winrt still has some issues with some character sets. These
tests are skipped/blacklisted for now and will be investigated.
Task-number: QTBUG-68297
Change-Id: I898e3383a4673b6dc87815a75e705f3302a4cbba
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
This autotest fails on Ubuntu 18.04 and QEMU builds.
Task-number: QTBUG-68860
Change-Id: I1907e713e8c743cf5cf8e284df516600a0c03dba
Reviewed-by: Tony Sarajärvi <tony.sarajarvi@qt.io>
Adjust line positions to deal with negative leading which isn't included
in height of QTextLine.
Change-Id: Id7918968c0f9d7e65700b9e7a08fc5d761883f22
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
The bounding rect was not including positive leading of the last line. This
patch solves it by changing using QTextLine's setLeadingIncluded, and adds
handling of negative leading to keep rendering unchanged in that case.
Change-Id: I4d18b81892184bb85cd7949a5dc3fb9cfa270a26
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
When showing a condensed font with AnyStretch, we should
not apply any stretch to the font (and if a stretch is
requested, we should calculate the actual stretch based
on how much the font is already stretched or condensed).
This usually works as expected, however, when using
QFont::NoFontMerging as the style strategy, we would
scale the glyph advances by the stretch of the font
since the calculated stretch of the font engine would
be overwritten by the actual stretch. In the case where
we use font merging, this would be done for the multi
engine, so we would not get the same issue, since the
text engine gets the stretch from the actual font engine
and this still has the original, calculated stretch
set.
Note on the test: We can't use testString() for this,
since it contains a space, and the test font does not
have a glyph for this, so we will end up merging a
different font for the space, giving us a slightly
different advance.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][macOS] Fixed display of condensed fonts
when NoFontMerging is in use.
Task-number: QTBUG-63800
Change-Id: I5b05e0dbfc8ae4b5d10c621ecb0975f53fda9483
Reviewed-by: Allan Sandfeld Jensen <allan.jensen@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
QTextDocumentWriter only supports a small subset of table formatting
when exporting to ODF-format. This patch adds more formatting
capabilities to the ODF exporter:
- table border support
- table alignment
- table width
- respect column constraints (column widths)
- add a tab before soft line breaks. This will avoid causing the last
line to stretch all over the cell in justified paragraphs.
With this patch, line height settings are now exported, too.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][QDocumentWriter] QDocumentWriter now supports table
borders, table alignment, table width, column widths, line height and
image resolution when exporting QTextDocuments to ODF files.
Task-number: QTBUG-63581
Change-Id: I2d269ef0f842e73af64d48bfef531d5fa3078088
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Remove BLACKLIST files which are no longer valid because the mentioned
CI systems are no longer active:
- opensuse-13.1
- opensuse-42.1
- rhel-7.1
- rhel-7.2
- rhel-7.3
- ubuntu-14.04
or the testcases are no longer available:
- QTBUG_14292_filesystem in qactiongroup
Change-Id: I80a4397059fafba169096440fdc07d45c76a1ed8
Reviewed-by: Frederik Gladhorn <frederik.gladhorn@qt.io>
QFontEngine::cloneWithSize() is used by QRawFont internally when switching
a raw-font from one size to another using setPixelSize. For CoreText, we
use a subclass of QCoreTextFontEngine to keep track of the QByteArray data
of a raw-font, but failed to overload cloneWithSize, so we would lose the
data whenever setPixelSize was called, resulting in missing text rendering
in QtWebKit. We now retain the data as we should.
Task-number: QTBUG-65923
Change-Id: I7d4186a3c32a61d48d1e9388e43f2792e8e46081
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
The size of the QStaticText was always adjusted, even if setTextWidth()
was used. Now size of the QStaticText is calculated according to
the set width of the text, and if no width was set, then the
automatically adjusted size is used.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][QStaticText] Fixed explicitly set width not being
respected.
Task-number: QTBUG-65836
Change-Id: If2f9f6952fb168f4bcb6d8fabfdc7360f8a36485
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
After we stopped sanitizing the fallback font list (with change
6ca48a847a), we now need to make
sure it is ordered so that the fonts that support the writing
system in question are always tested first, otherwise we can end up
loading a lot of fonts that will never be used.
Task-number: QTBUG-65605
Change-Id: Id2a65bbff3e64e6d6e6b4f72500778ee3e811e84
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Ritt <ritt.ks@gmail.com>
When we request fallback fonts, we cannot discriminate the fonts
based on the writing system support. This is especially important
since common script is now merged with other scripts, meaning that
a common script character will always go through the fallback
mechanism when not supported by the main font. When drawing
for instance a string of Devanagari characters on macOS, we would
get a list of 33 fallback fonts, but almost all of them would be
the default Devanagari font, since none of the other fallbacks
would support that script. Meaning that we would just check the
same font over and over, which makes no sense. The fallback list
has been retrieved specifically for the given script, so we do
not need to consider that when fetching the fonts.
For most of the common set, we will not have noticed the bug,
because at least one of the writing system-specific fallbacks will
have had support for latin characters as well. But when trying to
mix emojis and some non-common script, we would get a box in
place of the emoji, which had been adopted to the main script and
would only be looked for in the fonts supporting this.
Note that this exposed an issue with the QRawFont test on some
systems. When the sample text contained a space, it would
be possible to get a fallback font for this character, since
we now effectively support fallbacks. This is not the correct
behavior, but it is unrelated to this fix, and it was not what
the QRawFont::unsupportedWritingSystem() test was written to
check. I have therefore removed the space from the sample text
to make the test pass, and will make a separate task of fixing
the issue of merging fonts for whitespace characters.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Fixed a bug where mixing different
writing systems with emojis could lead to missing glyphs.
Task-number: QTBUG-61882
Change-Id: I00f6043bb01af1f2277723ccf643034aebf3e18f
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Ritt <ritt.ks@gmail.com>
The QTextFormat::FontLetterSpacingType property was added outside
the span of the FirstFontProperty and LastFontProperty, so
the fontDirty flag would not be set when it was changed. There is
no binary compatible way to fix this before Qt 6, so for now, we
add a special case for it.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Fixed an issue where changing the letter
spacing type of a QTextCharFormat would not cause its font to
update.
Task-number: QTBUG-65345
Change-Id: I5ab53d7f82d529b57edceacfc3fa688c6741cd17
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Ritt <ritt.ks@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: C. Boemann <cbo@boemann.dk>
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
QFontMetrics(F)::width() has been deprecated and is replaced by
horizontalAdvance(). This updates all usage of it in tests and
documentation.
It is worth noting that many or most of the usages of
QFontMetrics::width() probably intended to use boundingRect().width(),
but since it currently works, I have not looked into that, just
replaced the function name mechanically.
Change-Id: Iec382e5bad0b50f37a6cfff841bfb46ed4d4555f
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
A source of constant confusion is the QFontMetrics::width() function,
which does not return the bounding width of the text, but the advance
width. We deprecate this and add horizontalAdvance() instead, to avoid the
confusion in the future.
Note that there was an internal width() overload which was only there
for the purpose of supporting the Qt::TextBypassShaping flag. This
flag has already been replaced by public API, so no such
overload is added. Instead, we deprecate the TextBypassShaping flag
as well, which makes sense, since a replacement has been made.
Also note that there was a consistency problem with QFontMetrics and
QFontMetricsF, which are supposed to be interchangeable. The
QFontMetrics::width() functions for strings took an optional int length
argument, while the floating point version did not. This error is
corrected in the advance() functions.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Added QFontMetrics::horizontalAdvance() and
QFontMetricsF::horizontalAdvance() to replace the confusingly named
width() function. The latter has now been deprecated.
Change-Id: I0dfda43aa65c8235be32c62fade82cae05b29c79
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
The vast majority is actually switched to QRandomGenerator::bounded(),
which gives a mostly uniform distribution over the [0, bound)
range. There are very few floating point cases left, as many of those
that did use floating point did not need to, after all. (I did leave
some that were too ugly for me to understand)
This commit also found a couple of calls to rand() instead of qrand().
This commit does not include changes to SSL code that continues to use
qrand() (job for someone else):
src/network/ssl/qsslkey_qt.cpp
src/network/ssl/qsslsocket_mac.cpp
tests/auto/network/ssl/qsslsocket/tst_qsslsocket.cpp
Change-Id: Icd0e0d4b27cb4e5eb892fffd14b5285d43f4afbf
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
ultrix and reliant have not seen a release since 1995. dgux not since
2001. bsdi not since 2003. irix not since 2006. osf not since 2010.
dynix... unclear, but no later than 2002. symbian needs no mention.
All considered obsolete, all gone.
sco and unixware are effectively obsolete. Remove them until someone
expresses a real need.
Change-Id: Ia3d9d370016adce9213ae5ad0ef965ef8de2a3ff
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Remaining uses of Q_DECL_OVERRIDE are in:
src/corelib/global/qcompilerdetection.h
src/corelib/global/qglobal.cpp
doc/global/qt-cpp-defines.qdocconf
(definition and documentation of Q_DECL_OVERRIDE)
tests/manual/qcursor/qcursorhighdpi/main.cpp
(a test executable compilable both under Qt4 and Qt5)
Change-Id: Ib9b05d829add69e98a86238274b6a1fcb19b49ba
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Ville Voutilainen <ville.voutilainen@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Can now detect nested quotes and code blocks inside quotes, and can
rewrite the markdown too.
QTextHtmlParser sets hard-coded left and right margins, so we need to do
the same to be able to read HTML and write markdown, or vice-versa,
and to ensure that all views (QTextEdit, QTextBrowser, QML Text etc.)
will render it with margins. But now we add a semantic memory too:
BlockQuoteLevel is similar to HeadingLevel, which was added in
310daae539 to preserve H1..H6 heading
levels, because detecting it via font size didn't make sense in
QTextMarkdownWriter. Likewise detecting quote level by its margins
didn't make sense; markdown supports nesting quotes; and indenting
nested quotes via 40 pixels may be a bit too much, so we should consider
it subject to change (and perhaps be able to change it via CSS later on).
Since we're adding BlockQuoteLevel and depending on it in QTextMarkdownWriter,
it's necessary to set it in QTextHtmlParser to enable HTML->markdown
conversion. (But so far, nested blockquotes in HTML are not supported.)
Quotes (and nested quotes) can contain indented code blocks, but it seems
the reverse is not true (according to https://spec.commonmark.org/0.29/#example-201 )
Quotes can contain fenced code blocks.
Quotes can contain lists. Nested lists can be interrupted with
nested code blocks and nested quotes.
So far the writer assumes all code blocks are the indented type.
It will be necessary to add another attribute to remember whether the
code block is indented or fenced (assuming that's necessary).
Fenced code blocks would work better for writing inside block quotes
and list items because the fence is less ambiguous than the indent.
Postponing cursor->insertBlock() as long as possible helps with nesting.
cursor->insertBlock() needs to be done "just in time" before inserting
text that will go in the block. The block and char formats aren't
necessarily known until that time. When a nested block (such as a
nested quote) ends, the context reverts to the previous block format,
which then needs to be re-determined and set before we insert text
into the outer block; but if no text will be inserted, no new block
is necessary. But we can't use QTextBlockFormat itself as storage,
because for some reason bullets become very "sticky" and it becomes
impossible to have plain continuation paragraphs inside list items:
they all get bullets. Somehow QTextBlockFormat remembers, if we copy it.
But we can create a new one each time and it's OK.
Change-Id: Icd0529eb90d2b6a3cb57f0104bf78a7be81ede52
Reviewed-by: Gatis Paeglis <gatis.paeglis@qt.io>
- QObjects are always passed by pointer not by reference, by convention
- writeTable() takes QAIM rather than QATM to make testing via
QStandardItemModel possible in the future
Change-Id: I5bc6b8cd9709da4fb5d57d98fa22e0cb34360944
Reviewed-by: Gatis Paeglis <gatis.paeglis@qt.io>
Importer fixes:
- the first list item after a heading doesn't keep the heading font
- the first text fragment after a bullet is the bullet text, not a
separate paragraph
- detect continuation lines and append to the list item text
- detect continuation paragraphs and indent them properly
- indent nested list items properly
- add a test for QTextMarkdownImporter
Writer fixes:
- after bullet items, continuation lines and paragraphs are indented
- indentation of continuations isn't affected by checkboxes
- add extra newlines between list items in "loose" lists
- avoid writing triple newlines
- enhance the test for QTextMarkdownWriter
Change-Id: Ib1dda514832f6dc0cdad177aa9a423a7038ac8c6
Reviewed-by: Gatis Paeglis <gatis.paeglis@qt.io>
A QTextDocument can now be written out in Markdown format.
- Add the QTextMarkdownWriter as a private class for now
- Add QTextDocument::toMarkdown()
- QTextDocumentWriter uses QTextMarkdownWriter if setFormat("markdown")
is called or if the file suffix is .md or .mkd
- Add QTextEdit::toMarkdown() and the markdown property
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Markdown (CommonMark or GitHub dialect) is now
a supported format for reading into and writing from QTextDocument.
Change-Id: I663a77017fac7ae1b3f9a400f5cd357bb40750af
Reviewed-by: Gatis Paeglis <gatis.paeglis@qt.io>
In Korean text, they typically can use both the "Western" style of
word wrapping, i.e. breaking on spaces, as well as the East-Asian
style of potentially breaking between all syllables. However,
the Unicode Line Breaking Algorithm, TR14 defaults to breaks on
syllables and specifies a possible tailoring where Hangul is
mapped to the AL class instead:
"When Korean uses SPACE for line breaking, the classes in rule
LB26, as well as characters of class ID, are often tailored to AL"
When using Qt, the user would expect the WordWrap wrap mode to
break between words in Korean. If you want the syllable-based
text layout, you would use WrapAnywhere, probably accompanied
by line justification.
To avoid breaking QTextBoundaryFinder and other potential clients
of QUnicodeTools which depend on getting the precise Unicode
data from the algorithm, we do this by passing a flag from
QTextEngine when initializing the attributes. This way, it
can also be made optional later on, if we decide there is
a reason to add an additional wrap mode specifically to
handle cases like this.
[ChangeLog][Important Behavioral Change] WrapWord now
correctly prefers line breaks between words in Korean text.
WrapAnywhere can still be used to get breaks between syllables
instead.
Done-with: Alexey Turitsyn <alexey.turitsyn@lge.com>
Task-number: QTBUG-47644
Change-Id: I37b45cea2995db7fc2b61e3a0cc681bbdc334678
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Conflicts:
examples/examples.pro
qmake/library/qmakebuiltins.cpp
src/corelib/global/qglobal.cpp
Re-apply b525ec2 to qrandom.cpp(code movement in 030782e)
src/corelib/global/qnamespace.qdoc
src/corelib/global/qrandom.cpp
src/gui/kernel/qwindow.cpp
Re-apply a3d59c7 to QWindowPrivate::setVisible() (code movement in d7a9e08)
src/network/ssl/qsslkey_openssl.cpp
src/plugins/platforms/android/androidjniinput.cpp
src/plugins/platforms/xcb/qxcbconnection.cpp
src/plugins/platforms/xcb/qxcbconnection_xi2.cpp
src/widgets/widgets/qmenu.cpp
tests/auto/widgets/kernel/qwidget_window/tst_qwidget_window.cpp
Change-Id: If7ab427804408877a93cbe02079fca58e568bfd3
The blacklisting is not needed anymore as we now use -qt-harfbuzz.
This reverts commit b36e5faad4.
Task-number: QTQAINFRA-1363
Change-Id: I3ae50588204b27e6880416ae2cbc28dda53bb292
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@qt.io>
In Qt, we have QTextOption::tabStop, QTextEdit::tabStopWidth and
QPlainTextEdit::tabStopWidth.
Neither are very good names, since the tab stop is neither a
numerical value as in the former, nor does it have any dimensions
that can be measured, as in the latter. Vertical text advances
may also be supported by Qt at some point in the future, at
which point the name would make even less sense.
At the same time, we expose the actual type of the tab stop
distance as floating point in the QTextEdit and QPlainTextEdit
API instead of always rounding it to an int.
To avoid duplicating either of these APIs in Qt Quick, we
introduce tabStopDistance as the common term instead and deprecate
the old names.
[ChangeLog][Text] Introduced tabStopDistance property in
QTextOption, QTextEdit and QPlainTextEdit as replacement for
the inconsistently named tabStop and tabStopWidth properties.
QTextOption::tabStop, QTextEdit::tabStopWidth and
QPlainTextEdit::tabStopWidth have subsequently been deprecated.
Change-Id: Ib7e01387910cddb58adaaaadcd56c0e69edc4bc2
Reviewed-by: Paolo Angelelli <paolo.angelelli@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
The test fails when the system harfbuzz (version 1.3.2) is installed.
Change-Id: Id18a5a3c503f64ef56567d71655e433a46908b3f
Task-number: QTQAINFRA-1363
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@qt.io>
The test fails when the system harfbuzz (version 1.3.2) is installed.
Change-Id: Id18a5a3c503f64ef56567d71655e433a46908b3f
Task-number: QTQAINFRA-1363
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@qt.io>
In the past, we had an undocumented text flag that worked with
one of the QPainter::drawText() overloads. This was never intended
as public API and served a specific cause in Qt WebKit at one point.
But there is a general need for such API, as disabling shaping features
easily gives 25% performance improvement on text rendering even for
fairly short strings.
This patch adds a new style strategy flag to disable shaping and
will just uses the CMAP and HDMX tables to get glyph indices and advances
for the characters. In Qt 6, the TextBypassShaping flag can be removed
completely and be replaced by the style strategy.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Added QFont::PreferNoShaping style strategy to support
improvements to performance at the expense of some cosmetic font features.
Task-number: QTBUG-56728
Change-Id: I48e025dcc06afe02824bf5b5011702a7e0036f6d
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Similar on how it is done for Windows desktop we also use the given
style hint when building the list of fallbacks a font family.
Change-Id: I71378581d07f20ebe5bf0bc757bba919cc70e118
Reviewed-by: Maurice Kalinowski <maurice.kalinowski@qt.io>
CSS style such as "line-height: 1.5;" should be used as a multiplier,
but Qt uses it as percentage which makes line spacing way too small. To
workaround this, convert it to percent and use as
QTextBlockFormat::ProportionalHeight instead.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Important Behvior Changes] Changed CSS line-height
property with multiplier to follow CSS spec
Task-number: QTBUG-56848
Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-17683
Change-Id: Icc98f7c0d4d07542a220702c287f23fa450ef875
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
<div>1<br/></div>2 was inserting two newlines between 1 and 2, while all
tested web browsers only insert one newline - as long as there is nothing
between the <br/> and the </div>.
This was the cause for extra newlines being inserted in KMail when
replying to HTML emails, such as those generated by gmail.
Change-Id: I5145d977701e68913264357bba22780e7cdd3f7d
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
If the respective modules aren't available we cannot build the tests
and examples. We drop the qtConfig(opengl) requirement for the opengl
examples as
a, we would need to make the QtGui configuration available for that to
work, and
b, we should not add too much detail to the tests and examples build
configurations. Checking each test and example for every feature it
uses would be too much.
Task-number: QTBUG-57255
Change-Id: Ifb043c81ec9e5c487765297bd65704812cd281fc
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@qt.io>
Replace all QT_NO_PROCESS with QT_CONFIG(process), define it in
qconfig-bootstrapped.h, add QT_REQUIRE_CONFIG(process) to the qprocess
headers, exclude the sources from compilation when switched off, guard
header inclusions in places where compilation without QProcess seems
supported, drop some unused includes, and fix some tests that were
apparently designed to work with QT_NO_PROCESS but failed to.
Change-Id: Ieceea2504dea6fdf43b81c7c6b65c547b01b9714
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@qt.io>
operator=, which was only used for clearing, wasn't clearing the hash.
This led to a mismatch between the vector and the hash (given that the hash
points into the vector).
Spotted by interrupting kmail in gdb, and it was in this code
iterating over a 2000 entries hash (the first vector entries not matching
the hash, this code keep appending new entries for the same formats).
This fixes QTBUG-8862 again, the initial fix having been accidentally
reverted in 467b15a.
Change-Id: Ia34b3d002a0199e1930431a4bbdb2ec981ed4ffc
Task-number: QTBUG-8862
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
When calculating the width of a text for drawing decorations on top,
we use the effective advance of the whole text after it has been
through the shaper.
However, in the case of QStaticText and QGlyphRun, there is shortcut:
Since we only have the glyph indexes and position of each glyph,
we use the position + advance of the right-most glyph to find the
right-most edge of the decoration. For this, however, we use the
advance of the glyph *out of context* of the rest of the string,
because the whole idea is to avoid doing the shaping of the string
with every draw call. In some rare cases, the advance of the
right-most character, in the context of the string, is different
from the advance of the standalone glyph.
Now, one way of fixing this would be to store the width of the
text in QStaticText and QGlyphRun, but since it is a very rare
artifact which is barely visible, I have opted to just work around
it in the test instead, the workaround being to force integer
metrics so that we don't get the small 0.2 pixel error.
Task-number: QTBUG-55217
Change-Id: I8d16d52f2ef27275cabb7d3865aeeaa31617ba3d
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Recent HB changed the way of handling ZWJ/ZWNJ to be more in par
with other engines.
Change-Id: I8abacd195e4b247c8fa6d91ef1086e74da0a1efb
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
The QFontMetricsF version of the test should not truncate the
returned values, as the results may then be wrong.
Change-Id: I17f97f846bb723709e695e8866e437d6888d275b
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
OpenSUSE has a bitmap font called "Waree" while the test
is created for the TrueType font which is available on Ubuntu.
The style names are different, so we can use that to check
that we have the right one.
Change-Id: I808d0d1ecde9f10ed7730dc76ab3818490002ba9
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Amends 7896ae052a. The previous change
focused only on ZWJ and ZWNJ, but there are many other formatting characters
that we need to support and that may be rejected by the German keyboard-hack.
This opens up for all characters in the Other_Format category.
Task-number: QTBUG-58364
Change-Id: Idd967a9ae5b12060c851f6030b7e019508561696
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
The style name needs to be cleared if not present in the string,
otherwise the style name from qApp->font() (which propagates to
any default-constructed QFont) remains.
Change-Id: I9b6522a39a38526cced8a11ed02ae32582026480
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Shegunov <kshegunov@gmail.com>
The test failed if qApp->font() had a styleName() set,
when testing old serialization formats which didn't serialize it.
Change-Id: If0236d354be144b3a990e074a22f796fffb1ed18
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Shegunov <kshegunov@gmail.com>
Private Use Area characters are quite valid input characters when used
in combination with a custom font. Joiners also serve an important language
purpose in semitic writing systems.
Note that there is a hack where we disregard any character produced
using CTRL or CTRL+SHIFT specifically because of German keyboards. I have chosen to
keep the hack in this patch to limit the change (though I have made an exception
for ZWJ and ZWNJ since both are produced using Ctrl+Shift on Windows), but it
will probably have to be reverted.
[ChangeLog][QtWidgets][Input] Accept characters in Private Use Area, as well as
zero-width joiners and zero-width non-joiners in input in QLineEdit and QTextEdit.
Task-number: QTBUG-42074
Task-number: QTBUG-57003
Change-Id: I73f3b7d587a8670de24e902dc52a51f7721dba5a
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Commit 2bc7a40048 taught the CoreText font database to populate the
families lazily, and in the process added a guard to ensure that we
didn't populate internal fonts (prefixed with a '.'), as these fonts
would then show up in font selection dialogs.
Commit 909d3f5c7 then added support for private fonts, by making it
possible to filter out any private fonts from font selection daialogs.
But the guard was not removed, so we were still not populating these
fonts. This guard has been removed, and the filtering function has
been updated to include the conditions of the guard.
Next, commit e5e93345c5 used [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName:] to verify
that each family that we registered with the font database would also
have matching fonts when finally populated. This is not the right approach,
as [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName:] does not handle internal fonts.
Instead we trust what CTFontDescriptorCreateMatchingFontDescriptors()
gives us, but make sure to register the resulting font descriptors
with the original/originating font family, instead of the one we pull
out of the font descriptor.
Finally, as of iOS 10, we can use CTFontManagerCopyAvailableFontFamilyNames
instead of [UIFont familyNames], which gives us all of the internal font
families like on macOS, instead of just the user-visible families. For
earlier iOS versions we manually add '.PhoneFallback', as we know it
will be available even if not listed in [UIFont familyNames].
The end result is that we register and populate families like '.PhoneFallback',
which is critical to supporting more esoteric writing systems.
The check in tst_QFont that styles for a given family is not empty has
been removed, as we can't guarantee that on all platforms, which is
also documented for QFontDatabase::styles().
Task-number: QTBUG-45746
Task-number: QTBUG-50624
Change-Id: I04674dcb2bb36b4cdf5646d540c35727ff3daaad
Reviewed-by: Jake Petroules <jake.petroules@qt.io>
../tst_qfile.cpp: In member function 'void tst_QFile::handle()':
../tst_qfile.cpp:2661:38: warning: ignoring return value of 'ssize_t read(int, void*, size_t)', declared with attribute warn_unused_result [-Wunused-result]
tst_qstatictext.cpp:862:58: warning: unused parameter 'textItem' [-Wunused-parameter]
../tst_qtcpsocket.cpp: In member function 'void tst_QTcpSocket::abortiveClose()':
../tst_qtcpsocket.cpp:2254:90: warning: suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value [-Wparentheses]
Test.cpp: In member function 'void My4Socket::read()':
Test.cpp:66:20: warning: 'reply' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
../tst_qlocalsocket.cpp: In lambda function:
../tst_qlocalsocket.cpp:701:51: warning: comparison between signed and unsigned integer expressions [-Wsign-compare]
../tst_qtcpserver.cpp: In member function 'void tst_QTcpServer::linkLocal()':
../tst_qtcpserver.cpp:935:92: warning: suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value [-Wparentheses]
../tst_qtcpserver.cpp:940:92: warning: suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value [-Wparentheses]
Change-Id: Ic315069768bcb63a6b333c28ac65b0b992b0d43f
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@qt.io>
Looks up the canonical names of enumerated fonts and register them under
their preferred names if present.
Also changes the logic handling registration of english aliases, so it
is always done, even if it might in rare cases cause a double
registration since that is safe.
Task-number: QTBUG-53458
Change-Id: Ia010774b26072192b55697b717cc37442c852881
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
No-break-spaces should not be counted in the space data, but rather
be treated as any other non-breakable character. We were already
taking care of this in the loop we reach if the item starts with
a character which isn't whitespace, but there is a second loop for
items that begin with whitespace characters.
The result of this was that in certain circumstances where you gave
the nbsp its own format and made the line wrap, the previous line
would count an extra trailing space and it would swallow the first
character in its following line.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Fixed a bug where a no-break space would
sometimes cause the first character of the containing line to not be
displayed.
Task-number: QTBUG-56714
Change-Id: Idd760a389052e6de70f6cc397122b217987fa5f2
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
We were throwing away important information by claiming that all
fonts support all the standard sizes in QFontDatabase on Windows
This caused the font dialog to list unsupported sizes for bitmap
fonts, unlike the native font dialog.
We would also claim to support creating bitmap fonts at
unsupported sizes, which would lead to
1. QFontInfo(font).pointSize() would return the requested size,
not the actual rendered size.
2. Bitmap fonts created at 64 pixels and higher would be invisible.
On Mac, there are no system bitmap fonts, and the use is not very
common, but installing some bitmap fonts on the system, it does
seem to ignore the sizes supported in the font and just displays
the standard list instead, so we keep the current behavior there.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Fixed list of supported sizes for
bitmap fonts on Windows.
Task-number: QTBUG-56672
Change-Id: Idbec2db9eb3381ab5ddf6259bd2befcba9b93564
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
The QTextDocument::toPlainText() converts some characters in the
text to ASCII, which can be problematic for use cases where you
want to save the precise contents of the document, e.g. in
Qt Creator. Since we don't want to change the behavior of
toPlainText(), we introduce a new function which returns the
raw text contents of the document instead, with no modifications.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Added QTextDocument::toRawText() function.
Task-number: QTBUG-56538
Change-Id: Ib6c48a16551c4c71c4c431760f993793d1af6806
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Fixes the test for width of condensed fonts so it doesn't depend
on the presence of the Liberation font on the system, and adds
another test that condensed sub-families can be matched
consistently. The latter will however not work on Windows until
QTBUG-53458 is solved.
Task-number: QTBUG-51335.
Change-Id: Id6d046274fa21b2dce0ad6b32dce7f1c8a92a4f4
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
The layout isn't actually created until endLayout() or setLineWidth() is
called. So in the case where this was not done, the height of the line
would be 0, thus multiple lines would be placed on top of each other, at
y == 0.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][Text] Fixed QStaticText when manually breaking lines
and no text width was set.
Task-number: QTBUG-56346
Change-Id: I7f6ed6260545882f05fe39b21134315eca7401b9
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Ritt <ritt.ks@gmail.com>
After e109b8a0f3, it is possible
that the cache will be flushed as a result of inserting a new
font rather than just when the timer event triggers. When doing
superscript and subscript text layouts, we would first get
a regular font engine, then a scaled one, and then reference
the regular font engine *after* getting the scaled one. If the
regular font engine was deleted as a result of inserting the scaled
one, we would get a dangling pointer and crash.
The situation was improved by 49926bb9ef.
You would now to switch between 256 different fonts in the layout
in order to trigger it. The test in the commit will trigger the
crash even with this change.
[ChangeLog][Qt Gui][Text] Fixed a crash that could happen if you
were doing many different text layouts with different fonts
and superscript or subscript alignment.
Task-number: QTBUG-53911
Change-Id: Ia33108252e030eff25924ef1b7c10b9d59b5bc8c
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
cf53aa21bf and 3aaa5d6b32
were reverted because of reconstruction in 5.7.
defineTest(qtConfTest_checkCompiler) in configure.pri is smart
enough to cover the case in a9474d1260.
DirectWrite: Fix advances being scaled to 0
Since 131eee5cd, the stretch of a font can be 0, meaning
"whatever the font provides". In combination with ec7fee96,
this would cause advances in the DirectWrite engine to be scaled to
0, causing the QRawFont test to fail.
Conflicts:
configure
mkspecs/features/uikit/device_destinations.sh
mkspecs/features/uikit/xcodebuild.mk
src/corelib/global/qglobal.cpp
src/corelib/global/qnamespace.qdoc
src/plugins/platforms/cocoa/qcocoamenuitem.h
src/plugins/platforms/windows/qwindowsservices.cpp
src/plugins/platformthemes/gtk3/qgtk3dialoghelpers.cpp
src/plugins/platforms/windows/qwindowsfontenginedirectwrite.cpp
src/widgets/kernel/qapplication.cpp
tests/auto/widgets/dialogs/qfiledialog/tst_qfiledialog.cpp
tests/auto/widgets/dialogs/qfiledialog2/tst_qfiledialog2.cpp
Change-Id: I4656d8133da7ee9fcc84ad3f1c7950f924432d1e
[ChangeLog][QtGui][QTextDocument] Fixed a bug that would return a wrong
position when searching backward from the end of the document.
Task-number: QTBUG-48182
Change-Id: I6e88f808a50cb840f61e7bc579e2a28c5300089d
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Use the new qtConfig macro in all pro/pri files.
This required adding some feature entries, and adding
{private,public}Feature to every referenced already existing entry.
Change-Id: I164214dad1154df6ad84e86d99ed14994ef97cf4
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@theqtcompany.com>
Cap height is an important metric of font, in particular it is
required to make decent implementation of "initial-letter"
CSS property in QtWebKit.
Note that some fonts lack cap height metadata, so we need to
fall back to measuring H letter height.
Change-Id: Icf69d92159d070889085e20d31f2e397d796d940
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
If an entire font family is condensed or stretched and we match by
family name, the default stretch factor of 100 will make the font
engine try to synthesize it back to medium stretched font.
The existing code is already made to deal with a stretch of 0 that is
no longer used. This patch reintroduces 0 stretch to indicate no
specific stretch has been requested. Specifically setting stretch to
100 on a QFont will introduce the old behavior.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][QFont] The default value of QFont::stretch() is
now 0 to indicate any default stretch is acceptable.
Task-number: QTBUG-48043
Change-Id: I574747f980fd4f9893df828818aae99a07b41623
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>