This finishes the implementation of `--window` to also accept a string
as the "name" of the window. So you can say
```sh
wt -w foo new-tab
wt -w foo split-pane
```
and have both those commands execute in the same window, the one named
"foo". This is just slightly more ergonomic than manually using the IDs
of windows. In the future, I'll be working on renaming windows, and
displaying these names.
> #### `--window,-w <window-id>`
> Run these commands in the given Windows Terminal session. This enables opening
> new tabs, splits, etc. in already running Windows Terminal windows.
> * If `window-id` is `0`, run the given commands in _the current window_.
> * If `window-id` is a negative number, or the reserved name `new`, run the
> commands in a _new_ Terminal window.
> * If `window-id` is the ID or name of an existing window, then run the
> commandline in that window.
> * If `window-id` is _not_ the ID or name of an existing window, create a new
> window. That window will be assigned the ID or name provided in the
> commandline. The provided subcommands will be run in that new window.
> * If `window-id` is omitted, then obey the value of `windowingBehavior` when
> determining which window to run the command in.
Before this PR, I think we didn't actually properly support assigning
the id with `wt -w 12345`. If `12345` didn't exist, it would make a new
window, but just assign it the next id, not assign it 12345.
## References
* #4472, #8135
* https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5
## Validation Steps Performed
Ran tests
Messed with naming windows, working as expected.
Closes https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5#card-51431478
This PR is a resurrection of #8414. @Hegunumo has apparently deleted
their account, but the contribution was still valuable. I'm just here to
get it across the finish line.
This PR adds new global setting `centerOnLaunch`. When set to `true`,
the Terminal window will be centered on the display it opens on.
So the interactions are like:
* `initialPos: x,y`, `centered: true`, `launchMode: default`
center on the monitor that x,y is on
* `initialPos: x,y`, `centered: true`, `launchMode: maximized`
maximized on the monitor that x,y is on (centered adds nothing)
* `initialPos: <omitted>`, `centered: true`, `launchMode: default`
center on the default monitor
* `initialPos: <omitted>`, `centered: true`, `launchMode: focus`
center, focus mode on the default monitor
* `initialPos: <omitted>`, `centered: true`, `launchMode: maximized`
maximized on the default monitor (centered adds nothing)
## Validation Steps Performed
I've played with it on multiple different monitors, and it seems to work
on all of them.
Closes#8414 (original PR)
Closes#7722
Co-authored-by: Kiminori Kaburagi <yukawa_hidenori@icloud.com>
Adds support for the `windowingBehavior` global setting. This setting
controls how mutiple instances of `wt` behave in the absence of the `-w`
parameter. This setting has three values:
* `"useNew"`: (default) Multiple `wt` invocations (without the `-w`
param) always create new windows.
* `"useAnyExisting"`: When starting a new `wt`, we'll instead default to
any existing windows. `wt -w -1` will still create new windows.
* `"useExisting"`: Similar to `useAnyExisting`, but limits to
windows on the current desktop.
The IVirtualDesktopManager interface is _very_ limited. Hence why we
have to track the HWNDs manually, and ask if they're on the current
desktop.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've been playing with it for a week now.
References #5000
References projects/5
References #8898
Spec'd in #8135Closes#2227
Closes https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5#card-51431448
Closes https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5#card-51431433
This will make sure to summon the terminal window when running a
commandline in it.
* If the window is on another desktop, the OS will switch to the desktop
the window is on.
* If the window is minimized, it will restore it.
This is taken from my quake mode branch. It works aggressively. 848682a,
fee6473, 342d3f2, 5052d31 all had other attempts at doing this, but they
didn't work reliably. Part of the trick is that I don't _think_ Windows
wants one process to be able to move another process into the
foreground. In this case though, we _do_ want to move ourself into the
foreground, and this `AttachThreadInput` hack seems to be the only way
to do it reliably.
References #5000
Uses code authored for #653
Closes https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5#card-54636373
## Summary of the Pull Request
**If you're reading this PR and haven't signed off on #8135, go there first.**
![window-management-000](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/103932910-25199380-50e8-11eb-97e3-594a31da62d2.gif)
This provides the basic parts of the implementation of #4472. Namely:
* We add support for the `--window,-w <window-id>` argument to `wt.exe`, to allow a commandline to be given to another window.
* If `window-id` is `0`, run the given commands in _the current window_.
* If `window-id` is a negative number, run the commands in a _new_ Terminal window.
* If `window-id` is the ID of an existing window, then run the commandline in that window.
* If `window-id` is _not_ the ID of an existing window, create a new window. That window will be assigned the ID provided in the commandline. The provided subcommands will be run in that new window.
* If `window-id` is omitted, then create a new window.
## References
* Spec: #8135
* Megathread: #5000
* Project: projects/5
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#4472
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - **sure does**
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Note that `wt -w 1 -d c:\foo cmd.exe` does work, by causing window 1 to change
There are limitations, and there are plenty of things to work on in the future:
* [ ] We don't support names for windows yet
* [ ] We don't support window glomming by default, or a setting to configure what happens when `-w` is omitted. I thought it best to lay the groundwork first, then come back to that.
* [ ] `-w 0` currently just uses the "last activated" window, not "the current". There's more follow-up work to try and smartly find the actual window we're being called from.
* [ ] Basically anything else that's listed in projects/5.
I'm cutting this PR where it currently is, because this is already a huge PR. I believe the remaining tasks will all be easier to land, once this is in.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've been creating windows, and closing them, and running cmdlines for a while now. I'm gonna keep doing that while the PR is open, till no bugs remain.
# TODOs
* [x] There are a bunch of `GetID`, `GetPID` calls that aren't try/caught 😬
- [x] `Monarch.cpp`
- [x] `Peasant.cpp`
- [x] `WindowManager.cpp`
- [x] `AppHost.cpp`
* [x] If the monarch gets hung, then _you can't launch any Terminals_ 😨 We should handle this gracefully.
- Proposed idea: give the Monarch some time to respond to a proposal for a commandline. If there's no response in that timeframe, this window is now a _hermit_, outside of society entirely. It can't be elected Monarch. It can't receive command lines. It has no ID.
- Could we gracefully recover from such a state? maybe, probably not though.
- Same deal if a peasant hangs, it could end up hanging the monarch, right? Like if you do `wt -w 2`, and `2` is hung, then does the monarch get hung waiting on the hung peasant?
- After talking with @miniksa, **we're gonna punt this from the initial implementation**. If people legit hit this in the wild, we'll fix it then.
### Plurals and paste tenses
In the past, plurals `foo`+`s` and past tenses `foo`+`ed` were
automatically tolerated. This turned out to be a bad design choice on my
part.
The basic example is that `potatos` would sometimes be treated as a
mistake and sometimes not (depending on the presence of `potato`).
You can see in this PR, that this logic resulted in `Applys` being
accepted as a word along with `AppContainered` -- there's nothing
intrinsically wrong w/ the latter, but unfortunately in order to screen
out the former, my shortcut just couldn't stick around. This means that
the `dictionary`/`expect` files will grow perhaps by a tiny bit, but as
you can see, not really by much.
This is also why `thereses` (a user) was accepted as a word in the past
(therese is in the base dictionary, so `therese` + `s` was acceptable).
### Pull requests
When GitHub initially introduced GitHub Actions, the event for
`pull_request` was created without enough permission for a tool like
this to work properly. I worked around that by using the `schedule`
event. In 2020, they introduced a replacement event
`pull_request_target` which has enough permission. This means that I can
stop relying on the `schedule` event.
### Miscellaneous
* I've folded together some `expect/` files since now is as good a time
as any.
* I've included a hint about `excludes.txt` (I added a similar one for
our primary repo recently, and it came up this week in
`microsoft/terminal` -- @zadjii-msft)
* I've standardized on a default of `.github/actions/spelling` to make
the out of the box experience easier for new adopters, so I'm applying
that change here -- if you're attached to the old directory name,
specifying it is still supported. -- note the directory rename may
cause a merge conflict for people with open PRs and changes to the
contents, this shouldn't be a big problem.
Adds a `Microsoft.Terminal.Remoting.dll` to our solution. This DLL will
be responsible for all the Monarch/Peasant work that's been described in
#7240 & #8135.
This PR does _not_ implement the Monarch/Peasant architecture in any
significant way. The goal of this PR is to just to establish the project
layout, and the most basic connections. This should make reviewing the
actual meat of the implementation (in a later PR) easier. It will also
give us the opportunity to include some of the basic weird things we're
doing (with `CoRegisterClass`) in the Terminal _now_, and get them
selfhosted, before building on them too much.
This PR does have windows registering the `Monarch` class with COM. When
windows are created, they'll as the Monarch if they should create a new
window or not. In this PR, the Monarch will always reply "yes, please
make a new window".
Similar to other projects in our solution, we're adding 3 projects here:
* `Microsoft.Terminal.Remoting.lib`: the actual implementation, as a
static lib.
* `Microsoft.Terminal.Remoting.dll`: The implementation linked as a DLL,
for use in `WindowsTerminal.exe`.
* `Remoting.UnitTests.dll`: A unit test dll that links with the static
lib.
There are plenty of TODOs scattered about the code. Clearly, most of
this isn't implemented yet, but I do have more WIP branches. I'm using
[`projects/5`](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5) as my
notation for TODOs that are too small for an issue, but are part of the
whole Process Model 2.0 work.
## References
* #5000 - this is the process model megathread
* #7240 - The process model 2.0 spec.
* #8135 - the window management spec. (please review me, I have 0/3
signoffs even after the discussion we had 😢)
* #8171 - the Monarch/peasant sample. (please review me, I have 1/2)
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes nothing, this is just infrastructure
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
This commit iontroduces another `target` to the `openSettings` binding:
`settingsUI`. It opens the settings UI introduced in the previous
commit.
Closes#1564Closes#8048 (PR)
Co-authored-by: Carlos Zamora <carlos.zamora@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Leon Liang <lelian@microsoft.com>
This PR defines a series of `NOSOMETHING` macros in PCHs, in order to
prevent `windows.h` from bringing a lot of rarely used things into the
project.
Theoretically this should make PCH generation and overall complication
faster, but I didn't really benchmark the speed.
Another benefit would be reducing the symbol noises caused by
`windows.h`.
There's a handful of small changes in these updates:
The Win32 Toolkit is now built with CFG (I think), and
the VCRT forwarders are now the (second) non-RC version.
This commit moves us to the Xaml prerelease (201202003) that is
equivalent to public stable release 2.5.
Remember, we need to use prereleases for some silly reason.
This fixes the issue with the settings UI where clicking the browse
buttons would cause an exception to be thrown when we tried to display a
picker without an originating HWND.
It turns out that pickers need a hosting/parent window, and Xaml Islands
doesn't furnish us with a CoreWindow that's set up for that use case.
Alas!
Raymond Chen's [blog post on the matter] suggests that we should
hand the HWND off through some classic COM interface. To do that
properly, Terminal's various components need to implement that interface
and propagate the HWND down where it's needed.
Thanks to a [Xaml compiler issue], we can't actually do that. To work
around that, we've begged and borrowed different methods for pushing
HWNDs around:
1. Using IInitializeWithWindow in secret
2. A member that takes a uint64
3. An interface that offers a function that will "wire up" the HWND.
I chose (1) because AppHost can implement IInitializeWithWindow, but
TerminalPage cannot. We're just pretending that TerminalPage _can_.
I chose (2) because none of the Xaml types in TerminalSettingsEditor can
implement the interface thanks to the aforementioned compiler issue, but
we don't have an escape hatch like AppHost that lives in the same module
and can help us do the propagation.
I chose (3) because I didn't want to commit the same sin as (2) _seven
times_ for every different type of settings page that exists. (3) is
backed by "IHostedInWindow", and anybody who knows they have to use
IInitializeWithWindow to tie an HWND to an object can call
IHostedInWindow.TryPropagateHostingWindow() on that object.
House of cards.
[Xaml compiler issue]: https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/issues/3331
[blog post on the matter]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20190412-00/?p=102413
(cherry picked from commit f9fc9861a1)
Many include statements use forward slashes, while others use backwards
slashes. This is inconsistent formatting. For this reason, I changed the
backward slashes to forward slashes since that is the standard.
The terminal taskbar icon can now flash when the BEL sequence is
emitted, to let the user know something needs their attention.
The `BellStyle` setting can now be set to `audible`, `visual` or both or
none. When the pane receives a BEL event and the `bellStyle` includes
`visual`, we bubble the event up all the way to `AppHost` to handle
flashing the taskbar.
Closes#1608
This commit implements the OSC 9;4 sequence per the [ConEmu style].
| sequence | description |
| ------------ | ------------ |
| `ESC ] 9 ; 4 ; st ; pr ST` | Set progress state on taskbar and tab. |
| | When `st` is: |
| | |
| | `0`: remove progress. |
| | `1`: set progress value to `pr` (number, 0-100). |
| | `2`: set the taskbar to the "Error" state |
| | `3`: set the taskbar to the "Indeterminate" state |
| | `4`: set the taskbar to the "Warning" state |
We've also extended this with:
* st 3: set indeterminate state
* st 4: set paused state
We handle multiple tabs sending the sequence by using the the last focused
control's taskbar state/progress.
Upon receiving the sequence in `TerminalApi`, we send an event that gets caught
by `TerminalPage`. `TerminalPage` then fires another event that gets caught by
`AppHost` and that's where we set the taskbar progress.
Closes#3004
[ConEmu style]: https://conemu.github.io/en/AnsiEscapeCodes.html#ConEmu_specific_OSC
Until now, we relied on WM_SIZING to ensure that the island is not
downsized below minimal allowed dimensions. However, on some occasions
WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED, e.g. when anchoring a window to the top/bottom of
the screen. This message will use dimensions obtained from
WM_GETMINMAXINFO. Until now we didn't override this value, falling back
to the defaults. As a result we got an inconsistent behavior (at least
when attaching the anchor).
I added logic very similar to the one we use in IslandWindow::_OnSizing
to the MINMAXINFO handler: snap the client area, add non client
exclusive are, consider DPI along the computation.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Manual testing of minimizing, maximizing, resizing, attaching
different anchors, etc.
Closes#8026
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
In the focus mode the top border disappears upon resize. While this behavior is expected in the maximized / full screen mode, it should not happen in the focus mode.
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? -->
## References
<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/7012
* [x] CLA signed
* [ ] Tests added/passed - nope, only manual testing
* [ ] Documentation updated - irrelevant
* [ ] Schema updated - irrelevant
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx
<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
_GetTopBorderHeight method returns 0 when maximized or no title bar is visible. However the existence of top border has nothing to do with whether the title bar is visible. We want to leave the border as long as the window is not in some form of maximizing (maximized / full screen)
<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
* Manual - dragging, resizing, maximizing both in focus and non focus modes + full screen testing
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? -->
## References
<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/7996
* [x] CLA signed.
* [ ] Documentation updated - irrelevant
* [ ] Schema updated - irrelevant
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx
<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Currently the value of AlwaysOnTop is read by the AppHost from AppLogic that takes this value from the root TerminalPage. However at this stage neither AppLogic nor TerminalPage are initialized, and thus the return value is always false.
This PR introduces a "GetInitialAlwaysOnTop" method to AppLogic that returns a value that is configured in the settings.
In addition, the TerminalPage creation was fixed to read the configuration value upon creation (and not just after settings reload).
<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
* Only manual testing
* Starting the system with both initial value set to true and false
* Verifying that dynamic toggling on / off is not affected
This commit introduces 8 more variants of the .ICO file, embeds the
right ones into WindowsTerminal.exe, and adds code that will select the
most appropriate icon at runtime.
Since we're a Centennial application, the "application" icon inside our
package isn't used by the shell for the taskbar thumbnails or the
Alt-Tab window.
To quote J. Tippet,
> I believe there are two possible fixes:
>
> 1. Fix the OS shell to prefer the MRT icon instead of preferring the
> win32 icon
> 2. Add alternate versions of /res/terminal.ico
> The 1st fix is clearly better, since it benefits any hybrid app. But
> the 2nd fix is much easier, since it'd just take about an hour to gin up
> a new .ico file and hack the .RC file to refer to it when building the
> preview flavor.
... and to quote Michael Ratanapintha,
> Basically, if your MSIX-packaged desktop app's image resources are
> separate files or even separate MSIX packages, they may be loaded by
> MRT. If they're embedded in the .exe, they're the old-fashioned Win32
> resources Mr. Tippet is referring to.
This is the "2nd fix."
Fixes#6777
Co-authored-by: Jeffrey Tippet <jtippet@ntdev.microsoft.com>
This commit fixes our longstanding build artifact output issues and
finally unifies all C++ project output into bin/ and obj/.
In light of that, I've removed NoOutputRedirection.
I've also updated WTU and U8U16Test to use our common build props and
fixed any warnings/compilation errors that popped out.
I validated this change by running repeated incremental builds after
changing individual .cpp files in many of our C++/WinRT projects.
Our build pipeline was originally set up such that we could take any
binaries from the Terminal build and seamlessly re-package them with the
release or preview livery. My initial plan was to stamp a stable and
preview build at the same time, out of the same bits, to make ring
promotion easier.
I've never done that. For the last five releases, we've just re-cut a
new stable build along with the new preview build, usually because we
want to backport some fixes to stable.
This commit introduces preprocessor defines, detectable through CL and
RC, for any project that wants them. Right now, that's just going to be
WindowsTerminal.vcxproj (since it hosts the icons and the app entry
point). This list may be extended to include wt (the shim executable)
and the shell extension at some future date.
This will greatly simplify the logic in #7971, as we'll no longer need
to detect if we're dev or preview at runtime. It may also simplify the
logic in the shell extension for determining whether we're Dev or not.
This commit introduces two new launch modes: focus and maximizedFocus.
* Focused mode, behaves like a default mode, but with the Focus Mode
enabled.
* Maximized focused mode, behaves like a Maximized mode, but with the
Focus Mode enabled.
There two ways to invoke these new modes:
* In the settings file: you set the "launchMode" to either "focus" or
"maximizedFocus"
* In the command line options, you can path -f / --focus, which is
mutually exclusive with the --fullscreen, but can be combined with the
--maximized:
* Passing -f / --focus will launch the terminal in the "focus" mode
* Passing -fM / --focus --maximized will launch the terminal in the
"maximizedFocus" mode
This should resolve a relevant part in the command line arguments
mega-thread #4632Closes#7124Closes#7825Closes#7875
Took this as an easy starter. The method IslandWindow::SetAlwaysOnTop is
triggered once terminal settings are reloaded (in
TerminalPage::_RefreshUIForSettingsReload flow). This method calls
SetWindowPos without SWP_NOACTIVATE. As a result the window gets
activated, the focus is set and the cursor starts blinking.
Added SWP_NOACTIVATE in all SetWindowPos calls from IslandWindow and
NoClientIslandWindow (where it was missing). Please let me know if this
is an overkill - it is not required to fix the issue, however seems a
good practice, that might help if we decide to apply more settings
immediately.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Only manual testing - please guide me to the relevant UT framework, if
exists.
* Trying to reproduce this with VS attached doesn't work - the window
gets the focus in any case.
* Tested as a standalone application, by modifying different settings
(and comparing the results before and after the fix).
* Checked with Spy++ that no WM_ACTIVATE / WM_SETFOCUS is thrown upon
settings modification
* Applied terminal resizing, toggling full screen and focus mode to
check no regression was introduced.
Closes#7571
This pull request introduces (a very, very stripped-down copy of) the
WIL fallback error reporter.
It emits error records, usually immediately before the application
implodes, into the event stream.
This should improve diagnosability of issues that take Terminal down,
and allow us to give out a .wprp file to gather traces from users.
Introduces a new TerminalSettingsModel (TSM) project. This project is
responsible for (de)serializing and exposing Windows Terminal's settings
as WinRT objects.
## References
#885: TSM epic
#1564: Settings UI is dependent on this for data binding and settings access
#6904: TSM Spec
In the process of ripping out TSM from TerminalApp, a few other changes
were made to make this possible:
1. AppLogic's `ApplicationDisplayName` and `ApplicationVersion` was
moved to `CascadiaSettings`
- These are defined as static functions. They also no longer check if
`AppLogic::Current()` is nullptr.
2. `enum LaunchMode` was moved from TerminalApp to TSM
3. `AzureConnectionType` and `TelnetConnectionType` were moved from the
profile generators to their respective TerminalConnections
4. CascadiaSettings' `SettingsPath` and `DefaultSettingsPath` are
exposed as `hstring` instead of `std::filesystem::path`
5. `Command::ExpandCommands()` was exposed via the IDL
- This required some of the warnings to be saved to an `IVector`
instead of `std::vector`, among some other small changes.
6. The localization resources had to be split into two halves.
- Resource file linked in init.cpp. Verified at runtime thanks to the
StaticResourceLoader.
7. Added constructors to some `ActionArgs`
8. Utils.h/cpp were moved to `cascadia/inc`. `JsonKey()` was moved to
`JsonUtils`. Both TermApp and TSM need access to Utils.h/cpp.
A large amount of work includes moving to the new namespace
(`TerminalApp` --> `Microsoft::Terminal::Settings::Model`).
Fixing the tests had its own complications. Testing required us to split
up TSM into a DLL and LIB, similar to TermApp. Discussion on creating a
non-local test variant can be found in #7743.
Closes#885
The WAP packaging project is sensitive to including applications that it
thinks are UWPs. The changes we made to separate WindowsStoreApp and
WindowsAppContainer weren't comprehensive enough to convince WAP that we
were not still UWPs.
Because of that, it would run sub-builds of each of these projects (and
all their dependencies) with an additional `GenerateAppxPackageOnBuild`
property set. The existence of this property caused MSBuild to think the
projects needed to be built *again*.
GlobalAppSettings is now a WinRT object in the TerminalApp project.
## References
#7141 - GlobalAppSettings is a settings object
#885 - this new settings object will be moved to a new TerminalSettingsModel project
## PR Checklist
* [x] Tests passed
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This one was probably the easiest thus far.
The only weird thing is how we handle InitialPosition. Today, we lose a
little bit of fidelity when we convert from LaunchPosition (int) -->
Point (float) --> RECT (long). The current change converts
LaunchPosition (optional<long>) --> InitialPosition (long) --> RECT
(long).
NOTE: Though I could use LaunchPosition to go directly from TermApp to
AppHost, I decided to introduce InitialPosition because LaunchPosition
will be a part of TerminalSettingsModel soon.
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Tests passed
- [x] Deployment succeeded
The easiest fix was actually just moving all the source files from
`TerminalApp` to `TerminalApp/lib`, where the appropriate `pch.h`
actually resides.
Closes#6866
#7145 introduced a check so that we wouldn't dispatch keys unless they
actually had a scancode. Our synthetic events actually _didn't_ have
scancodes. Not because they couldn't--just because they didn't.
Fixes#7297
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR adds support for both _nested_ and _iterable_ commands in the Command palette.
![nested-commands-000](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/87072916-2d991c00-c1e2-11ea-8917-a70e8b8b9803.gif)
* **Nested commands**: These are commands that include additional sub-commands. When the user selects on of these, the palette will update to only show the nested commands.
* **Iterable commands**: These are commands what allow the user to define only a single command, which is repeated once for every profile. (in the future, also repeated for color schemes, themes, etc.)
The above gif uses the following json:
```json
{
"name": "Split Pane...",
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"name": "Split with ${profile.name}...",
"commands": [
{ "command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "automatic" } },
{ "command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "vertical" } },
{ "command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "horizontal" } }
]
}
]
},
```
## References
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#3994
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - Sure does, but we'll finish polishing this first.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
We've now gotta keep the original json for a command around, so that once we know what all the profiles will be, we can expand the commands that need it.
We've also got to parse commands recursively, because they might have any number of child commands.
These together made the command parsing a _lot_ more complicated, but it feels good so far.
## Validation Steps Performed
* wrote a bunch of tests
* Played with it a bunch
MouseInput was directly asking user32 about the state of the mouse buttons,
which was somewhat of a layering violation. This commit makes all callers
have to pass the mouse state in themselves.
Closes#4869
## Summary of the Pull Request
Move `ICoreSettings` and `IControlSettings` from the TerminalSettings project to the TerminalCore and TerminalControl projects respectively. Also entirely removes the TerminalSettings project.
The purpose of these interfaces is unchanged. `ICoreSettings` is used to instantiate a terminal. `IControlSettings` (which requires an `ICoreSettings`) is used to instantiate a UWP terminal control.
## References
Closes#7140
Related Epic: #885
Related Spec: #6904
## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes#7140
* [X] CLA signed
* [X] Tests ~added~/passed (no additional tests necessary)
* [X] ~Documentation updated~
* [X] ~Schema updated~
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
A lot of the work here was having to deal with winmd files across all of these projects. The TerminalCore project now outputs a Microsoft.Terminal.TerminalControl.winmd. Some magic happens in TerminalControl.vcxproj to get this to work properly.
## Validation Steps Performed
Deployed Windows Terminal and opened a few new tabs.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds a execute commandline action (`wt`), which lets a user bind a key to a specific `wt` commandline. This commandline will get parsed and run _in the current window_.
## References
* Related to #4472
* Related to #5400 - I need this for the commandline mode of the Command Palette
* Related to #5970
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes oh, there's not actually an issue for this.
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - yes it does
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
One important part of this change concerns how panes are initialized at runtime. We've had some persistent trouble with initializing multiple panes, because they rely on knowing how big they'll actually be, to be able to determine if they can split again.
We previously worked around this by ignoring the size check when we were in "startup", processing an initial commandline. This PR however requires us to be able to know the initial size of a pane at runtime, but before the parents have necessarily been added to the tree, or had their renderer's set up.
This led to the development of `Pane::PreCalculateCanSplit`, which is very highly similar to `Pane::PreCalculateAutoSplit`. This method attempts to figure out how big a pane _will_ take, before the parent has necessarily laid out.
This also involves a small change to `TermControl`, because if its renderer hasn't been set up yet, it'll always think the font is `{0, fontHeight}`, which will let the Terminal keep splitting in the x direction. This change also makes the TermControl set up a renderer to get the real font size when it hasn't yet been initialized.
## Validation Steps Performed
This was what the json blob I was using for testing evolved into
```json
{
"command": {
"action":"wt",
"commandline": "new-tab cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k media-commandline ; new-tab powershell dev\\symbols.ps1 ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ; new-tab -p \"haunter.gif\" ; focus-tab -t 0",
},
"keys": ["ctrl+shift+n"]
}
```
I also added some tests.
# TODO
* [x] Creating a `{ "command": "wt" }` action without a commandline will spawn a new `wt.exe` process?
- Probably should just do nothing for the empty string
This PR adds support for always on top mode, via two mechanisms:
* The global setting `alwaysOnTop`. When set to true, the window will be
created in the "topmost" group of windows. Changing this value will
hot-reload whether the window is in the topmost group.
* The action `toggleAlwaysOnTop`, which will toggle the `alwaysOnTop`
property at runtime.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
All "topmost" windows maintain an internal z-ordering relative to one
another, but they're all always above all other "non-topmost" windows.
So multiple Windows Terminal windows which are both `alwaysOnTop` will
maintain a z-order relative to one another, but they'll all be on top of
all other windows.
## Validation Steps Performed
Toggled always on top mode, both in the settings and also at runtime,
and verified that it largely did what I expected.
Closes#3038
## Summary of the Pull Request
Add support for "focus" mode, which only displays the actual terminal content, no tabs or titlebar. The edges of the window are draggable to resize, but the window can't be moved in borderless mode.
The window looks _slightly_ different bewteen different values for `showTabsInTitlebar`, because switching between the `NonClientIslandWindow` and the `IslandWindow` is _hard_.
`showTabsInTitlebar` | Preview
-- | --
`true` | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/86639069-f5090080-bf9d-11ea-8b29-fb1e479a078d.png)
`false` | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/86639094-fafee180-bf9d-11ea-8fc0-6804234a5113.png)
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#2238
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
* **KNOWN ISSUE**: Upon resizing the NCIW, the top frame margin disappears, making that border disappear entirely. 6356aaf has a bunch of WIP work for me trying to fix that, but I couldn't get it quite right.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Toggled between focus and fullscreen a _bunch_ in both modes.
The main change in 16.7 is the separation of `AppContainerApplication`
into `WindowsStoreApp` and `WindowsAppContainer`. There's been a bit of
interest in splitting packaging away from containment, and this is the
first step in that direction.
We're a somewhat unique application, but as WinUI3 becomes more
prevalent we will become _less_ unique.
Some of these things, I've looked at and wondered how they ever worked.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes nothing
## Validation Steps Performed
Built locally and in CI. Tested the generated package with the package tester. Built on 16.6 and seen that it still seems to work.
See: https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/releases/tag/v2.5.0-prerelease.200609001
> ### Notable Changes:
>
> Resize tab view items only once the pointer has left the TabViewItem strip (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2569)
> Align TabView visuals with Edge (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2201)
> Fix background of MenuFlyout in white high contrast (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2446)
> TabView: Make TabViewItem consume the TabViewItemHeaderForeground theme resource (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2348)
> TabView: Add tooltips to its scrolling buttons. (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2369)
* [x] Related to #5360 (@jtippet confirms that this alone does not close it.)
* [x] I work here
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
Many places in this codebase has an equality comparison to the boolean FALSE. This adds unneeded complexity as C and C++ has a NOT operand for use of these in if statements. This makes the code more readable in those areas.
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? -->
## References
<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [X] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [X] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [ ] I've discussed this with core contributors already. If not checked, I'm ready to accept this work might be rejected in favor of a different grand plan. Issue number where discussion took place: #xxx
<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
One boolean being compared to FALSE was only used once, with the boolean name being "b", so it is better off not existing at all.
<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
Unit Testing passed, compiler refactoring
For mysterious reasons lost to the sands of time, XAML will _never_ pass
us a VK_MENU event. This is something that'll probably get fixed in
WinUI 3, but considering we're stuck on system XAML for the time being,
the only way to work around this bug is to pass the event through
manually. This change generalizes the F7 handler into a "direct key
event" handler that uses the same focus and tunneling method to send
different key events, and then uses it to send VK_MENU.
## Validation Steps Performed
Opened the debug tap, verified that I was seeing alt key ups.
Also used some alt keybindings to make sure I didn't break them.
Closes#6421
This pull request moves WindowUiaProvider back into Win32 interactivity
and deletes all mention of it from Windows Terminal. Terminal does not
have a single toplevel window that requires Console-like UIA, as each
Xaml control inside it is in charge of its own destiny.
I've also merged `IUiaWindow` and `IConsoleWindow` back together, as
well as `WindowUiaProviderBase` and `WindowUiaProvider`.
Things look a lot more like they did before we tore them apart.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#3564
* [x] CLA
* [x] Tests added/passed (manual)
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already
## Validation
Carlos validated conhost and terminal on this branch.
Wildcards are not allowed in toplevel ItemGroups in vcxproj; they must
be generated by targets.
We mostly use wildcards for pulling in PRI files that are dumped on disk
by the translation tool. We don't want to check those in, so we can't
expand references to them.
To that end, I've introduced a new target that will take a list of
folders containing resw files and expand wildcards under them.
All[1] other wildcards have been moved into their respective targets
_or_ simply expanded.
[1]: Nothing has complained about the resource wildcards in
CascadiaResources.build.items, so I haven't exploded it yet.
Fixes#6214.
This brings support for "Compact" tab sizing, which compresses all inactive tabs to just the size of their icons plus the close button. Neat!
It also just keeps us generally up-to-date and good citizens.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds `"launchMode": "fullscreen"`, which does what it says on the box.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#288
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
It's important to let the winow get created, _then_ fullscreen it, because otherwise, when the user exits fullscreen, the window is sized to like, 0x0 or something, and that's just annoying.