| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Avoid accidental side-effects.
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This is a regression. Scenario: search for a string, then backspace
until it goes empty.
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This one is ancient and it affects every single one of my forks,
including the whole lines2 lineage. The corner case: searching for empty
string.
In the process I've also cleaned up edit.check_locs on initialization to
only modify cursor if it can find a legal place for it.
In general I should be more careful about mutating the cursor. Just
adding 1 to it is irresponsible.
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We don't want to do this during app initialization because other forks
might not start out with an editor on screen even if this one does.
We don't want to perform this side-effect on edit.mouse_press, which
also runs in tests.
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This isn't a bug here, but it led to a bug in lines 2.
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Multiple editors in an app shouldn't create duplicate font objects.
Not strictly needed for this app, but feels hard-won enough I want to
pull this in from Carousel to all forks.
This still isn't ideal. Ideally we'd automatically share the font.
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We're patching line_cache and then immediately clearing it using
Text.redraw_all.
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It's shorter and conveys intent better.
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This feels better when I press a few keys, then backspace and press new
keys. It might be confusing if I hit 'down' a few times then backspace,
but I seldom do that.
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Looks to have first been introduced in Sep 2023. (Merge commit
09c76c82c2, though git's merge commits are hard to read. Yes, looks like
commit 0a12e4c733 didn't get merged right.)
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This is quite useful because I used to have a long list of places in
which to invalidate the cache.
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I'm not sure this is very useful. I had an initial idea to stop using
screen_bottom1 in final_text_loc_on_screen, by starting from screen_top1
rather than screen_bottom1. But that changes the direction in which we
scan for the text line in situations where there is somehow no text on
screen (something that should never happen but I have zero confidence in
that).
Still, it doesn't seem like a bad thing to drastically reduce the
lifetime of some derived state.
Really what I need to do is throw this whole UX out and allow the cursor
to be on a drawing as a whole. So up arrow or left arrow below a drawing
would focus the whole drawing in a red border, and another up arrow and
left arrow would skip the drawing and continue upward. I think that
change to the UX will eliminate a whole class of special cases in the
code.
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Thanks Alex Schroeder for reporting this crash. The scenario:
* Edit a file like say this repo's Readme.
* The second line is empty and there's a '+' to insert a drawing.
Click on that.
* Resize the window so just the first line of text and the drawing are
visible.
* Close the window.
* Reopen lines.love, it will reopen the same file.
* Click on the left margin to the left of the drawing.
Before this commit these steps yielded the following crash:
Error: bad argument #1 to 'len' (string expected, got nil)
text.lua:626: in function 'pos_at_end_of_screen_line'
edit.lua:298: in function 'mouse_press'
There were two distinct problems here:
1. State.screen_bottom1 is not required to point to a text line, it
could just as well be a drawing. I have been sloppy in handling that.
2. The bug was partially masked (the need to close and reopen the
window) by a second bug: inserting a drawing was not invalidating the
cache I save of starty coordinates for each line. (I've inserted and
deleted starty invalidations a few times in the past, but it looks
like I'd never had one in this particular location edit.draw before.)
How did these issues get missed for years?
- Even though I use lines.love on a daily basis, it turns out I don't
actually create line drawings all that often.
- When I do, I'm still living in files that are mostly text with only
an occasional drawing.
- I keep my windows fairly large.
Between these 3 patterns, the odds of running into a drawing as the
first or bottom-most line on the screen were fairly small. And then I
had to interact with it. I suspect I tend to interact with drawings
after centering them vertically.
---
Bug #1 in particular has some interesting past history.
* Near the start of the project, when I implemented line-wrapping I
started saving screen_bottom, the bottom-most line displayed on
screen. I did this so I could scroll down easily just by assigning
`screen_top = screen_bottom`. (On the other hand, scrolling up still
required some work. I should perhaps get rid of it and just compute
scrolls from scratch each time.)
* Also near the start of the project, I supported selecting text by a
complex state machine spanning keypress, mouse press and mouse
release:
mouse click (press and immediate release) moves cursor
mouse drag (press and much later release) creates selection
shift-click selects from current cursor to click location
shift-movement creates/grows a selection
* On 2023-06-01, inscript reported a bug. Opening a window with just a
little bit of text (lots of unused space in the window), selecting all
the text and then clicking below all the text would crash the editor.
To fix this I added code at the bottom of edit.mouse_press which
computed the final visible line+pos location and used that in the
cursor-move/text-selection state machine. It did this computation
based on.. screen_bottom. But I didn't notice that screen_bottom could
be a drawing (which has no pos). This commit's bug/regression was
created.
* On 2023-09-20, Matt Wynne encountered a crash which got me to realize
I need code at the bottom of edit.mouse_release symmetric to the code
at the bottom of edit.mouse_press. I still didn't notice that
screen_bottom could be a drawing.
So in fixing inscript's bug report, I introduced (at least) 2
regressions, because I either had no idea or quickly forgot that
screen_bottom could point at a drawing.
While I created regressions, the underlying mental bug feels new. I just
never focused on the fact that screen_bottom could point at a drawing.
This past history makes me suspicious of my mouse_press/mouse_release
code. I think I'm going to get rid of screen_bottom entirely as a
concept. I'll still have to be careful though about the remaining
locations and which of them are allowed to point at drawings:
- cursor and selection are not allowed to point at drawings
- screen_top and screen_bottom are allowed to point at drawings
I sometimes copy between these 4 location variables. Auditing shows no
gaps where cursor could ever end up pointing at a drawing. It's just
when I started using screen_bottom for a whole new purpose (in
the mouse_press/release state machine) that I went wrong.
I should also try getting rid of starty entirely. Is it _really_ needed
for a responsive editor? I think I introduced it back when I didn't know
what I was doing with LÖVE and was profligately creating text objects
willy-nilly just to compute widths.
Getting rid of these two fairly global bits of mutable state will
hopefully make lines much more robust when the next person tries it out
in 6 months :-/ X-(
Thanks everyone for the conversation around this bug:
https://merveilles.town/@akkartik/112567862542495637
---
Bug #2 has some complexity as well, and might lead to some follow-on
cleanup.
When I click on the button to insert a new drawing, the mouse_release
hook triggers and moves the cursor below the new drawing. This is
desirable, but I'd never noticed this happy accident. It stops working
when I invalidate starty for all lines (which gets recomputed and cached
for all visible lines on every frame).
Fixing this caused a couple of unit tests start crashing for 2 reasons
that required their own minor fixes:
- My emulated mouse press and release didn't have an intervening
frame and so mouse_release no longer receives starty. Now I've added
a call to edit.draw() between press and release.
This might actually bite someone for real someday, if they're
running on a slow computer or something like that. I've tried to
click really fast but I can't seem to put mouse_press and release in
the same frame (assuming 30 frames per second)
- My tests' window dimensions often violate my constraint that the
screen always have one line of text for showing the cursor. They're
unrealistically small or have a really wide aspect ratio (width 2x
of height). I suspect lines.love will itself crash in those
situations, but hopefully they're unrealistic. Hmm, I wonder what
would happen if someone maximized in a 16:9 screen, that's almost
2x.. Anyways, I've cleaned a couple of tests up, but might need to
fix up others at some point. I'd have to rejigger all my brittle
line-wrapping tests if I modify the screen width :-/ X-(
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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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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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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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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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Make it more obvious that the color passed in is just for the background.
The icon will do the rest.
r/g/b keys are more consistent with App.color().
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