This commit introduces "AtlasEngine", a new text renderer based on DxEngine.
But unlike it, DirectWrite and Direct2D are only used to rasterize glyphs.
Blending and placing these glyphs into the target view is being done using
Direct3D and a simple HLSL shader. Since this new renderer more aggressively
assumes that the text is monospace, it simplifies the implementation:
The viewport is divided into cells, and its data is stored as a simple matrix.
Modifications to this matrix involve only simple pointer arithmetic and is easy
to understand. But just like with DxEngine however, DirectWrite
related code remains extremely complex and hard to understand.
Supported features:
* Basic text rendering with grayscale AA
* Foreground and background colors
* Emojis, including zero width joiners
* Underline, dotted underline, strikethrough
* Custom font axes and features
* Selections
* All cursor styles
* Full alpha support for all colors
* _Should_ work with Windows 7
Unsupported features:
* A more conservative GPU memory usage
The backing texture atlas for glyphs is grow-only and will not shrink.
After 256MB of memory is used up (~20k glyphs) text output
will be broken until the renderer is restarted.
* ClearType
* Remaining gridlines (left, right, top, bottom, double underline)
* Hyperlinks don't get full underlines if hovered in WT
* Softfonts
* Non-default line renditions
Performance:
* Runs at up to native display refresh rate
Unfortunately the frame rate often drops below refresh rate, due us
fighting over the buffer lock with other parts of the application.
* CPU consumption is up to halved compared to DxEngine
AtlasEngine is still highly unoptimized. Glyph hashing
consumes up to a third of the current CPU time.
* No regressions in WT performance
VT parsing and related buffer management takes up most of the CPU time (~85%),
due to which the AtlasEngine can't show any further improvements.
* ~2x improvement in raw text throughput in OpenConsole
compared to DxEngine running at 144 FPS
* ≥10x improvement in colored VT output in WT/OpenConsole
compared to DxEngine running at 144 FPS
Drag and drop does not work for WSL because paths are pasted as windows
paths having incorrect path separator and path root. This PR adds code
to correct the path in TerminalControl before pasting to WSL terminals.
One problem with this approach is that it assumes the default WSL
automount root of "/mnt". It would be possible to add a setting like
"WslDragAndDropMountRoot"... but I decided it if someone wants to change
automount location it would be simple enough just to create the "/mnt"
symlink in WSL.
## Validation
Couldn't find an obvious place to add a test. Manually tested
cut-n-paste from following paths:
- "c:\"
- "c:\subdir"
- "c:\subdir\subdir"
- "\\wsl.localhost\<distro>"
- \\wsl.localhost\<distro>\subdir"
Closes#331
<!-- 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
Moves baskgroung image update releated code into separate function and adds uri path construction exeption handling.
<!-- 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#11361
* [x] 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
<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
Tried to put garbage as a path. Terminal didn't crashed.
and as soon ad I typed that out I realized that WINRT_PROPERTY already has
setters and setting an optional override gets me nothing
sure I could stealth the new value in underneath the runtime value, so
reloading the settings doesn't reset font size, colors, etc
I could
but it sure does feel like overkill for "refactor but don't change anything"
Missed this in #11180. I forgot to init the BG opacity with the renderer on startup, because that matters when you have `"antialiasingMode": "cleartype",`.
Repro json
```json
{
"commandline": "cmd.exe",
"guid": "{0caa0dad-35be-5f56-a8ff-afceeeaa6101}",
"hidden": false,
"opacity": 35,
"antialiasingMode": "cleartype",
"padding": "0",
"name": "Command Prompt"
},
```
* [x] Fixes#11315
For some weird reason we sometimes receive a WM_KEYDOWN
message without vkey or scanCode if a user drags a tab.
The KeyChord constructor has a debug assertion ensuring that all KeyChord
either have a valid vkey/scanCode. This is important, because this prevents
accidential insertion of invalid KeyChords into classes like ActionMap.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#11076
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
## Validation Steps Performed
* Tab dragging doesn't produce assertion failures anymore ✔️
## Summary of the Pull Request
![603-final](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/132585665-afed3210-257a-4fee-9b43-4273a0f5cf69.gif)
Adds support for vintage style opacity, on Windows 11+. The API we're using for this exists since the time immemorial, but there's a bug in XAML Islands that prevents it from working right until Windows 11 (which we're working on backporting).
Replaces the `acrylicOpacity` setting with `opacity`, which is a uint between 0 and 100 (inclusive), default to 100.
`useAcrylic` now controls whether acrylic is used or not. Setting an opacity < 100 with `"useAcrylic": false` will use vintage style opacity.
Mouse wheeling adjusts opacity. Whether acrylic is used or not is dependent upon `useAcrylic`.
`opacity` will stealthily default to 50 if `useAcrylic:true` is set.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#603
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [x] https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal/pull/416
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Opacity was moved to AppearanceConfig. In the future, I have a mind to allow unfocused acrylic, so that'll be important then.
## Validation Steps Performed
_just look at it_
## Summary of the Pull Request
Basically undoes #10988 in favour of implementing it as described in #11018
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#11018
* [x] CLA signed. If not, go over [here](https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com/microsoft/Terminal) and sign the CLA
* [X] Tests added/passed
* [X] Documentation updated. If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
* [X] Schema updated.
* [x] I work here
## Validation Steps Performed
- alt+space opens the system menu by default
- when alt+space is bound, the keys do not get send to terminal
- right-click on the tab bar didn't break (still opens system menu at the location of the cursor)
## Summary of the Pull Request
![clear-buffer-000](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/127570078-90c6089e-0430-4dfc-bcd4-a0cde20c9167.gif)
This adds a new action, `clearBuffer`. It accepts 3 values for the `clear` type:
* `"clear": "screen"`: Clear the terminal viewport content. Leaves the scrollback untouched. Moves the cursor row to the top of the viewport (unmodified).
* `"clear": "scrollback"`: Clear the scrollback. Leaves the viewport untouched.
* `"clear": "all"`: (**default**) Clear the scrollback and the visible viewport. Moves the cursor row to the top of the viewport (unmodified).
"Clear Buffer" has also been added to `defaults.json`.
## References
* From microsoft/vscode#75141 originally
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#1193
* [x] Closes#1882
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This is a bit tricky, because we need to plumb it all the way through conpty to clear the buffer. If we don't, then conpty will immediately just redraw the screen. So this sends a signal to the attached conpty, and then waits for conpty to draw the updated, cleared, screen back to us.
## Validation Steps Performed
* works for each of the three clear types as expected
* tests pass.
* works even with `ping -t 8.8.8.8` as you'd hope.
## Summary of the Pull Request
**Naive implementation** of exporting the text buffer of the current pane
into a text file triggered from the tab context menu.
**Disclaimer: this is not an export of the command history,**
but rather just a text buffer dumped into a file when asked explicitly.
## References
Should provide partial solution for #642.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The logic is following:
* Open a file save picker
* The location is Downloads folder (should be always accessible)
* The suggest name of the file equals to the pane's title
* The allowed file formats list contains .txt only
* If no file selected stop
* Lock terminal
* Read all lines till the cursor
* Format each line by removing trailing white-spaces and adding CRLF if not wrapped
* Asynchronously write to selected file
* Show confirmation
As the action is relatively fast didn't add a progress bar or any other UX.
As the buffer is relatively small, holding it entirely in the memory rather than
writing line by line to disk.
If both of the following are true
1. alt+space is not explicitly unbound
2. alt+space is not bound to a command
Then the window procedure will handle the alt+space to open up the context menu.
In this case, we need to make sure we don't send the keys to terminal.
Closes#10935
## Summary of the Pull Request
Since the days immemorial of the Terminal, the TermControl has auto-focused itself when it finalizes its layout. This has led to the problem that `wt ; sp ; sp ; sp...` ends up focusing one of these panes at random.
This PR fixes this issue by getting rid of the auto-focusing. Panes now manually get focused when created. We manually focus the active pane when a commandline is dispatched. since we're internally tracking "active" separate from "focused", this ends up working as you'd hope.
## References
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#6586
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
I also had to turn the cursor off by default. Most `TermControl`s would never get the `LostFocus` event, so their cursors would get left `On`, and that's not right.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've run the following things a bunch of times to make sure they work:
* `wtd sp ; sp ; sp`
* `wtd sp ; sp ; sp ; fp -t 0`
* `newTab`
* `splitPane`
* use the command palette to do the above as well
Where the result used to be random (cases 1 & 2), the result is exactly what you'd expect now.
It doesn't work at all for
```
wtd sp ; sp ; sp ; mf left
```
Presumably because we can't `move-focus` directionally during startup. However, that doesn't work _today_ either, so it's not making it worse. Just highlights that single scenario doesn't work right.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Pretty straightforward. Check if the scroll event is a horizontal movement. If it is, ignore it. We don't have a horizontal scrollbar.
## References
* obviously, revisit this if we ever do #1860
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#10329
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Validation Steps Performed
* scrolled ↑/↓ with slaptop trackpad: terminal scrolls.
* scrolled ←/→ with slaptop trackpad: terminal doesn't scroll.
* Scrolling _slightly more vertically than horizontally_ still scrolls.
* Scrolling _slightly more horizontally than vertically_ doesn't scroll.
## Summary of the Pull Request
The bug was that Narrator would still read the content of the old tab/pane although a new tab/pane was introduced. This is caused by the automation peer not being created when XAML requests it. Normally, we would prevent the automation peer from being created if the terminal was not fully initialized.
This change allows the automation peer to be created regardless of the terminal being fully initialized by...
- `TermControl`: `_InitializeTerminal` updates the padding (dependent on the `SwapChainPanel`) upon full initialization
- `ControlCore`: initialize the `_renderer` in the ctor so that we can attach the UIA Engine before `ControlCore::Initialize()` is called (dependent on `SwapChainPanel` loading)
As a bonus, this also fixes a locking issue where logging would attempt to get the text range's text and lock twice. The locking fix is very similar to #10937.
## PR Checklist
Closes [MSFT 33353327](https://microsoft.visualstudio.com/OS/_workitems/edit/33353327)
## Validation Steps Performed
- New pane from key binding is announced by Narrator
- New tab from key binding is announced by Narrator
## Summary of the Pull Request
This was missed in #10051. We need to make sure that the UIA provider can immediately know about the padding in the control, not just after the settings reload.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #9955.e
* [x] Additionally, this just closes#9955. The only remaining box in there never repro'd, so probably wasn't even root caused by #9820. I think we can close that issue for now, and reactivate if something else was broken.
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Validation Steps Performed
Checked before/after in Accessibility Insights. Before the row rectangles were the full width of the control initially. Now they're properly padded.
<!-- 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
This PR implements/solves #7125. Concretely: two requests regarding alt+space were posted there:
1. Disabling the alt+space menu when the keychord explicitly unbound - and forwarding the keystroke to the terminal
2. Disabling the alt+space menu when the keychord is bound to an action
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? -->
## References
Not that I know
<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#7125
* [x] CLA signed.
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [x] Documentation updated. N/A
* [x] 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.
The issue was marked Help-Wanted. I am happy to change the implementation to better fit your (planned) architecture.
<!-- 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
While researching the solution, I noticed that the XAML system was always opening the system menu after Alt+Space, even when explicitly setting the event to be handled according to the documentation. The only solution I could find was to hook into the "XAML bypass" already in place for F7 KeyDown, and Alt KeyUp keystrokes. This bypass sends the keystroke to the AppHost immediately. This bypass method will "fall back" to the normal XAML routing when the keystroke is not handled.
The implemented behaviour is as follows:
- Default: same as normal; system menu is working since the bypass does not handle the keystroke
- Alt+Space explicitly unbound: bypass passes the keystroke to the terminal and marks it as handled
- Alt+Space bound to command: bypass invokes the command and marks it as handled
Concretely, added a method to the KeyBindings and ActionMap interfaces to check whether a keychord is explicitly unbound. The implementation for `_GetActionByKeyChordInternal` already distinguishes between explicitly unbound and lack of binding, however this distinction is not carried over to the public methods. I decided not to change this existing method, to avoid breaking other stuff and to make the API more explicit.
Furthermore, there were some checks against Alt+Space further down in the code, preventing this keystroke from being entered in the terminal. Since the check for this keystroke is now done at a "higher" level, I thought I could safely remove these checks as otherwise the keystroke could never be sent to the terminal itself. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Note that when alt+space is bound to an action that opens the command pallette (such as tab search), then a second press of the key combination does still open the system menu. This is because at that point, the "bypass" is cancelled (called "not a good implementation" in #4031). I don't think this can easily be solved for now, but this is a very minor bug/inconvenience.
<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
Added tests for the new method. Performed manual checking:
* [x] Default configuration still opens system menu like normal
* [x] Binding alt+space to an action performs the action and does not show the system menu
* [x] Explicitly unbinding alt+space no longer shows the system menu and sends the keystroke to the terminal. I was unable to run the debug tap (it crashed my instance - same thing happening on preview and release builds) to check for sure, but behaviour was identical to native linux terminals.
#### ⚠️ targets #10051
## Summary of the Pull Request
This updates our `ThrottledFunc`s to take a dispatcher parameter. This means that we can use the `Windows::UI::Core::CoreDispatcher` in the `TermControl`, where there's always a `CoreDispatcher`, and use a `Windows::System::DispatcherQueue` in `ControlCore`/`ControlInteractivity`. When running in-proc, these are always the _same thing_. However, out-of-proc, the core needs a dispatcher queue that's not tied to a UI thread (because the content proces _doesn't have a UI thread!_).
This lets us get rid of the output event, because we don't need to bubble that event out to the `TermControl` to let it throttle that update anymore.
## References
* Tear-out: #1256
* Megathread: #5000
* Project: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5
## PR Checklist
* [x] This is a part of #1256
* [x] I work here
* [n/a] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Fortunately, `winrt::resume_foreground` works the same on both a `CoreDispatcher` and a `DispatcherQueue`, so this wasn't too hard!
## Validation Steps Performed
This was validated in `dev/migrie/oop/the-whole-thing` (or `dev/migrie/oop/connection-factory`, I forget which), and I made sure that it worked both in-proc and x-proc. Not only that, _it wasn't any slower_!This reverts commit 04b751faa7.
## Summary of the Pull Request
This fixes two bugs related to dragging into the bounds of the `TermControl`. Although the fixes are fairly small, I'm batching them up, because I don't want to stack 2 more PRs on top of #10051.
* #9109
- This is fixed by only starting an autoscroll if the click&drag actually started within the bounds of the control.
* #4603
- Building on the above change, only modify the selection when the drag started in the control.
## References
* srsly go read #10051.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#9109
* [x] Closes#4603
* [x] I work here
* [x] Test added
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This is kind of annoying that the auto-scrolling is handled by the TermControl, but it uses a timer that's still a WinUI construct.
We only want to start the auto-scrolling behavior when the drag started _inside_ the control. Otherwise, in the tab drag scenario, dragging into the bounds of the TermControl will trick it into thinking it should start a scroll.
This commit introduces an alternative to specifying key bindings as a combination of key modifiers and a character. It allows you to specify an explicit virtual key as `vk(nnn)`.
Additionally this commit makes it possible to bind actions to scan codes. As scan code 41 appears to be the button below the Escape key on virtually all keyboards, we'll be able to bind the quake mode hotkey to `win+sc(41)` and have it work consistently across most if not all keyboard layouts.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#7539, Closes#10203
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
## Validation Steps Performed
The following was tested both on US and DE keyboard layouts:
* Ctrl+, opens settings ✔️
* Win+` opens quake mode window ✔️
* Ctrl+plus/minus increase/decrease font size ✔️
## Summary of the Pull Request
This forces the `TermControl` to only use `ControlCore` and `ControlInteractivity` via their WinRT projections. We want this, because WinRT projections can be used across process boundaries. In the future, `ControlCore` and `ControlInteractivity` are going to be living in a different process entirely from `TermControl`. By enforcing this boundary now, we can make sure that they will work seamlessly in the future.
## References
* Tear-out: #1256
* Megathread: #5000
* Project: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5#card-50760270
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Most all this was just converting pure c++ types to winrt types when possible. I've added a couple helper projections with `til` converters, which made most of this really easy.
The "`MouseButtonState` needs to be composed of `Int32`s instead of `bool`s" is MENTAL. I have no idea why this is, but when I had the control OOP in the sample, that would crash when trying to de-marshal the bools. BODGY.
The biggest changes are in the way the UIA stuff is hooked up. The UiaEngine needs to be attached directly to the `Renderer`, and it can't be easily projected, so it needs to live next to the `ControlCore`. But the `TermControlAutomationPeer` needed the `UiaEngine` to help implement some interfaces.
Now, there's a new layer we've introduced. `InteractivityAutomationPeer` does the `ITextProvider`, `IControlAccessibilityInfo` and the `IUiaEventDispatcher` thing. `TermControlAutomationPeer` now has a
`InteractivityAutomationPeer` stashed inside itself, so that it can ask the interactivity layer to do the real work. We still need the `TermControlAutomationPeer` though, to be able to attach to the real UI tree.
## Validation Steps Performed
The terminal behaves basically the same as before.
Most importantly, I whipped out Accessibility Insights, and the Terminal looks the same as before.
Previously `TermControl::Close` destroyed all `ThrottledFunc`s to ensure they're not scheduling any callbacks on the UI thread, as the call to `Close` signals the point at which the `TermControl` isn't part of the UI thread anymore. `_CursorPositionChanged` tried to prevent access to the potentially deallocated `_tsfTryRedrawCanvas` by checking the `std::shared_ptr` for nullability, but since the deallocation happens on the UI thread and the nullability check on a background thread, this check introduced a race condition.
This commit solves the issue by not deallocating any `ThrottledFunc`s anymore and instead checking the `_closing` flag inside the `ThrottledFunc` callback on the UI thread.
Additionally this commit cleans up some antipatterns around the use of `std::optional`.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#10479
* [x] Closes#10302
## Validation Steps Performed
* Opening and closing tabs doesn't crash ✔️
* Printing long text doesn't crash ✔️
* Manual scrolling doesn't crash ✔️
* ^G / the audible bell doesn't crash ✔️
Just come cleanup I did not manage to get to before #9270 merged.
Specifically:
- We only initialize the animation and timer if we need them
- We don't repeatedly destroy/create the timer
## Validation Steps Performed
It still works
I cannot for the life of me repro the original bug. I've got fonts with bad permissions SxS, I've tried installing a font twice, I've tried stopping the font cache service. No idea how to manually repro the original bug.
BUT theoretically, this function should never throw. So lets just switch this to a `LOG_IF_FAILED`, and hope that this goes away?
* [x] Fixes#10211?
* [x] built & ran manually.
Unclear if this can get cherry-picked trivially to 1.8. Code's pretty trivial though so if we need another PR for that, it can be arranged.
<!-- 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
Adds a new bellStyle called `window`. When `window` is set and a BEL is emitted, we flash the pane that emitted it.
Additionally, changes bellStyle in the SUI to a list of checkboxes instead of radio buttons, to match bellStyle being a flag-enum. Deprecates 'BellStyle::Visual' in the schema, but still allows it to be set in the json (it maps to `Window | Taskbar`)
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? -->
## References
#6700
<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [ ] Closes #xxx
* [x] 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.
* [x] I work here
<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
GIF in Teams
[Defapp] Use real HPCON for PTY management; Have Monarch always listen for connections
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#9464
* [x] Related to #9475 - incomplete fix
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Manual test
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- Sometimes peasants can't manage to accept a connection appropriately because I wrote defterm before @zadjii-msft's monarch/peasant architecture. The simple solution here is to just make the monarch always be listening for inbound connections. Then COM won't start a peasant with -Embedding just to ask the monarch where it should go. It'll just join the active window. I didn't close 9475 because it should follow monarch policies on which window to join... and it doesn't yet.
- A lot of interesting things are happening because this didn't have a real HPCON. So I passed through the remaining handles (and re-GUID-ed the interface) that made it possible for me to pack the right process handles and such into an HPCON on the inbound connection and monitor that like any other ConptyConnection. This should resolve some of the process exit behaviors and signal channel things like resizing.
## Summary of the Pull Request
This replaces `ThrottledFunc` with two variants:
* `ThrottledFuncLeading` invokes the callback immediately and blocks further calls for the given duration
* `ThrottledFuncTrailing` blocks calls for the given duration and then invokes the callback
## References
* #9270 - `ThrottledFuncLeading` will allow the pane to flash immediately for a BEL, but block further BELs until the animation finished
## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
## Validation Steps Performed
* [x] Ensured scrolling still works