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7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mike Griese 85f067403d
Replace the UWP file export with the shell32 one (#11365)
Just like in #9760, we can't actually use the UWP file picker API, because it will absolutely not work at all when the Terminal is running elevated. That would prevent the picker from appearing at all. So instead, we'll just use the shell32 one manually. 

This also gets rid of the confirmation dialog, since the team felt we didn't really need that. We could maybe replace it with a Toast (#8592), but _meh_

* [x] closes #11356
* [x] closes #11358
* This is a lot like #9760
* introduced in #11062
* megathread: #9700
2021-10-01 18:33:22 +00:00
Mike Griese 29be8564f6
Manually dismiss popups when the window moves, or the SUI scrolls (#10922)
## Summary of the Pull Request

BODGY!

This solution was suggested in https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/issues/4554#issuecomment-887815332.

When the window moves, or when a ScrollViewer scrolls, dismiss any popups that are visible. This happens automagically when an app is a real XAML app, but it doesn't work for XAML Islands.

## References
* upstream at https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/issues/4554

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #9320
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Unfortunately, we've got a bunch of scroll viewers in our SUI. So I did something bodgyx2 to make our life a little easier.

`DismissAllPopups` can be used to dismiss all popups for a particular UI element. However, we've got a bunch of pages with scroll viewers that may or may not have popups in them. Rather than define the same exact body for all their `ViewChanging` events, the `HasScrollViewer` struct will just do it for you!

Inside the `HasScrollViewer` stuct, we can't get at the `XamlRoot()` that our subclass implements. I mean, _we_ can, but when XAML does it's codegen, _XAML_ won't be able to figure it out.

Fortunately for us, we don't need to! The sender is a UIElement, so we can just get _their_ `XamlRoot()`.

So, you can fix this for any SUI page with just a simple 

```diff
-    <ScrollViewer>
+    <ScrollViewer ViewChanging="ViewChanging">
```

```diff
-    struct AddProfile : AddProfileT<AddProfile>
+    struct AddProfile : public HasScrollViewer<AddProfile>, AddProfileT<AddProfile>
```

## Validation Steps Performed

* the window doesn't close when you move it
* the popups _do_ close when you move the window
* the popups close when you scroll any SUI page
2021-08-16 13:41:17 +00:00
Leonard Hecker 32fbd4cbb6
Enable /Zc:preprocessor (#10593)
This commit is a preparation for upcoming changes to KeyChordSerialization for #7539 and #10203.
In order to support variadic macros, /Zc:preprocessor was enabled, which required changing unrelated parts of the project.

## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed

## Validation Steps Performed

* Project still compiles ✔️
2021-07-13 23:00:11 +00:00
PankajBhojwani c18e0f5008
Add an Appearances xaml object and AppearanceViewModel to TSE (#10066)
Implements an `Appearances` xaml object and an `AppearanceViewModel` in the SettingsEditor project. Updates `Profiles` to use these new objects for its default appearance. 

This is the first step towards getting `UnfocusedAppearance` into the SUI.
2021-07-09 15:43:58 -05:00
Carlos Zamora c66910b685
Make Actions page editable (#9949)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR lays the foundation for a new Actions page in the Settings UI as designed in #6900. The Actions page now leverages the `ActionMap` to display all of the key bindings and allow the user to modify the associated key chord or delete the key binding entirely.

## References

#9621 - ActionMap
#9926 - ActionMap serialization
#9428 - ActionMap Spec
#6900 - Actions page
#9427 - Actions page design doc

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

### Settings Model Changes

- `Command::Copy()` now copies the `ActionAndArgs`
- `ActionMap::RebindKeys()` handles changing the key chord of a key binding. If a conflict occurs, the conflicting key chord is overwritten.
- `ActionMap::DeleteKeyBinding()` "deletes" a key binding by binding "unbound" to the given key chord.
- `ActionMap::KeyBindings()` presents another view (similar to `NameMap`) of the `ActionMap`. It specifically presents a map of key chords to commands. It is generated similar to how `NameMap` is generated.

### Editor Changes

- `Actions.xaml` is mainly split into two parts:
   - `ListView` (as before) holds the list of key bindings. We _could_ explore the idea of an items repeater, but the `ListView` seems to provide some niceties with regards to navigating the list via the key board (though none are selectable).
   - `DataTemplate` is used to represent each key binding inside the `ListView`. This is tricky because it is bound to a `KeyBindingViewModel` which must provide _all_ context necessary to modify the UI and the settings model. We cannot use names to target UI elements inside this template, so we must make the view model smart and force updates to the UI via changes in the view model.
- `KeyBindingViewModel` is a view model object that controls the UI and the settings model. 

There are a number of TODOs in Actions.cpp will be long-term follow-ups and would be nice to have. This includes...
- a binary search by name on `Actions::KeyBindingList`
- presenting an error when the provided key chord is invalid.

## Demo
![Actions Page Demo](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11050425/116034988-131d1b80-a619-11eb-8df2-c7e57c6fad86.gif)
2021-05-18 21:37:16 +00:00
Carlos Zamora 9b1bb134bf
Order enum settings according to enum values (#8784)
Sorts the list of `EnumEntry`s that is used to create combo boxes and
radio buttons in the Settings UI. `INITIALIZE_BINDABLE_ENUM_SETTING`
sorts the list in increasing order of the enum values, whereas
`INITIALIZE_BINDABLE_ENUM_SETTING_REVERSE_ORDER` does so in decreasing
order.

## References
#6800 - Settings UI Epic

I attempted sorting the `IObservableVector<EnumEntry>` using
`std::sort`, but I would get an error in
`winrt::Windows::Foundation::swap` (`C2665`). So instead, I did the
following approach:
- (unchanged) we're converting the `IMap` from EnumMappings into (1) a
  map of localized strings and (2) the list for XAML controls
- instead of storing `EnumEntry`s to the `IObservableVector` directly,
  store it to a `std::vector`
- sort the vector using `std::sort`
- _now_ initialize the `IObservableVector` using the sorted
  `std::vector`

This uses the value of the associated enum to determine a sorting order.
Since we want the "negative" value (i.e. "none" or "hidden") to be last,
I use `EnumEntryComparator` and `EnumEntryReverseComparator` to
determine whether we want increasing or decreasing order respectively.
`INITIALIZE_BINDABLE_ENUM_SETTING_REVERSE_ORDER` is a copy of
`INITIALIZE_BINDABLE_ENUM_SETTING`, except it uses
`EnumEntryReverseComparator` to sort in decreasing order.

Closes #8758
2021-01-14 11:47:33 +00:00
Dustin Howett 3e2b94334d Introduce the Terminal Settings Editor (#8048)
This commit introduces the terminal settings editor (to wit: the
Settings UI) as a standalone project. This project, and this commit, is
the result of two and a half months of work.

TSE started as a hackathon project in the Microsoft 2020 Hackathon, and
from there it's grown to be a bona-fide graphical settings editor.

There is a lot of xaml data binding in here, a number of views and a
number of view models, and a bunch of paradigms that we've been
reviewing and testing out and designing and refining.

Specified in #6720, #8269
Follow-up work in #6800
Closes #1564
Closes #8048 (PR)

Co-authored-by: Carlos Zamora <carlos.zamora@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Kayla Cinnamon <cinnamon@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Alberto Medina Gutierrez <almedina@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: John Grandle <jograndl@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: xerootg <xerootg@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Scott <sarmiger1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Vineeth Thomas Alex <vineeththomasalex@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Leon Liang <lelian@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Dustin L. Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Dustin L. Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
2020-12-11 13:47:10 -08:00