Fri, 24 Jul 2015 04:24:38 +0300
Apply Leonard's patch for fixing the colors:
The colors were broken again.
* isprint for some reason returned true when the given byte is higher than 255.
The char cast of the byte was then printed which resulted in odd characters
popping up. Black appeared as ^@ which is NULL in caret notation.
* After that, the colors were all messed up because the RLINE enum didn't take
in account the color swapping.
So instead of messing up the enum order/number I went for a new "range-like"
method.
* After fixing all of that, I noticed the Interface::render_colorline had a
broken loop since the VS2010 commits.
This made the lines not print entierely and messed up the colors etc.
/* Public Domain Curses */ #include <curspriv.h> RCSID("$Id: getyx.c,v 1.29 2008/07/15 17:13:26 wmcbrine Exp $") /*man-start************************************************************** Name: getyx Synopsis: void getyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x); void getparyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x); void getbegyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x); void getmaxyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x); void getsyx(int y, int x); int setsyx(int y, int x); int getbegy(WINDOW *win); int getbegx(WINDOW *win); int getcury(WINDOW *win); int getcurx(WINDOW *win); int getpary(WINDOW *win); int getparx(WINDOW *win); int getmaxy(WINDOW *win); int getmaxx(WINDOW *win); Description: The getyx() macro (defined in curses.h -- the prototypes here are merely illustrative) puts the current cursor position of the specified window into y and x. getbegyx() and getmaxyx() return the starting coordinates and size of the specified window, respectively. getparyx() returns the starting coordinates of the parent's window, if the specified window is a subwindow; otherwise it sets y and x to -1. These are all macros. getsyx() gets the coordinates of the virtual screen cursor, and stores them in y and x. If leaveok() is TRUE, it returns -1, -1. If lines have been removed with ripoffline(), then getsyx() includes these lines in its count; so, the returned y and x values should only be used with setsyx(). setsyx() sets the virtual screen cursor to the y, x coordinates. If y, x are -1, -1, leaveok() is set TRUE. getsyx() and setsyx() are meant to be used by a library routine that manipulates curses windows without altering the position of the cursor. Note that getsyx() is defined only as a macro. getbegy(), getbegx(), getcurx(), getcury(), getmaxy(), getmaxx(), getpary(), and getparx() return the appropriate coordinate or size values, or ERR in the case of a NULL window. Portability X/Open BSD SYS V getyx Y Y Y getparyx - - 4.0 getbegyx - - 3.0 getmaxyx - - 3.0 getsyx - - 3.0 setsyx - - 3.0 getbegy - - - getbegx - - - getcury - - - getcurx - - - getpary - - - getparx - - - getmaxy - - - getmaxx - - - **man-end****************************************************************/ int getbegy(WINDOW *win) { PDC_LOG(("getbegy() - called\n")); return win ? win->_begy : ERR; } int getbegx(WINDOW *win) { PDC_LOG(("getbegx() - called\n")); return win ? win->_begx : ERR; } int getcury(WINDOW *win) { PDC_LOG(("getcury() - called\n")); return win ? win->_cury : ERR; } int getcurx(WINDOW *win) { PDC_LOG(("getcurx() - called\n")); return win ? win->_curx : ERR; } int getpary(WINDOW *win) { PDC_LOG(("getpary() - called\n")); return win ? win->_pary : ERR; } int getparx(WINDOW *win) { PDC_LOG(("getparx() - called\n")); return win ? win->_parx : ERR; } int getmaxy(WINDOW *win) { PDC_LOG(("getmaxy() - called\n")); return win ? win->_maxy : ERR; } int getmaxx(WINDOW *win) { PDC_LOG(("getmaxx() - called\n")); return win ? win->_maxx : ERR; } int setsyx(int y, int x) { PDC_LOG(("setsyx() - called\n")); if(y == -1 && x == -1) { curscr->_leaveit = TRUE; return OK; } else { curscr->_leaveit = FALSE; return wmove(curscr, y, x); } }