| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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scenario:
- create a long wrapping line
- tap past end of first screen line
Before this commit the cursor would be positioned not quite at the end
of the screen line but one character before. In effect there was no way
to position cursor at end of a wrapping line.
I'm not sure how this bug has lasted so long. It was introduced in
commit 8d3adfa36 back in June 2022, which was itself billed as a bugfix
for "clicking past end of screen line". But when I go back to it this
bug exists even back then. How did I miss it?! I wrote a test back then
-- and the test was wrong, has always been wrong.
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We now treat all arrow chords as cursor movement.
Many thanks to Ryan Kessler (https://tone.support) for reporting this
issue.
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- source editor always expects relative paths
- refresh mocked data
There's still one issue after this: the font size saved in the config
file is the one we use in tests. More broadly, Editor_state is
completely wrong.
Ideally I'd just not save any settings for the source editor if the
tests fail.
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Scenario:
modify a test to fail in the source editor
delete any settings in the 'config' file in the save dir
start lines.love
press C-e to switch to source editor
Before this commit, this scenario led to the following events:
the C-e keypress invokes App.run_tests_and_initialize()
the failing test results in a call to error()
the call to error() is trapped by the xpcall around the event handler in love.run
handle_error runs
Current_app is 'source', so love.event.quit() is triggered
love.quit() is invoked
source.settings() is invoked
App.screen.position() is invoked, which calls the test mock
Since App.screen.move was never invoked, App.screen.position() returns nil
The 'config' file is written without values for source.x and source.y
As a result, future runs fail to open.
This is likely a corner case only I will ever run into, since I'm
careful to never commit failing unit tests. Still, I spent some time
trying to figure out the best place to fix this. Options:
* don't write config if Error_message is set
but we do want config written in this scenario:
* we hit an error, source editor opens
* we spend some time debugging and don't immediately fix the issue
* we quit, with some new files opened in various places
* hardcode source.settings() to call love.window.getPosition() rather
than App.screen.position().
drawback: weird special case
* clean up test mocks before aborting
this seems like something we always want
I'm not very sure of my choice.
This bug doesn't leave me feeling very great about my whole app.
Arguably everything I've done is bullshit hacks piled on hacks.
Perhaps the issue is:
- naked error() in LÖVE apps never invokes love.quit(), but
- an unhandled error within my handle_error invokes love.quit() (via
love.event.quit)
Perhaps LÖVE should provide a way to abort without invoking the quit
handler. There's literally no other way in LÖVE to request a quit.
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scenario: run without config file, quit, run again
expected: font size remains the same on second run
Before this commit it was increasing on each run.
It turns out the font height that you pass into love.graphics.newFont()
is not the result of font:getHeight().
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Now it adjusts the current font for itself.
And it's up to the caller to adjust the current font after.
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Not really useful here, but other forks might make use of it.
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Renamed from the 'error' state.
Now we no longer overload Error_message; it's only used for actual
errors that trigger opening the source editor.
I was tempted to hide Skip_rest_of_key_events inside the 'warning' state
as well, but that isn't right. It applies to all Current_app
transitions, not just those in and out of 'warning'.
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I'm starting to feel better after replacing 1 line with 20 and 2 new
bits of global state. I'm now handling two scenarios more explicitly:
* If I change Current_app within key_press, the corresponding text_input
and key_release events go to the new app. If it's an editor it might
insert the key, which is undesirable. Putting such handlers in
key_release now feels overly clever, particularly since it took me
forever to realize why I was getting stuck in an infinite loop.
* Both 'run' and 'source' can hit the version check, so we need to be
able to transition from the 'error' app to either. Which
necessitates yet another global bit of state: Next_app.
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This is still ugly, but hopefully easier to follow.
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When I stopped running the version check before the tests I also stopped
initializing Version, which can be used in tests to watch out for font
changes across versions. As a result I started seeing a test failure
with LÖVE v12.
It looks like all manual tests pass now. And we're also printing the
warning about version checks before running tests, which can come in
handy if a new version ever causes test failures. The only thing that
makes me unhappy is the fact that we're calling the version check twice.
And oh, the fact that this part around initialization and version
management is clearly still immature.
I'll capture some desires and fragmentary thought processes around them:
* If there's an error, go to the source editor.
* But oh, don't go to source editor on some unactionable errors, so we
include a new `Current_app` mode for them:
* Unsupported version requires an expert. Just muddle through if you
can or give a warning someone can send me.
* A failing test might be spurious depending on the platform and font
rendering scheme. So again just provide a warning someone can send
me.
[Source editor can be confusing for errors. Also an editor! But not
showing the file you asked for!]
* But our framework clears the warning after running tests:
* If someone is deep in developing a new feature and quits -> restore
back in the source editor.
[Perhaps `Current_app` is the wrong place for this third hacky mode,
since we actually want to continue running. Perhaps it's orthogonal to
`Current_app`.]
[Ideally I wouldn't run the tests after the version check. I'd pause,
wait for a key and then resume tests? "Muddle through" is a pain to
orchestrate.]
* We store `Current_app` in settings. But we don't really intend to
persist a `Current_app` of 'error'. Only the main app or 'source'
editor.
[Another vote against storing 'error' in `Current_app`.]
* So we need to rerun the version check after running tests to actually
show the warning.
[Perhaps I need to separate out the side-effect of setting `Version`
from the side-effect of changing `Current_app`. But that's not right
either, because I do still want to raise an error message if the
version check fails before running tests. Which brings us back to
wanting to run the tests after raising the version check..]
One good thing: none of the bugs so far have been about silently
ignoring test failures. I thought that might be the case for a bit,
which was unnerving.
I grew similar muddiness in Mu's bootstrap system over time, with
several surrounding modes around the core program that interacted poorly
or at least unsatisfyingly with each other. On one level it just feels
like this outer layer reflects muddy constraints in the real world. But
perhaps there's some skill I still need to learn here..
Why am I even displaying this error if we're going to try to muddle
through anyway? In (vain) hopes that someone will send me that
information. It's not terribly actionable even to me. But it's really
intended for when making changes. If a test fails then, you want to
know.
The code would be cleaner if I just threw an unrecoverable error from
the version check. Historically, the way I arrived at this solution was:
* I used the default love.errorhandler for a while
* I added xpcall and error recovery, but now I have situations where I
would rather fall back on love.errorhandler. How to tell xpcall
that?
But no, this whole line of thought is wrong. LÖVE has a precedent for
trying to muddle through on an unexpected version. And spurious test
failures don't merit a hard crash. There's some irreducible requirement
here. No point making the code simplistic when the world is complex.
Perhaps I should stop caching Version and just recompute it each time.
It's only used once so far, hardly seems worth the global.
We have two bits of irreducible complexity here:
* If tests fail it might be a real failure, or it might not.
* Even if it's an unexpected version, everything might be fine.
And the major remaining problem happens at the intersection of these two
bits. What if we get an unexpected version with some difference that
causes tests to fail? But this is a hypothetical and not worth thinking
about since I'll update the app fairly quickly in response to new
versions.
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We could now get test failures before the version check, which might be
confusing.
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We'll end up calling Text.redraw_all anyway, which will clear starty and
much more besides.
We'll still conservatively continue clearing starty in a few places
where there's a possibility that Text.redraw_all may not be called. This
change is riskier than most.
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Just checking mouse.isDown works if the editor is the entirety of the
app, as is true in this fork. However, we often want to introduce other
widgets. We'd like tapping on them to not cause the selection to flash:
https://news.ycombinator.com/context?id=38404923&submission=38397715
The right architecture to enforce this is: have each layer of the UI
maintain its own state machine between mouse_press and mouse_release
events. And only check the state machine in the next level down rather
than lower layers or the bottommost layer of raw LÖVE.
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I'm not sure this can trigger everywhere (I've only been able to
exercise it in Lua Carousel), but it seems like a safety net worth
having against future modifications by anybody.
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This commit doesn't guarantee we'll always catch it. But if this
invariant is violated, things can get quite difficult to debug. I found
in the Lua Carousel fork that all the xpcalls I keep around were
actively hindering my ability to notice this invariant being violated.
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This came up when trying to integrate my apps with the vudu debugger
(https://github.com/deltadaedalus/vudu). In general, it's a subtle part
of LÖVE's semantics that you can modify event handlers any time and your
modifications will get picked up. Now my Freewheeling Apps will follow
this norm as well.
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Each one should provide a message that will show up within LÖVE. Stop
relying on nearby prints to the terminal.
I also found some unnecessary ones.
There is some potential here for performance regressions: the format()
calls will trigger whether or not the assertion fails, and cause
allocations. So far Lua's GC seems good enough to manage the load even
with Moby Dick, even in some situations that caused issues in the past
like undo.
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We have an early exit for 'error' mode in this function.
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In particular, I want to be able to switch to 'error' mode rather than
throw a real error() on test failures, because that's a little more
responsive and might be recoverable. (On some Android devices the font
is slightly different, and tests fail as a result.)
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before:
stack traceback:
[string "text.lua"]:9: in function 'draw'
[string "edit.lua"]:200: in function 'draw'
[string "run.lua"]:140: in function 'draw'
[string "main.lua"]:162: in function <[string "main.lua"]:155>
[C]: in function 'xpcall'
[string "app.lua"]:38: in function <[string "app.lua"]:20>
[C]: in function 'xpcall'
[love "boot.lua"]:370: in function <[love "boot.lua"]:337>
after:
stack traceback:
text.lua:9: in function 'draw'
edit.lua:200: in function 'draw'
run.lua:140: in function 'draw'
main.lua:162: in function <[string "main.lua"]:155>
[C]: in function 'xpcall'
app.lua:38: in function <[string "app.lua"]:20>
[C]: in function 'xpcall'
[love "boot.lua"]:370: in function <[love "boot.lua"]:337>
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Port of a fix "upstream": commit b38f172ceb in template-live-editor.
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