Instead of everyone overriding save_to() and set_property() and doing
a pretty asymmetric job of implementing the various properties, let's
add a bit of structure here.
Object properties are now represented by a Core::Property. Properties
are registered with a getter and setter (optional) in constructors.
I've added some convenience macros for creating and registering
properties, but this does still feel a bit bulky. We'll have to
iterate on this and see where it goes.
xterms send a bitmask (+ 1) in the 2nd CSI parameter if "special"
keys (arrow keys, pgup/down, etc) are sent with modifiers held down.
Serenity's Terminal used to send ^[[O, which is a nonexistent
escape sequence and a misread of VT100's ^[O (ie the '[' is
replaced by 'O'). Since the xterm scheme also supports shift
and alt modifiers, switch to that.
More flexible, and makes ctrl-left/right and alt-left/right work
in SerenityOS's bash port.
Also do this for page up/down.
No behavior change for SerenityOS's Shell.
This also makes the editor clean as many lines as the searching took,
for instance, in the case of <C-r><C-c>ls<tab>, two lines should be
cleaned, not just one.
Fixes#3413.
Makes C-c print "^C" and continue prompting on a new line.
Also fixes a problem where an interrupted get_line() would need more
read()'s than required to update the display.
Prior to this, no keybinding were installed on the search editor, and so
editing wasn't really possible.
Also fixes <C-r> making infinite search editors.
It backward-deletes a word like Ctrl-W, but it has a slightly
different definition of what a word is. For example, with the
caret behind `gcc -fsanitize=address`, Ctrl-W would delete
'-fsanitize=address' but Alt-backspace would only delete 'address'.
All these shortcuts treat consecutive alnums as a word, not consecutive
non-spaces.
For example, `alias KILL='kill -9'` can now be written by typing it
out lowercase, then hitting ctrl-a alt-f alt-u.
Ctrl-W still treats a word as a sequence of non-spaces. Alt-backspace
in a future patch will add the ability to backward-delete a word
that's a sequence of alnums.
This adds Alt-f to go forward by a word, and Alt-b to go backward
by a word (like ctrl-arrow-left / ctrl-arrow-right already do).
Behind the scenes, alt-key is implemented by sending <esc> followed
by that key, and typing <esc> f/b for moving by a word hence works
too (in all other shells too, not just in Serenity's).
While here, rename some InputState enum values to make the slightly
expanded use of <esc> clearer, and expand a few comments.
Also move the existing backspace lambda out of the loop.
The do_delete() extraction fixes a minor bug where
InputState::ExpectTerminator wasn't entered if delete was pressed at the
very end of a line. Now that this is fixed, there's no more
"LibLine: Unhandled final: 7e (~)" when hitting delete at the end of the
line.