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Author SHA1 Message Date
James Holderness b604117421
Standardize the color table order (#11602)
## Summary of the Pull Request

In the original implementation, we used two different orderings for the color tables. The WT color table used ANSI order, while the conhost color table used a Windows-specific order. This PR standardizes on the ANSI color order everywhere, so the usage of indexed colors is consistent across both parts of the code base, which will hopefully allow more of the code to be shared one day.

## References

This is another small step towards de-duplicating `AdaptDispatch` and `TerminalDispatch` for issue #3849, and is essentially a followup to the SGR dispatch refactoring in PR #6728.

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #11461
* [x] CLA signed.
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated.
* [ ] Schema updated.
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already. Issue number where discussion took place: #11461

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Conhost still needs to deal with legacy attributes using Windows color order, so those values now need to be transposed to ANSI colors order when creating a `TextAttribute` object. This is done with a simple mapping table, which also handles the translation of the default color entries, so it's actually slightly faster than the original code.

And when converting `TextAttribute` values back to legacy console attributes, we were already using a mapping table to handle the narrowing of 256-color values down to 16 colors, so we just needed to adjust that table to account for the translation from ANSI to Windows, and then could make use of the same table for both 256-color and 16-color values.

There are also a few places in conhost that read from or write to the color tables, and those now need to transpose the index values. I've addressed this by creating separate `SetLegacyColorTableEntry` and `GetLegacyColorTableEntry` methods in the `Settings` class which take care of the mapping, so it's now clearer in which cases the code is dealing with legacy values, and which are ANSI values.

These methods are used in the `SetConsoleScreenBufferInfoEx` and `GetConsoleScreenBufferInfoEx` APIs, as well as a few place where color preferences are handled (the registry, shortcut links, and the properties dialog), none of which are particularly sensitive to performance. However, we also use the legacy table when looking up the default colors for rendering (which happens a lot), so I've refactored that code so the default color calculations now only occur once per frame.

The plus side of all of this is that the VT code doesn't need to do the index translation anymore, so we can finally get rid of all the calls to `XTermToWindowsIndex`, and we no longer need a separate color table initialization method for conhost, so I was able to merge a number of color initialization methods into one. We also no longer need to translate from legacy values to ANSI when generating VT sequences for conpty.

The one exception to that is the 16-color VT renderer, which uses the `TextColor::GetLegacyIndex` method to approximate 16-color equivalents for RGB and 256-color values. Since that method returns a legacy index, it still needs to be translated to ANSI before it can be used in a VT sequence. But this should be no worse than it was before.

One more special case is conhost's secret _Color Selection_ feature. That uses `Ctrl`+Number and `Alt`+Number key sequences to highlight parts of the buffer, and the mapping from number to color is based on the Windows color order. So that mapping now needs to be transposed, but that's also not performance sensitive.

The only thing that I haven't bothered to update is the trace logging code in the `Telemetry` class, which logs the first 16 entries in the color table. Those entries are now going to be in a different order, but I didn't think that would be of great concern to anyone.

## Validation Steps Performed

A lot of unit tests needed to be updated to use ANSI color constants when setting indexed colors, where before they might have been expecting values in Windows order. But this replaced a wild mix of different constants, sometimes having to use bit shifting, as well as values mapped with `XTermToWindowsIndex`, so I think the tests are a whole lot clearer now. Only a few cases have been left with literal numbers where that seemed more appropriate.

In addition to getting the unit tests working, I've also manually tested the behaviour of all the console APIs which I thought could be affected by these changes, and confirmed that they produced the same results in the new code as they did in the original implementation.

This includes:
- `WriteConsoleOutput`
- `ReadConsoleOutput`
- `SetConsoleTextAttribute` with `WriteConsoleOutputCharacter`
- `FillConsoleOutputAttribute` and `FillConsoleOutputCharacter` 
- `ScrollConsoleScreenBuffer`
- `GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo`
- `GetConsoleScreenBufferInfoEx`
- `SetConsoleScreenBufferInfoEx`

I've also manually tested changing colors via the console properties menu, the registry, and shortcut links, including setting default colors and popup colors. And I've tested that the "Quirks Mode" is still working as expected in PowerShell.

In terms of performance, I wrote a little test app that filled a 80x9999 buffer with random color combinations using `WriteConsoleOutput`, which I figured was likely to be the most performance sensitive call, and I think it now actually performs slightly better than the original implementation.

I've also tested similar code - just filling the visible window - with SGR VT sequences of various types, and the performance seems about the same as it was before.
2021-11-04 22:13:22 +00:00
Carlos Zamora c070be12d3
Implement Keyboard Selection (#10824)
Implements the following keyboard selection non-configurable key bindings:
- shift+arrow --> move endpoint by character
- ctrl+shift+left/right --> move endpoint by word
- shift+home/end --> move to beginning/end of line
- ctrl+shift+home/end --> move to beginning/end of buffer

This was purposefully done in the ControlCore layer to make keyboard selection an innate part of how the terminal functions (aka a shared component across terminal consumers).

## References
#715 - Keyboard Selection
#2840 - Spec

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comment
The most relevant section is `TerminalSelection.cpp`, where we define how each movement operates. It's basically a giant embedded switch-case statement. We leverage a lot of the work done in a11y to perform the movements.

## Validation Steps Performed
- General cases:
   - test all of the key bindings added
- Corner cases:
   - `char`: wide glyph support
   - `word`: move towards, away, and across the selection pivot
   - automatically scroll viewport
   - ESC (and other key combos) are still clearing the selection properly
2021-09-23 12:24:32 -07:00
Leonard Hecker 15c02b77a0
Remove std::deque from Renderer (#10923)
This commit improves the renderer classes by:
* reducing binary size by 4kB
* improving performance by 5%
* reducing code complexity

## References

* #10563 -- vtebench tracking issue

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

## Validation Steps Performed

* Ran vtebench/termbench and noted ~5% perf. improvements
2021-08-24 15:27:59 +00:00
James Holderness 4c53c595e7
Add support for double-width/double-height lines in conhost (#8664)
This PR adds support for the VT line rendition attributes, which allow
for double-width and double-height line renditions. These renditions are
enabled with the `DECDWL` (double-width line) and `DECDHL`
(double-height line) escape sequences. Both reset to the default
rendition with the `DECSWL` (single-width line) escape sequence. For now
this functionality is only supported by the GDI renderer in conhost.

There are a lot of changes, so this is just a general overview of the
main areas affected.

Previously it was safe to assume that the screen had a fixed width, at
least for a given point in time. But now we need to deal with the
possibility of different lines have different widths, so all the
functions that are constrained by the right border (text wrapping,
cursor movement operations, and sequences like `EL` and `ICH`) now need
to lookup the width of the active line in order to behave correctly.

Similarly it used to be safe to assume that buffer and screen
coordinates were the same thing, but that is no longer true. Lots of
places now need to translate back and forth between coordinate systems
dependent on the line rendition. This includes clipboard handling, the
conhost color selection and search, accessibility location tracking and
screen reading, IME editor positioning, "snapping" the viewport, and of
course all the rendering calculations.

For the rendering itself, I've had to introduce a new
`PrepareLineTransform` method that the render engines can use to setup
the necessary transform matrix for a given line rendition. This is also
now used to handle the horizontal viewport offset, since that could no
longer be achieved just by changing the target coordinates (on a double
width line, the viewport offset may be halfway through a character).

I've also had to change the renderer's existing `InvalidateCursor`
method to take a `SMALL_RECT` rather than a `COORD`, to allow for the
cursor being a variable width. Technically this was already a problem,
because the cursor could occupy two screen cells when over a
double-width character, but now it can be anything between one and four
screen cells (e.g. a double-width character on the double-width line).

In terms of architectural changes, there is now a new `lineRendition`
field in the `ROW` class that keeps track of the line rendition for each
row, and several new methods in the `ROW` and `TextBuffer` classes for
manipulating that state. This includes a few helper methods for handling
the various issues discussed above, e.g. position clamping and
translating between coordinate systems.

## Validation Steps Performed

I've manually confirmed all the double-width and double-height tests in
_Vttest_ are now working as expected, and the _VT100 Torture Test_ now
renders correctly (at least the line rendition aspects). I've also got
my own test scripts that check many of the line rendition boundary cases
and have confirmed that those are now passing.

I've manually tested as many areas of the conhost UI that I could think
of, that might be affected by line rendition, including things like
searching, selection, copying, and color highlighting. For
accessibility, I've confirmed that the _Magnifier_ and _Narrator_
correctly handle double-width lines. And I've also tested the Japanese
IME, which while not perfect, is at least useable.

Closes #7865
2021-02-18 05:44:50 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett e7592ec3d4
ROW: clean up in preparation to hide CharRow & AttrRow (#8446)
Moving things out of CharRow into ROW helps us hide it as an implementation detail.
This is part one of many.

### CharRow: Hide ClearCell, use ROW::ClearColumn

### CharRow: Hide GetText, use ROW::GetText

### CharRowBaseTests: remove dead file (never used!)

### CharRow: Move DoubleBytePadded into ROW

### CharRow: Move WrapForced into ROW

### Char/AttrRow: Hide Reset, use ROW::Reset

### Remove RowCellIterator (dead code)

RCI was unused; it was replaced by TextBufferCellIterator shortly after its creation

### Move AttrRowTests to ut_textbuffer from ut_host

It had no reliance on the host.
2021-01-20 21:16:56 +00:00
Don-Vito a1f42e87a8
Fix Copy to Clipboard to preserve visual structure of block selection (#8579)
There are two issue with copy to clipboard when block is selected:
* We don't add new lines for lines that were wrapped
* We remove trailing whitespaces which is not intuitive in block selection.

Fixed the copy logic to always add newlines and not to remove
whitespaces when block is selected.

Even if shift is pressed!

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
* Added optional parameter to `TextBuffer::GetText` 
that allows to apply formatting (includeCRLF / trimming) 
to lines that were wrapped
* Changed `Terminal::RetrieveSelectedTextFromBuffer` 
to apply the following parameters when block is selected:
  * includeCRLF = true
  * trimTrailingWhitespaces = false
  * apply the formatting above to all rows, including the ones 
that were wrapped 

## Validation Steps Performed
* Manual tests for both block and standard selection
* Copy with both right-click and command
* Added UT

Closes #6740
2020-12-14 23:32:44 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett df7c3ccc3b
Hash the URI as part of the hyperlink ID (#7940)
It turns out that we missed part of the OSC 8 spec which indicated that
_hyperlinks with the same ID but different URIs are logically distinct._

> Character cells that have the same target URI and the same nonempty id
> are always underlined together on mouseover.
> The same id is only used for connecting character cells whose URIs is
> also the same. Character cells pointing to different URIs should never
> be underlined together when hovering over.

This pull request fixes that oversight by appending the (hashed) URI to
the generated ID.

When Terminal receives one of these links over ConPTY, it will hash the
URL a second time and therefore append a second hashed ID. This is taken
as an acceptable cost.

Fixes #7698
2020-10-16 22:08:59 +00:00
Carlos Zamora 9ec57a7d3c
Fix and test TextBuffer::MoveToPreviousWord() (#7770)
This fixes a bug when moving backwards by word that resulted in #7742.

This also includes...
- a minor refactor that leverages `GetWordStart` in `MoveToPreviousWord`
- additional unit tests for movement by word
- a feature test comprised of the referenced bug report

`MoveToPreviousWord()` would...
- move backwards for each whitespace character
- then, move backwards for each regular character

This would actually result in moving to the beginning of the current "word" (as defined by a11y).

We actually need to do this process twice:
- the first time gets you to the beginning of the current word
- attempt to move back by one character
- the second time gets you to the beginning of the previous word

Rather than implementing 4 while loops, we leverage `GetWordStart()` to
attempt to move to the beginning of the previous word. We call it twice
(as described above). The logic is unchanged, but we instead reuse a
function that has already undergone more testing.

To make sure this works as expected, additional unit tests were
introduced covering "MoveByWord" in the TextBuffer.

## Validation Steps Performed
Added test for repro steps.
Added unit tests for movement by word.

Closes #7742
2020-09-30 18:13:22 +00:00
Carlos Zamora 40893b2823
Fix A11y EndExclusive Error for Move & Expand (#7677)
`EndExclusive` represents the end of the buffer. This is designed to not
point to any data on the buffer. UiaTextRange would point to this
`EndExclusive` and then attempt to move based on it. However, since it
does not point to any data, it could experience undefined behavior or
(inevitably) crash from running out of bounds.

This PR specifically checks for expansion and movement at that point,
and prevents us from moving beyond it. There are plans in the future to
define the "end" as the last character in the buffer. Until then, this
solution will suffice and provide correct behavior that doesn't crash.

## Validation Steps Performed
Performed the referenced bugs' repro steps and added test coverage.

Closes MSFT-20458595
Closes #7663
Closes #7664
2020-09-23 20:06:18 +00:00
PankajBhojwani 614507b95b
OSC 8 support for conhost and terminal (#7251)
<!-- 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
Conhost can now support OSC8 sequences (as specified [here](https://gist.github.com/egmontkob/eb114294efbcd5adb1944c9f3cb5feda)). Terminal also supports those sequences and additionally hyperlinks can be opened by Ctrl+LeftClicking on them. 

<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? --> 
## References
#204 

<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes #204 
* [ ] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Documentation updated. If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
* [ ] Schema 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
Added support to:

- parse OSC8 sequences and extract URIs from them (conhost and terminal)
- add hyperlink uri data to textbuffer/screeninformation, associated with a hyperlink id (conhost and terminal)
- attach hyperlink ids to text to allow for uri extraction from the textbuffer/screeninformation (conhost and terminal)
- process ctrl+leftclick to open a hyperlink in the clicked region if present

<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
Open up a PowerShell tab and type
```PowerShell
${ESC}=[char]27
Write-Host "${ESC}]8;;https://github.com/microsoft/terminal${ESC}\This is a link!${ESC}]8;;${ESC}\"
```
Ctrl+LeftClick on the link correctly brings you to the terminal page on github

![hyperlink](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/26824113/89953536-45a6f580-dbfd-11ea-8e0d-8a3cd25c634a.gif)
2020-09-03 13:52:39 -04:00
James Holderness 158a1708a6
Render the SGR "underlined" attribute in the style of the font (#7148)
This PR updates the rendering of the _underlined_ graphic rendition
attribute, using the style specified in the active font, instead of just
reusing the grid line at the bottom of the character cell.

* Support for drawing the correct underline effect in the grid line
  renderer was added in #7107.

There was already an `ExtendedAttributes` flag defined for the
underlined state, but I needed to update the `SetUnderlined` and
`IsUnderlined` methods in the `TextAttribute`  class to use that flag
now in place of the legacy `LVB_UNDERSCORE` attribute. This enables
underlines set via a VT sequence to be tracked separately from
`LVB_UNDERSCORE` grid lines set via the console API.

I then needed to update the `Renderer::s_GetGridlines` method to
activate the `GridLines::Underline` style when the `Underlined`
attribute was set. The `GridLines::Bottom` style is still triggered by
the `LVB_UNDERSCORE` attribute to produce the bottom grid line effect.

Validation
----------

Because this is a change from the existing behaviour, certain unit tests
that were expecting the `LVB_UNDERSCORE` to be toggled by `SGR 4` and
`SGR 24` have now had to be updated to check the `Underlined` flag
instead.

There were also some UI Automation tests that were checking for `SGR 4`
mapping to `LVB_UNDERSCORE` attribute, which I've now substituted with a
test of the `SGR 53` overline attribute mapping to
`LVB_GRID_HORIZONTAL`. These tests only work with legacy attributes, so
they can't access the extended underline state, and I thought a
replacement test that covered similar ground would be better than
dropping the tests altogether.

As far as the visual rendering is concerned, I've manually confirmed
that the VT underline sequences now draw the underline in the correct
position and style, while grid lines output via the console API are
still displayed in their original form.

Closes #2915
2020-08-03 12:49:25 +00:00
James Holderness 3388a486dc
Refactor the renderer color calculations (#6853)
This is a refactoring of the renderer color calculations to simplify the
implementation, and to make it easier to support additional
color-altering rendition attributes in the future (e.g. _faint_ and
_conceal_).

## References

* This is a followup to PRs #3817 and #6809, which introduced additional
  complexity in the color calculations, and which suggested the need for
  refactoring. 

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

When we added support for `DECSCNM`, that required the foreground and
background color lookup methods to be able to return the opposite of
what was requested when the reversed mode was set. That made those
methods unnecessarily complicated, and I thought we could simplify them
considerably just by combining the calculations into a single method
that derived both colors at the same time.

And since both conhost and Windows Terminal needed to perform the same
calculations, it also made sense to move that functionality into the
`TextAttribute` class, where it could easily be shared.

In general this way of doing things is a bit more efficient. However, it
does result in some unnecessary work when only one of the colors is
required, as is the case for the gridline painter. So to make that less
of an issue, I've reordered the gridline code a bit so it at least
avoids looking up the colors when no gridlines are needed.

## Validation Steps Performed

Because of the API changes, quite a lot of the unit tests had to be
updated. For example instead of verifying colors with two separate calls
to `LookupForegroundColor` and `LookupBackgroundColor`, that's now
achieved with a single `LookupAttributeColors` call, comparing against a
pair of values. The specifics of the tests haven't changed though, and
they're all still working as expected.

I've also manually confirmed that the various color sequences and
rendition attributes are rendering correctly with the new refactoring.
2020-07-10 22:26:34 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett 1bf4c082b4
Reintroduce a color compatibility hack, but only for PowerShells (#6810)
There is going to be a very long tail of applications that will
explicitly request VT SGR 40/37 when what they really want is to
SetConsoleTextAttribute() with a black background/white foreground.
Instead of making those applications look bad (and therefore making us
look bad, because we're releasing this as an update to something that
"looks good" already), we're introducing this compatibility quirk.
Before the color reckoning in #6698 + #6506, *every* color was subject
to being spontaneously and erroneously turned into the default color.
Now, only the 16-color palette value that matches the active console
background/foreground color will be destroyed, and only when received
from specific applications.

Removal will be tracked by #6807.

Michael and I discussed what layer this quirk really belonged in. I
originally believed it would be sufficient to detect a background color
that matched the legacy default background, but @j4james provided an
example of where that wouldn't work out (powershell setting the
foreground color to white/gray). In addition, it was too heavyhanded: it
re-broke black backgrounds for every application.

Michael thought that it should live in the server, as a small VT parser
that righted the wrongs coming directly out of the application. On
further investigation, however, I realized that we'd need to push more
information up into the server (so that it could make the decision about
which VT was wrong and which was right) than should be strictly
necessary.

The host knows which colors are right and wrong, and it gets final say
in what ends up in the buffer.

Because of that, I chose to push the quirk state down through
WriteConsole to DoWriteConsole and toggle state on the
SCREEN_INFORMATION that indicates whether the colors coming out of the
application are to be distrusted. This quirk _only applies to pwsh.exe
and powershell.exe._

NOTE: This doesn't work for PowerShell the .NET Global tool, because it
is run as an assembly through dotnet.exe. I have no opinion on how to
fix this, or whether it is worth fixing.

VALIDATION
----------
I configured my terminals to have an incredibly garish color scheme to
show exactly what's going to happen as a result of this. The _default
terminal background_ is purple or red, and the foreground green. I've
printed out a heap of test colors to see how black interacts with them.

Pull request #6810 contains the images generated from this test.

The only color lines that change are the ones where black as a
background or white as a foreground is selected out of the 16-color
palette explicitly. Reverse video still works fine (because black is in
the foreground!), and it's even possible to represent "black on default"
and reverse it into "default on black", despite the black in question
having been `40`.

Fixes #6767.
2020-07-10 15:25:39 -07:00
James Holderness e7a2732ffb
Refactor the SGR implementation in AdaptDispatch (#5758)
This is an attempt to simplify the SGR (Select Graphic Rendition)
implementation in conhost, to cut down on the number of methods required
in the `ConGetSet` interface, and pave the way for future improvements
and bug fixes. It already fixes one bug that prevented SGR 0 from being
correctly applied when combined with meta attributes.

* This a first step towards fixing the conpty narrowing bugs in issue
  #2661
* I'm hoping the simplification of `ConGetSet` will also help with
  #3849.
* Some of the `TextAttribute` refactoring in this PR overlaps with
  similar work in PR #1978. 

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

The main point of this PR was to simplify the
`AdaptDispatch::SetGraphicsRendition` implementation. So instead of
having it call a half a dozen methods in the `ConGetSet` API, depending
on what kinds of attributes needed to be set, there is now just one call
to get current attributes, and another call to set the new value. All
adjustments to the attributes are made in the `AdaptDispatch` class, in
a simple switch statement.

To help with this refactoring, I also made some change to the
`TextAttribute` class to make it easier to work with. This included
adding a set of methods for setting (and getting) the individual
attribute flags, instead of having the calling code being exposed to the
internal attribute structures and messing with bit manipulation. I've
tried to get rid of any methods that were directly setting legacy, meta,
and extended attributes.

Other than the fix to the `SGR 0` bug, the `AdaptDispatch` refactoring
mostly follows the behaviour of the original code. In particular, it
still maps the `SGR 38/48` indexed colors to RGB instead of retaining
the index, which is what we ultimately need it to do. Fixing that will
first require the color tables to be unified (issue #1223), which I'm
hoping to address in a followup PR.

But for now, mapping the indexed colors to RGB values required adding an
an additional `ConGetSet` API to lookup the color table entries. In the
future that won't be necessary, but the API will still be useful for
other color reporting operations that we may want to support. I've made
this API, and the existing setter, standardise on index values being in
the "Xterm" order, since that'll be essential for unifying the code with
the terminal adapter one day.

I should also point out one minor change to the `SGR 38/48` behavior,
which is that out-of-range RGB colors are now ignored rather than being
clamped, since that matches the way Xterm works.

## Validation Steps Performed

This refactoring has obviously required corresponding changes to the
unit tests, but most were just minor updates to use the new
`TextAttribute` methods without any real change in behavior. However,
the adapter tests did require significant changes to accommodate the new
`ConGetSet` API. The basic structure of the tests remain the same, but
the simpler API has meant fewer values needed to be checked in each test
case. I think they are all still covering the areas there were intended
to, though, and they are all still passing.

Other than getting the unit tests to work, I've also done a bunch of
manual testing of my own. I've made sure the color tests in Vttest all
still work as well as they used to. And I've confirmed that the test
case from issue #5341 is now working correctly.

Closes #5341
2020-05-08 16:04:16 -07:00
Carlos Zamora a3382276d7
Improve wide glyph support in UIA (#4946)
## Summary of the Pull Request
- Added better wide glyph support for UIA. We used to move one _cell_ at a time, so wide glyphs would be read twice.
- Converted a few things to use til::point since I'm already here.
- fixed telemetry for UIA

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #1354

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The text buffer has a concept of word boundaries, so it makes sense to have a concept of glyph boundaries too.

_start and _end in UiaTextRange are now til::point

## Validation Steps Performed
Verified using Narrator
2020-03-23 23:50:17 +00:00
Carlos Zamora e79a421f3a
Abstract GetTextForClipboard() for UIA (#4578)
## Summary of the Pull Request
`GetTextForClipboard` already exists in the TextBuffer. It makes sense to use that for UIA as well. This changes the behavior or `GetText()` such that it does not remove leading/trailing whitespace anymore. That is more of an expected behavior.

## References
This also contributes to...
- #4509: UIA Box Selection
- #2447: UIA Signaling for Selection
- #1354: UIA support for Wide Glyphs
Now that the expansion occurs at before render-time, the selection anchors are an accurate representation of what is selected. We just need to move GetText to the TextBuffer. Then we can have those three issues just rely on code from the text buffer. This also means ConHost gets some of this stuff for free 😀

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- `TextBuffer::GetTextForClipboard()` --> `GetText()`
- `TextBuffer::GetText()` no longer requires GetForegroundColor/GetBackgroundColor. If either of these are not defined, we return a `TextAndColor` with only the `text` field populated.
- renamed a few parameters for copying text to the clipboard for clarity
- Updated `UiaTextRange::GetText()` to use `TextBuffer::GetText()`

## Validation Steps Performed
Manual tests for UIA using accessibility insights and Windows Terminal's copy action (w/ and w/out shift)

Added tests as well.
2020-03-09 08:17:34 -07:00
Carlos Zamora 0e672fac08
Move rect expansion to textbuffer; refactor selection code (#4560)
- When performing chunk selection, the expansion now occurs at the time
  of the selection, not the rendering of the selection
- `GetSelectionRects()` was moved to the `TextBuffer` and is now shared
  between ConHost and Windows Terminal
- Some of the selection variables were renamed for clarity
- Selection COORDs are now in the Text Buffer coordinate space
- Fixes an issue with Shift+Click after performing a Multi-Click
  Selection

## References
This also contributes to...
- #4509: UIA Box Selection
- #2447: UIA Signaling for Selection
- #1354: UIA support for Wide Glyphs

Now that the expansion occurs at before render-time, the selection
anchors are an accurate representation of what is selected. We just need
to move `GetText` to the `TextBuffer`. Then we can have those three
issues just rely on code from the text buffer. This also means ConHost
gets some of this stuff for free 😀

### TextBuffer
- `GetTextRects` is the abstracted form of `GetSelectionRects`
- `_ExpandTextRow` is still needed to handle wide glyphs properly

### Terminal
- Rename...
    - `_boxSelection` --> `_blockSelection` for consistency with ConHost
    - `_selectionAnchor` --> `_selectionStart` for consistency with UIA
    - `_endSelectionPosition` --> `_selectionEnd` for consistency with
      UIA
- Selection anchors are in Text Buffer coordinates now
- Really rely on `SetSelectionEnd` to accomplish appropriate chunk
  selection and shift+click actions

## Validation Steps Performed
- Shift+Click
- Multi-Click --> Shift+Click
- Chunk Selection at...
    - top of buffer
    - bottom of buffer
    - random region in scrollback

Closes #4465
Closes #4547
2020-02-27 16:42:26 -08:00
Josh Soref a13ccfd0f5
Fix a bunch of spelling errors across the project (#4295)
Generated by https://github.com/jsoref/spelling `f`; to maintain your repo, please consider `fchurn`

I generally try to ignore upstream bits. I've accidentally included some items from the `deps/` directory. I expect someone will give me a list of items to drop, I'm happy to drop whole files/directories, or to split the PR into multiple items (E.g. comments/locals/public).

Closes #4294
2020-02-10 20:40:01 +00:00
Carlos Zamora 29df540174
Refactor UiaTextRange For Improved Navigation and Reliability (#4018)
## Summary of the Pull Request
This pull request is intended to achieve the following goals...
1) reduce duplicate code
2) remove static functions
3) improve readability
4) improve reliability
5) improve code-coverage for testing
6) establish functioning text buffer navigation in Narrator and NVDA

This also required a change to the wrapper class `XamlUiaTextRange` that has been causing issues with Narrator and NVDA.

See below for additional context.

## References
#3976 - I believe this might have been a result of improperly handling degenerate ranges. Fixed here.
#3895 - reduced the duplicate code. No need to separate into different files
#2160 - same as #3976 above
#1993 - I think just about everything is no longer static

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #3895, Closes #1993, Closes #3976, Closes #2160 
* [x] CLA signed
* [x] Tests added/passed

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

### UiaTextRange
- converted endpoints into the COORD system in the TextBuffer coordinate space
- `start` is inclusive, `end` is exclusive. A degenerate range is when start == end.
- all functions are no longer static
- `MoveByUnit()` functions now rely on `MoveEndpointByUnit()` functions
- removed unnecessary typedefs like `Endpoint`, `ScreenInfoRow`, etc..
- relied more heavily on existing functionality from `TextBuffer` and `Viewport`

### XamlUiaTextRange
- `GetAttributeValue()` must return a special HRESULT that signifies that the requested attribute is not supported. This was the cause of a number of inconsistencies between Narrator and NVDA.
- `FindText()` should return `nullptr` if nothing was found. #4373 properly fixes this functionality now that Search is a shared module

### TextBuffer
- Word navigation functionality is entirely in `TextBuffer` for proper abstraction
- a total of 6 functions are now dedicated to word navigation to get a good understanding of the differences between a "word" in Accessibility and a "word" in selection

As an example, consider a buffer with this text in it:
"  word   other  "
In selection, a "word" is defined as the range between two delimiters, so the words in the example include ["  ", "word", "   ", "other", "  "].
In accessibility , a "word" includes the delimiters after a range of readable characters, so the words in the example include ["word   ", "other  "].

Additionally, accessibility word navigation must be able to detect if it is on the first or last word. This resulted in a slight variant of word navigation functions that return a boolean instead of a COORD.

Ideally, these functions can be consolidated, but that is too risky for a PR of this size as it can have an effect on selection.

### Viewport
- the concept of `EndExclusive` is added. This is used by UiaTextRange's `end` anchor as it is exclusive. To signify that the last character in the buffer is included in this buffer, `end` must be one past the end of the buffer. This is `EndExclusive`
- Since many functions check if the given `COORD` is in bounds, a flag must be set to allow `EndExclusive` as a valid `COORD` that is in bounds.

### Testing
- word navigation testing relies more heavily on TextBuffer tests
- additional testing was created for non-movement focused functions of UiaTextRange
- The results have been compared to Microsoft Word and some have been verified by UiAutomation/Narrator contacts as expected results.

## Validation Steps Performed
Tests pass
Narrator works
NVDA works
2020-01-31 20:59:39 +00:00
Mike Griese 62765f152e Create tests that roundtrip output through a conpty to a Terminal (#4213)
## Summary of the Pull Request

This PR adds two tests:
* First, I started by writing a test where I could write output to the console  host and inspect what output came out of conpty. This is the `ConptyOutputTests` in the host unit tests.
* Then I got crazy and thought _"what if I could take that output and dump it straight into the `Terminal`"_? Hence, the `ConptyRoundtripTests` were born, into the TerminalCore unit tests.

## References

Done in pursuit of #4200, but I felt this warranted it's own atomic PR

## PR Checklist
* [x] Doesn't close anything on it's own.
* [x] I work here
* [x] you better believe this adds tests
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

From the comment in `ConptyRoundtripTests`:
> This test class creates an in-proc conpty host as well as a Terminal, to
> validate that strings written to the conpty create the same resopnse on the
> terminal end. Tests can be written that validate both the contents of the
> host buffer as well as the terminal buffer. Everytime that
> `renderer.PaintFrame()` is called, the tests will validate the expected
> output, and then flush the output of the VtEngine straight to th

Also, some other bits had to be updated:
* The renderer needed to be able to survive without a thread, so I hadded a simple check that it actually had a thread before calling `pThread->NotifyPaint`
* Bits in `CommonState` used `NTSTATUS_FROM_HRESULT` which did _not_ work outside the host project. Since the `NTSTATUS` didn't seem that important, I replaced that with a `HRESULT`
* `CommonState` likes to initialize the console to some _weird_ defaults. I added an optional param to let us just use the defaults.
2020-01-17 16:40:12 +00:00
Michael Niksa 6f667f48ae
Make the terminal parser/adapter and related classes use modern… (#3956)
## Summary of the Pull Request
Refactors parsing/adapting libraries and consumers to use safer and/or more consistent mechanisms for passing information.

## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests still pass
* [x] Am a core contributor.

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This is in support of hopefully turning audit mode on to more projects. If I turned it on, it would immediately complain about certain classes of issues like pointer and size, pointer math, etc. The changes in this refactoring will eliminate those off the top.

Additionally, this has caught a bunch of comments all over the VT classes that weren't updated to match the parameters lists.

Additionally, this has caught a handful of member variables on classes that were completely unused (and now gone).

Additionally, I'm killing almost all hungarian and shortening variable names. I'm only really leaving 'p' for pointers.

Additionally, this is vaguely in support of a future where we can have "infinite scrollback" in that I'm moving things to size_t across the board. I know it's a bit of a memory cost, but all the casting and moving between types is error prone and unfun to save a couple bytes.

## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] build it
- [x] run all the tests
- [x] everyone looked real hard at it
2019-12-19 14:12:53 -08:00
Carlos Zamora 4dd9f9c180 make filling chars (and, thus, erase line/char) unset wrap (#2831)
EraseInLine calls `FillConsoleOutputCharacterW()`. In filling the row with
chars, we were setting the wrap flag. We need to specifically not do this on
ANY _FILL_ operation. Now a fill operation UNSETS the wrap flag if we fill to
the end of the line.

Originally, we had a boolean `setWrap` that would mean...
- **true**: if writing to the end of the row, SET the wrap value to true
- **false**: if writing to the end of the row, DON'T CHANGE the wrap value

Now we're making this bool a std::optional to allow for a ternary state. This
allows for us to handle the following cases completely. Refer to the table
below:

,- current wrap value
|     ,- are we filling the last cell in the row?
|     |     ,- new wrap value
|     |     |     ,- comments
|--   |--   |--   |
| 0   | 0   | 0   |
| 0   | 1   | 0   |
| 0   | 1   | 1   | THIS CASE WAS HANDLED CORRECTLY
| 1   | 0   | 0   | THIS CASE WAS UNHANDLED
| 1   | 0   | 1   |
| 1   | 1   | 1   |

To handle that special case (1-0-0), we need to UNSET the wrap. So now, we have
~setWrap~ `wrap` mean the following:
- **true**: if writing to the end of the row, SET the wrap value to TRUE
- **false**: if writing to the end of the row, SET the wrap value to FALSE
- **nullopt**: leave the wrap value as it is

Closes #1126
2019-09-30 18:16:31 -07:00
adiviness 9b92986b49
add clang-format conf to the project, format the c++ code (#1141) 2019-06-11 13:27:09 -07:00
MelulekiDube 1c16b2c06b Removed using namespace directive from header files (#955)
* Removed using namespace directive from header files and put these in cpp files where they are used

* Fixed tabbing issues by replacing them with spaces.
Also regrouped the using directives.

* Update src/host/exemain.cpp

Co-Authored-By: Mike Griese <migrie@microsoft.com>

* Update src/interactivity/win32/find.cpp

Co-Authored-By: Mike Griese <migrie@microsoft.com>
2019-05-30 11:14:21 -07:00
Dustin Howett d4d59fa339 Initial release of the Windows Terminal source code
This commit introduces all of the Windows Terminal and Console Host source,
under the MIT license.
2019-05-02 15:29:04 -07:00