Command used:
grep -Pirn '(out|warn)ln\((?!["\)]|format,|stderr,|stdout,|output, ")' \
AK Kernel/ Tests/ Userland/
(Plus some manual reviewing.)
Let's pick ArgsParser as an example:
outln(file, m_general_help);
This will fail at runtime if the general help happens to contain braces.
Even if this transformation turns out to be unnecessary in a place or
two, this way the code is "more obviously" correct.
I forgot that we need to also initialize SerialDevice and also to ensure
it creates a sysfs node properly. Although I had a better fix for this,
it keeps the CI happy, so for now it's more than enough :)
A quick grep revealed these stats (counting only the first occurrence
per line):
`thing`(1): 154
`thing(1)`: 9
thing(1): 4
This commit converts all occurrences to the `thing`(1) format.
The editor now draws a grid showing the pixels if you are zoomed
in enough. Currently the threshold is a scale of 15 (so if one
pixel side on the image takes up > 15 pixels in the editor)
Make this API take a Span<Cell*> instead of a Vector<Cell*>&.
This is behavior neutral, but stops the API looking like it wants to
do mutable things to the Vector.
Currently, all callers of ResolveLocale invoke the operation with an
empty [[RelevantExtensionKeys]] slot, so the block of the method that
deals with those keys was unimplemented. This implements that block now
to prepare for Intl.NumberFormat which has a [[RelevantExtensionKeys]].
Note that the find_key_in_value() method is a simple VERIFY_NOT_REACHED
in just this commit until the Intl.NumberFormat's keys are handled in
its implementation.
This data is published under ISO-4217 as an XML file. Since we can't
parse XML files yet, and the data isn't very large, it was translated to
C++ manually here.
LibJS will need to canonicalize Unicode extension values, so extract the
lambda that was doing this work to its own function. This also changes
the helpers it invokes to take the provided key as a StringView because
we don't need (and won't always have) full String objects here.
Instead of doing so in the constructor, let's do immediately after the
constructor, so we can safely pass a reference of a Device, so the
SysFSDeviceComponent constructor can use that object to identify whether
it's a block device or a character device.
This allows to us to not hold a device in SysFSDeviceComponent with a
RefPtr.
Also, we also call the before_removing method in both SlavePTY::unref
and File::unref, so because Device has that method being overrided, it
can ensure the device is removed always cleanly.
This was a cool slider and was missing from the gallery completely.
Vertical mode for this isn't enabled, and it looked awfully crammed
in the bottom along with the other horizontal sliders, so for now
I've just added this to the top, and it controls the opacity of the
image along with the opacity slider.
Commit 890c647e0f fixed an off-by-one bug, so the mapping of the page
at the very end of the user address space now works correctly.
This change adjusts the test so cover the corner cases the original
version was designed too.validate.
This function was checking 1 byte after the provided range, which caused
it to reject valid userspace ranges that happened to end exactly at the
top of the user address space.
This fixes a long-standing issue with mysterious Optional errors in
Coredump::write_regions(). (It happened when trying to add a memory
region at the very top of the address space to a coredump.)
This just returns an empty CSSStyleDeclaration for now. The real thing
needs to be a live object that provides a view onto the computed style
of a given element. This is far from that, but it's something. :^)
To avoid expensive floating point operations the values are put in the
upper half of an integer which is then used for calculations.
When the src_rect is sufficiently large (when, say, PixelPaint is zoomed
in x100), the precision provided by this strategy with regular
32-bit-long ints is no longer enough.
This patch changes the used types to i64, which are 64 bits wide and the
shifting is increased to 32 bits.
On the 32-bit-arch a i64 doesn't fit in a single register anymore but
it's probably okay to trust the compiler to do clever stuff around this
issue.
When we save/load state in the parser, we preserve the lexer state by
simply making a copy of it. This was made extremely heavy by the lexer
keeping a cache of all parsed identifiers.
It keeps the cache to ensure that StringViews into parsed Unicode escape
sequences don't become dangling views when the Token goes out of scope.
This patch solves the problem by replacing the Vector<FlyString> which
was used to cache the identifiers with a ref-counted
HashTable<FlyString> instead.
Since the purpose of the cache is just to keep FlyStrings alive, it's
fine for all Lexer instances to share the cache. And as a bonus, using a
HashTable instead of a Vector replaces the O(n) accesses with O(1) ones.
This makes a 1.9 MiB JavaScript file parse in 0.6s instead of 24s. :^)