Add `markup` to the i3bar protocol as a block member.
This is a string that determines how the block should be parsed as
markup. "pango" indicates the block should be parsed as Pango markup.
"none" indicates the block should not be parsed as markup.
This combines detecting of current and clicked workspaces into one cycle
and then checks if the x coordinate of the clicked point is greater than
the workspace buttons width.
This draws the statusline after drawing (and calculating width of) the
workspace buttons and fixes calculation of its maximum visible width.
This (hopefully) guarantees that these two will never overlap.
This fixes the bug when statusline pixmap wasn't entirely cleared that
caused random artifacts to appear when the statusline width is greater
than the screen width.
Not quite sure why there are so many differences. Perhaps we’ve gotten
out of the habit of running clang-format after every change.
I guess it’d be best to have a travis hook that runs clang-format for us
and reports any problems on pull requests.
A buffer is introduced for the statusline which will only be copied to the actual statusline
once an entire statusline is parsed. This avoids a race condition where incompletely parsed
statuslines were rendered, causing only some status blocks to be rendered which is visible to
the user as a flickering.
fixes#1480
Parse text within workspace buttons and the i3bar statusline as Pango
markup. This lets people specify things like font weight, text color,
background color, font size, and font family in the text of i3bar.
fixes#1468
1. Always subscribe to click events for i3bar.
2. Exit the click event handler if no current workspace was found only after clicks on status blocks have been handled.
fixes#1430
Dynamically update the font when the `reload` command is called by
reloading the font with `xcb_init_late` and adjusting the size of the
bar by updating the output dimensions with a call to the ipc.
Without this call, sometimes the tray icon windows are reparented into
i3’s container around the i3bar window, i.e. into the next remaining
window in the window hierarchy. Since i3 then closes that container
(since the i3bar window itself was closed), the tray window will also
get closed. In general, this weird interaction (getting reparented and
then closed) is not well received by tray icon providers :).
closes: #1296
Users can specify a command to run when a button was pressed on i3bar to
override the default behavior. Currently only the mouse wheel buttons
are supported. This is useful for disabling the scroll wheel action or
running scripts that implement custom behavior for these buttons.
Example:
bar {
wheel_up_cmd nop
wheel_down_cmd exec ~/.i3/scripts/custom_wheel_down
}
fixes#1104
This removes our last dependency on Xlib! :)
(Okay, an Xlib dependency still comes in through other libraries that we
link against, but it’s not us. Our code is simpler by this change and
uses one less connection to X11.)
This should be the last commit that formats a big bunch of files. From
here on, whenever I merge patches, I’ll run clang-format like described
in the title.
This has multiple effects:
1) The i3 codebase is now consistently formatted. clang-format uncovered
plenty of places where inconsistent code made it into our code base.
2) When writing code, you don’t need to think or worry about our coding
style. Write it in yours, then run clang-format-3.5
3) When submitting patches, we don’t need to argue about coding style.
The basic idea is that we don’t want to care about _how_ we write the
code, but _what_ it does :). The coding style that we use is defined in
the .clang-format config file and is based on the google style, but
adapted in such a way that the number of modifications to the i3 code
base is minimal.