The test for inserting text at a specific position failed because
<Ctrl+Right> doesn't behave the same on Windows and Linux. This changes
it to move the cursor using other keys.
This means we don't get a QProcess message because of test_no_loglines
not sending :quit, and we don't need to do so in test_ascii_locale as
there's nothing we need to wait for.
This adds the ability to open new tabs in the last-focused window
instead, which fixes#1801.
Right now the only other option is probably not that useful for human
users but it's required to make tests behave deterministically and
consistently. (But with #881 on the roadmap, I would implement this as
another choice)
To this end, also make the test framework set this option to preserve
the invariant against which existing tests are written: that spawning a
new window would effectively also focus it.
This allows a specific keybinding, for whatever reason, to override the
default mode. Examples of when this could be useful:
* :hint --rapid --mode=word (to type them more rapidly)
* :hint --mode=letter input (if the default mode is number)
Also reword the description of 'group' to make the distinction between
'group' and 'mode' clearer.
Changes :yank's flag arguments to a positional "what" argument
specifying the object to be yanked. Including "selection" as a
possibility allows for the replacement of :yank-selected with
:yank selection.
webelem.javascript_escape got renamed to javascript.string_escape, and a
new javascript.assemble got added to make it easier to call a function
inside a .js file.
:hint all download does not use the response headers to determine the
filename (the prompt is shown before a request is even done), so our
long filename was pretty useless.
:hint works because it does a request first and uses the right filename,
but we need to wait until the prompt is shown before we can do
:prompt-open-download, since the request is a bit slower and would fail
otherwise.
There's currently an error on exit which doesn't get caught with
--nowindow and not with ":later 500 quit".
We also need to check the output as there's an additional segfault when
that happens...
* Move documentation changes of bookmark / quickmarks to docstrings, as the
asciidoc is autogenerated from those
* Fix some whitespaces in the BDD test cases
* Improved docstring in qute_bookmarks handler
There is a new page now, qute:bookmarks that will display all bookmarks and
quickmarks. It's still missing a search / filter feature, but you can use
the built-in search / navigation just as easily for now.
In the last CherryPy update, cherrypy.wsgiserver got converted to a
single module. While this issue still exists in pylint, we don't get it
here anymore.
We have some things like pos_px stubbed which will fail any test because
of the stub warning - but some tests don't actually need that, it just
happens when e.g. loading something.
So let's not fail tests based on stub warnings, and see how much works
that way.
The test was failing because of two reasons:
First, the old code had filename questions in DownloadManager.get and
DownloadManager.fetch which were almost identical, thus the part in
DownloadManager.get was removed in an earlier commit. All filename
asking is now done by DownloadManager.fetch. The good part is code
deduplication, the bad part is slightly modified behavior: The new code
doesn't wait for a filename to start the download, instead it tries to
fill the buffer immediately. This made the test fail because qute:// has
no registered handler, so in order for the test to pass now, the "no
crash" part is not enough, we also need to expect the "No handler"
error.
Secondly, and a rather rare (race) condition was the handling of errors
in the DownloadItem. If an error occured after the registration of
self.on_reply_error as error handler and before the check
reply.error() != QNetworkReply.NoError
at the end of the function, the error signal would be emitted twice:
Once by _die() (called by on_reply_error), and once by the init_reply
function directly (in the last if block). This lead to duplicated error
messages. This is also explained in a comment in the file (with small
"stack traces").