When using :tab-prev/:tab-next (or :tab-focus which uses :tab-next
internally) immediately after the last tab, those functions could be
called with 0 tabs open, which caused a ZeroDivisionError when trying to
do % 0.
Fixes#1448.
- Fix a docstring copy-paste
- Add own name/copyright date to new file
- Simplify a bdd expression (no need for regex)
- Scroll to a pixel position in a single operation
Rather than binding each set of local marks to a tab, bind them to a
url. Strip the fragment from the url, as two pages that differ only in
fragment are likely the same page.
Automatically set the special "'" mark when jumping.
jump-mark "'" will jump to the last position before the previous jump.
A jump could be navigating via a link, jumping to another mark, or
scrolling by percentage (e.g. gg or G).
set-mark <key> saves your current scroll position as mark <key>.
jump-mark <key> jumps to the position previously set for mark <key>.
If <key> is lowercase, it is local to the current tab. Each tab has its
own set of lowercase marks.
If <key> is uppercase, it is global across tabs, and stores a url and a
scroll position. Jumping to an uppercase mark navigates to that url,
then scrolls to the saved position.
Resolves#310.
This makes it possible to jump to the very last tab, as opposed to the
last focused tab, by using -1 as the index. Generally negative indexes
are counted from the end.
Solves issue #1166
This was needed before there was editor.ExternalEditor as there were
various commands which needed to access the editor object.
Since this is encapsulated in ExternalEditor now, no need to keep a
reference to the object around.
The edit-url command opens a url (by default, the current url) in the
user's external editor and navigates to the result when the editor is
closed. This makes it easy to tweak the current url to navigate within
a site.
`edit-url` accepts the same flags as `open` (e.g. -t will open in a new
tab.
One may provide a url as an argument to create a shortcut to
pre-populate part of a url and allow filling in the rest.
There is no default keybinding.
Resolves#1261.
`buffer` takes either a tab index or a string and focuses the specified
tab. The index can be of the form [0-9]+ which will switch to the
relevant tab in the current window or [0-9]+/[0-9]+ (that is
win_id/index) which will focus the specified window before switching
tabs. If a string is passed the list of open tabs across all windows is
sorted based on title and url (just like in the completion widget) and
the top result is selected.
There are a lot of problems and flakiness with using a real clipboard.
Instead we now have a :debug-set-fake-clipboard command to set a text, and use
logging when getting the contents.
Fixes#1285.
It seems that unlike Gecko, WebKit does not support undo/redo operations
when the textarea's `value` attribute is changed directly. Fortunately
there is a WebKit-specific workaround using textInput event.
References:
* http://stackoverflow.com/a/7554295
* http://help.dottoro.com/ljuecqgv.php
The Shift+Ins key should arguably insert primary selection, not the
clipboard selection as every Qt program does. This commit makes it
possible via the hidden paste-primary command (enabled by default).
Unfortunately QtWebKit does not provide any straightforward way to
insert text at cursor position into editable fields, so we work around
this by executing a JavaScript snippet - inspired by this SO answer:
http://stackoverflow.com/a/11077016
- The paste command will now open one tab/window per url if multiple
URLs (separated by newline) are present in the clipboard
- Adds the tests for the new multitab functionality
- Changes test/integration/conftest.py to be able to insert newlines in
the clipboard for the test