Various code (like src2asciidoc.py) relies on all @cmdutils.register
decorators being called when qutebrowser.app is imported.
Moving the keyconf import to _init_key_config broke that assumption, as
keyconf isn't imported anywhere anymore - which caused :bind and :unbind
to vanish from the generated documentation.
In the long run we should perhaps use venusian:
http://docs.pylonsproject.org/projects/venusian/
But for now, this is the easiest solution.
Wire up the config change event to update command completion on
changing aliases, so the new aliases will be included.
Fixes#1814.
Currently we do not have tests at a high enough level to test whether
signals are wired up correctly to update completions.
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 was currently almost completely broken, yet nobody complained. The
new behavior (in the previous commit) makes this always hide the mouse
cursor, even when an input field has focus.
Since the only two easy options to implement are "never hide" and
"always hide", combined with the fact that both are sort of useless to
an end-user, just remove the option until somebody wants it back.
Right now, get('last-focused-main-window') essentially returns the same
as qApp.activeWindow(), since it's None when no window is focused. This
seems somewhat contrary to its original intent, so I've changed it to
only ever update the object.
This actually fixes another bug as well: on_focus_changed's new is not
always a MainWindow - in fact it's a WebView on my end. To fix this,
directly use the QApplication.activeWindow() to find the current focus.
That second bit in particular actually some related bugs that probably
nobody ever noticed or bothered reporting:
* _maybe_hide_mouse_cursor currently pretty much never gets called
* :adblock-update doesn't actually show any downloads
* ... probably more
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.
Since we now use QWebEngineScript, we can't easily know when the script
finished running and we can access window._qutebrowser.scroll.
We instead assume the initial position (if we don't get a
scrollPositionChanged) will always be (0, 0), and explicitly set it
to (None, None) (displaying ???) if we can't connect that signal.
We now load the JS code as a QWebEngineScript, which sets up
window._qutebrowser with various "modules". That means we don't have to
pass the whole module every time we want to execute something.
Changed the description for the 'hints/auto-follow-timeout', 'input/timeout' and 'input/partial-timeout' settings to specify that the time should be given in milliseconds
It doesn't actually work yet (as it claims the field is not editable),
but at least does not crash when the backend limitation for the command
is removed.