The greasemonkey `@match` directive is used to match urls against
chromium url patterns (as opposed to `@include` which treats its
argument as a glob expression). I was using fnmatch for both here
because I am lazy and knew someone else was going to implement chromium
url patterns for me eventually. Now it is done and I should switch to
using them instead. The most common failing case that this will fix is
something matching on `*://*.domain.com/*` because it wouldn't match
the url with no subdomain.
This codepath is only used on webengine 5.7.1 and webkit backends.
Allow completion functions to react dynamically to args as the user
inputs them. This allows config-cycle to filter out values that were
already provided.
Args provided after the maxsplit do not cause the completion to regen.
For example, successive words typed after `:open` just set the filter
pattern and do not spuriously regenerate the completion model.
When a command has positional varargs, keep offering the configured
completion for each successive argument.
Right now this only influences `config-cycle`.
Previously, `config-cycle <option> ` would offer a value completion for
only the first argument after the option. Now it will keep offering
value completion for each successive argument.
This will be useful for passing multiple tags to the new bookmark
commands that will be added for #882.
`prefix` is a string and `seq` is a key sequence, so removing `len(prefix)`
items from `seq` will remove too many if `prefix` contains a special character
(ex "<Ctrl+x>"). Remove the number of characters from `str(seq)` instead.
If we don't do this, when doing:
self.config_stub.val.content.user_stylesheets = css_path
then _update_stylesheet gets called before the stylesheet QWebEngineScript did
run (as there was no load yet), so we get:
[:2] Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'stylesheet' of undefined!
Instead, load the page first and then update the stylesheet.
This tests that live updating works properly, and also makes sure we don't run
into the problem described above.
- Initialize JavaScript in webenginesettings.py instead of webenginetab.py
- Move JavaScript snippet into a .js file
- Make sure scripts can be re-run and do nothing if already run.
- Run scripts on DocumentCreation *and* DocumentReady. Closes#3717.
- Give each script an unique name for debugging.
- Also make custom stylesheets work on chrome:// pages
- Use qutebrowser-editor-backup as the backup file prefix
- Consistently use message.error instead of cmdexc
- Improve test coverage for the backup function
- Fix lint errors in the unit test code
Currently the editor deletes its temp file whenever editing is finished.
With this patch, the file will not be deleted if the editor callback
encounters an exception.
One example is if the tab containing the edited element is closed. The
editor errors with "Edited element vanished", but with this patch it
will also print "Backup at ..." so the user does not lose their work.
Resolves#1596.
Supersedes #3641, using the cleaner approach started in #1677.
1899e313fd as a fix for #3631 broke :unbind, as
the config system treats None and '' equally.
Instead, allow None/'' again, but just handle it as "no binding".
This mostly reverts 4ef5db1bc4 for #1966, but
fixes#3684 by allowing numbers to be bound again. If the user wants to bind
numbers instead of using them for a count, why not let them.
This handles Qt.KeypadModifier (Num+...) correctly, adds tests for converting
modifiers to strings, and strips Qt.GroupSwitchModifier as QKeySequence doesn't
know about it.
Fixes#3675
When pressing a key which doesn't exist as Qt.Key, we don't get Qt.Key_unknown
like we'd expect, but we get 0x0 instead...
Let's add that as a new "nil" key (to not conflict with None/unknown/zero/...)
and handle it appropriately.
This can be reproduced by doing:
setxkbmap -layout us,gr -option grp:alt_shift_toggle
and pressing Alt-Shift/Shift-Alt.
Turns out when we press yY, we get three events:
Qt.Key_Y, Qt.NoModifier
Qt.Key_Shift, Qt.ShiftModifier
Qt.Key_Y, Qt.ShiftModifier
If we don't ignore the second one, our keychain will be interrupted by the Shift
keypress.
Now that we don't rely on str(KeyInfo) being empty anywhere, there's no reason
to return an empty string for only-modifier keypresses anymore.
While those keys can't be bound (QKeySequence('Shift') == Qt.Key_unknown)
there's also no reason to explicitly ignore them.
Generated by:
import key_data
from PyQt5.QtCore import Qt
from PyQt5.QtGui import QKeySequence
for key in key_data.KEYS:
attr = key.attribute
member = getattr(Qt, 'Key_' + attr, None)
if member is None:
continue
name = QKeySequence(member).toString()
if name != attr:
try:
print(" Key('{}', '{}')".format(attr, name))
except UnicodeEncodeError:
print(" Key('{}', '{}') # FIXME".format(attr, name.encode('unicode-escape').decode('ascii')))
else:
print()
When `@require`ing local files (with the `file://` scheme) the
greasemonkey manager was not catching the DownloadItem.finished signal
because it was being emitted before it had managed to connect.
I didn't see this happening while testing with files that should have
been in cache but I wouldn't be surprised.
I had to change the download mock to be able to give it the appearance
of asynchronicity. Now when using it one must set download.successful
appropriately before firing download.finished. I also added a list of
downloads to the stub so a test could enumerate them in case the
unit-under-test didn't have a reference to them.
When min_chars is nonzero, if the first command that opens the
completion has < min_chars on the word under the cursor, it triggers a
check for a condition where last_cursor_pos is None.
By setting last_cursor_pos=-1 we ensure that the completer always
updates the first time it is opened, and that there is never a check
against None.
This adds a test for the min_chars feature.
Resolves#3635.