get X errors in XFree86 4.0. Don't use it if you're running XFree 4. 2. Color modifiers for images don't work. At all. 3. Transparency shading/tinting will not work in 8bpp or lower. Life blows sometimes. Sorry. Time for a real video card. :-) 4. The built-in icon is broken. 5. You WILL need to update your theme.cfg files. The borders on the horizontal and vertical bar images were incorrect when combined with the new anti-aliased scaling. The horizontal bars should have a right border of 3. Vertical bars should have a bottom border of 3. The menu images should have both right *and* bottom borders of 3. You can either make those changes by hand, or use the --with-theme-update option to autogen.sh. Your call. I think that covers everything I've run into. I will point out that I don't really take advantage of a lot of the Imlib2 features just yet. My first priority is to make all the stuff that worked before work again (or at least the important stuff). Then I'll work on new features. So there it is. If you're not ready for it, don't use it. But if you are, I hope you like it. SVN revision: 2478
2000-04-12 21:19:05 -07:00
Imlib_Border *edges;
unsigned char up;
} bevel_t;
Wed Apr 12 21:18:19 PDT 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the initial commit with Imlib2 support. READ THIS CAREFULLY. There is important information in this commit message that will keep you from getting screwed. First off, support for Imlib 1.x is GONE. It is no longer supported as of now. If you want to continue using it, do NOT install this version. I tried to support both for awhile, but the code ended up being way too ugly and hackish. Imlib2 is the future. And trust me, when you see what we do with this future, you'll be happy for the switch. The good news is that most of the basics work. Transparency still works, and the basic image stuff works. Most users won't notice any major problems, so long as your Imlib2 is 100% up-to-date. However, a few things still don't work: 1. Auto mode is a bit broken. You'll get X errors in XFree86 4.0. Don't use it if you're running XFree 4. 2. Color modifiers for images don't work. At all. 3. Transparency shading/tinting will not work in 8bpp or lower. Life blows sometimes. Sorry. Time for a real video card. :-) 4. The built-in icon is broken. 5. You WILL need to update your theme.cfg files. The borders on the horizontal and vertical bar images were incorrect when combined with the new anti-aliased scaling. The horizontal bars should have a right border of 3. Vertical bars should have a bottom border of 3. The menu images should have both right *and* bottom borders of 3. You can either make those changes by hand, or use the --with-theme-update option to autogen.sh. Your call. I think that covers everything I've run into. I will point out that I don't really take advantage of a lot of the Imlib2 features just yet. My first priority is to make all the stuff that worked before work again (or at least the important stuff). Then I'll work on new features. So there it is. If you're not ready for it, don't use it. But if you are, I hope you like it. SVN revision: 2478
2000-04-12 21:19:05 -07:00
typedef struct cmod_struct {
unsigned short gamma, brightness, contrast;
Imlib_Color_Modifier imlib_mod;
Wed Apr 12 21:18:19 PDT 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the initial commit with Imlib2 support. READ THIS CAREFULLY. There is important information in this commit message that will keep you from getting screwed. First off, support for Imlib 1.x is GONE. It is no longer supported as of now. If you want to continue using it, do NOT install this version. I tried to support both for awhile, but the code ended up being way too ugly and hackish. Imlib2 is the future. And trust me, when you see what we do with this future, you'll be happy for the switch. The good news is that most of the basics work. Transparency still works, and the basic image stuff works. Most users won't notice any major problems, so long as your Imlib2 is 100% up-to-date. However, a few things still don't work: 1. Auto mode is a bit broken. You'll get X errors in XFree86 4.0. Don't use it if you're running XFree 4. 2. Color modifiers for images don't work. At all. 3. Transparency shading/tinting will not work in 8bpp or lower. Life blows sometimes. Sorry. Time for a real video card. :-) 4. The built-in icon is broken. 5. You WILL need to update your theme.cfg files. The borders on the horizontal and vertical bar images were incorrect when combined with the new anti-aliased scaling. The horizontal bars should have a right border of 3. Vertical bars should have a bottom border of 3. The menu images should have both right *and* bottom borders of 3. You can either make those changes by hand, or use the --with-theme-update option to autogen.sh. Your call. I think that covers everything I've run into. I will point out that I don't really take advantage of a lot of the Imlib2 features just yet. My first priority is to make all the stuff that worked before work again (or at least the important stuff). Then I'll work on new features. So there it is. If you're not ready for it, don't use it. But if you are, I hope you like it. SVN revision: 2478
2000-04-12 21:19:05 -07:00
} colormod_t;
typedef struct {
Wed Apr 12 21:18:19 PDT 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the initial commit with Imlib2 support. READ THIS CAREFULLY. There is important information in this commit message that will keep you from getting screwed. First off, support for Imlib 1.x is GONE. It is no longer supported as of now. If you want to continue using it, do NOT install this version. I tried to support both for awhile, but the code ended up being way too ugly and hackish. Imlib2 is the future. And trust me, when you see what we do with this future, you'll be happy for the switch. The good news is that most of the basics work. Transparency still works, and the basic image stuff works. Most users won't notice any major problems, so long as your Imlib2 is 100% up-to-date. However, a few things still don't work: 1. Auto mode is a bit broken. You'll get X errors in XFree86 4.0. Don't use it if you're running XFree 4. 2. Color modifiers for images don't work. At all. 3. Transparency shading/tinting will not work in 8bpp or lower. Life blows sometimes. Sorry. Time for a real video card. :-) 4. The built-in icon is broken. 5. You WILL need to update your theme.cfg files. The borders on the horizontal and vertical bar images were incorrect when combined with the new anti-aliased scaling. The horizontal bars should have a right border of 3. Vertical bars should have a bottom border of 3. The menu images should have both right *and* bottom borders of 3. You can either make those changes by hand, or use the --with-theme-update option to autogen.sh. Your call. I think that covers everything I've run into. I will point out that I don't really take advantage of a lot of the Imlib2 features just yet. My first priority is to make all the stuff that worked before work again (or at least the important stuff). Then I'll work on new features. So there it is. If you're not ready for it, don't use it. But if you are, I hope you like it. SVN revision: 2478
2000-04-12 21:19:05 -07:00
Imlib_Image im;
Imlib_Border *border, *pad;
bevel_t *bevel;
Wed Apr 12 21:18:19 PDT 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the initial commit with Imlib2 support. READ THIS CAREFULLY. There is important information in this commit message that will keep you from getting screwed. First off, support for Imlib 1.x is GONE. It is no longer supported as of now. If you want to continue using it, do NOT install this version. I tried to support both for awhile, but the code ended up being way too ugly and hackish. Imlib2 is the future. And trust me, when you see what we do with this future, you'll be happy for the switch. The good news is that most of the basics work. Transparency still works, and the basic image stuff works. Most users won't notice any major problems, so long as your Imlib2 is 100% up-to-date. However, a few things still don't work: 1. Auto mode is a bit broken. You'll get X errors in XFree86 4.0. Don't use it if you're running XFree 4. 2. Color modifiers for images don't work. At all. 3. Transparency shading/tinting will not work in 8bpp or lower. Life blows sometimes. Sorry. Time for a real video card. :-) 4. The built-in icon is broken. 5. You WILL need to update your theme.cfg files. The borders on the horizontal and vertical bar images were incorrect when combined with the new anti-aliased scaling. The horizontal bars should have a right border of 3. Vertical bars should have a bottom border of 3. The menu images should have both right *and* bottom borders of 3. You can either make those changes by hand, or use the --with-theme-update option to autogen.sh. Your call. I think that covers everything I've run into. I will point out that I don't really take advantage of a lot of the Imlib2 features just yet. My first priority is to make all the stuff that worked before work again (or at least the important stuff). Then I'll work on new features. So there it is. If you're not ready for it, don't use it. But if you are, I hope you like it. SVN revision: 2478
2000-04-12 21:19:05 -07:00
colormod_t *mod, *rmod, *gmod, *bmod;
short last_w, last_h;
} imlib_t;
typedef struct {
pixmap_t *pmap;
imlib_t *iml;
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
Pixel fg, bg;
} simage_t;
typedef struct {
Window win;
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
unsigned char mode, userdef;
simage_t *norm, *selected, *clicked, *disabled, *current;
} image_t;
typedef short renderop_t;
/************ Variables ************/
extern image_t images[image_max];
extern Pixmap desktop_pixmap, viewport_pixmap, buffer_pixmap;
extern Window desktop_window;
/************ Function Prototypes ************/
#ifndef PIXMAP_SUPPORT
# define free_simage(s) NOP
# define create_simage() ((simage_t *) NULL)
# define load_image(f, s) ((unsigned char) 0)
# define check_image_ipc(w) ((unsigned char) 0)
# define redraw_image(w) NOP
# define redraw_images_by_mode(w) NOP
# define paste_simage(s, which, win, d, x, y, w, h) NOP
# define set_icon_pixmap(f, h) NOP
#endif
_XFUNCPROTOBEGIN
extern const char *get_image_type(unsigned char);
extern unsigned char image_mode_any(unsigned char);
#ifdef PIXMAP_SUPPORT
extern const char *imlib_strerror(Imlib_Load_Error);
extern unsigned short parse_pixmap_ops(char *);
extern unsigned short set_pixmap_scale(const char *, pixmap_t *);
extern unsigned char check_image_ipc(unsigned char);
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
extern image_t *create_eterm_image(void);
extern void reset_eterm_image(image_t *, unsigned long);
extern void free_eterm_image(image_t *);
extern simage_t *create_simage(void);
extern void reset_simage(simage_t *, unsigned long);
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
extern void free_simage(simage_t *);
extern colormod_t *create_colormod(void);
extern void reset_colormod(colormod_t *);
extern void free_colormod(colormod_t *);
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
extern Pixmap create_trans_pixmap(simage_t *, unsigned char, Drawable, int, int, unsigned short, unsigned short);
extern Pixmap create_viewport_pixmap(simage_t *, Drawable, int, int, unsigned short, unsigned short);
extern void paste_simage(simage_t *, unsigned char, Window, Drawable, unsigned short, unsigned short, unsigned short, unsigned short);
extern void redraw_image(unsigned char);
extern void redraw_images_by_mode(unsigned char);
#endif
extern void render_simage(simage_t *, Window, unsigned short, unsigned short, unsigned char, renderop_t);
#ifdef PIXMAP_SUPPORT
extern const char *search_path(const char *, const char *);
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
extern unsigned char load_image(const char *, simage_t *);
extern void update_cmod(colormod_t *);
extern void update_cmod_tables(imlib_t *);
extern void free_desktop_pixmap(void);
# ifdef PIXMAP_OFFSET
extern unsigned char need_colormod(imlib_t *);
extern void colormod_trans(Pixmap, imlib_t *, GC, unsigned short, unsigned short);
Thu Feb 10 15:10:01 PST 2000 Michael Jennings <mej@eterm.org> This is the first public availability of the work thus far on Eterm 0.9.1. There's quite a bit of new stuff here. * Added scrollbar thumb support. * Completely redid the terminfo/termcap stuff. The terminfo file is now compiled (by tic) and installed by default (unless you specify --without-terminfo). The config files still say xterm, though, because some programs (like SLang and GNU mc) use the silly algorithm of "Is $TERM set to xterm?" to detect mouse reporting support in a terminal. =P But if you don't ever use xterm, you can use Eterm's termcap and just name it "xterm" instead. Thanks to Marius Gedminas <mgedmin@takas.lt> for his patch that started this whole revamp. * Added the kEsetroot script for KDE users from Dax Games <dgames@isoc.net>. * You can now configure the Home and End emulation via --with-home= and --with-end= options to configure. The --with-terminfo option is also new, and --enable-xim is now the default. * Added a new image state, disabled, for when Eterm loses focus. This is supported by all widgets (well, all those that could possibly be on screen when Eterm lost focus), even the background image. So you could actually have all your images darken on focus out and restore to normal on focus in. * Widget colors formerly dealt with as colors (menu text color, scrollbar color, etc.) are now handled by the imageclasses. Each image state can have a foreground and background color defined. The current exception is the background image; I hope to add that later. The foreground is the text color and the background is the object color (for solid color mode). So menu text color is set by the menu imageclass. And again, for unfocused colors, use the disabled state of the imageclass. * Proportionally-spaced fonts are now handled much better. They are still forced into evenly-spaced columns (it's a terminal for crying out loud!) but at least you don't end up with Eterm's wider than your screen. :-) * Home on refresh is gone, as is home on echo. It's now much simpler. There are two options: home on output, and home on input, the former being a combination of echo and refresh. Also, keypresses that don't necessarily have corresonding output can trigger a home on input, like Ctrl-End or whatever...ones that don't have special meaning. Credit to Darren Stuart Embry <dse@louisville.edu> for pointing out this issue and the one with "m-" in font names. * I finally got around to re-merging the new parser stuff from my work on the Not Game. Closed up some old potential behavior quirks with theme parsing. * Added a new escape sequence to fork-and-exec a program. Also added a scrollback search capability to highlight all occurances of a string in your scrollback buffer. Use the new "Etsearch" utility to access it. "Etsearch string" to search for a string, then "Etsearch" by itself to reset the highlighting. * And of course, the biggie. Eterm now supports a completely- customizeable buttonbar. Not a menubar, a buttonbar. It can have an arbitrary number of buttons, and each button can perform an action, just like a menuitem. So a button could bring up a menu (like a menubar) or launch a program (like a launchbar) or perform an operation (like a toolbar). Each button can have an icon, text, or both. And you can have buttons left- or right-justified in the buttonbar. You will eventually be able to have an arbitrary number of buttonbars, but I'm still working on that. As with any change this big, things could very easily be broken. So beware. :-) I have tested this myself, and everything seems to work, but I can't test every possibility. Let me know if you find anything that's broken, and enjoy! SVN revision: 2048
2000-02-10 16:25:07 -08:00
extern unsigned char update_desktop_info(int *, int *);
extern Window get_desktop_window(void);
extern Pixmap get_desktop_pixmap(void);
# endif
extern void shaped_window_apply_mask(Drawable, Pixmap);
extern void set_icon_pixmap(char *, XWMHints *);
#endif
_XFUNCPROTOEND
#endif /* _PIXMAP_H */