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[input] Only timeout if the last character was escape
There really is no need to - Timeout just because the _first_ character was a control character - Timeout because of any control character other than escape The reason to timeout because the '\e' sequence can appear by itself (signifying pressing the escape key) and still make sense - e.g. vi-mode has it bound to a rather important function! But a \c can't appear by itself, so we can just block. This allows binding sequences like \cx\ce and inputting them at a leisurely pace rather than the frantic escape_timeout one. It should also improve sequences that _include_ escape somewhere else. E.g. something like a\eb ("a, then alt+b") should now time out for the "\eb" part, allowing users to bind a\e ("a, then escape") to something else. Why you'd want to do that, I have no idea. But it's more consistent, and that's nice!
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1 changed files with 5 additions and 5 deletions
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@ -376,12 +376,8 @@ static bool input_mapping_is_match(const input_mapping_t &m) {
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assert(str.size() > 0 && "zero-length input string passed to input_mapping_is_match!");
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debug(4, L"trying to match mapping %ls", escape_string(m.seq.c_str(), ESCAPE_ALL).c_str());
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bool timed_first_char = iswcntrl(str[0]);
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bool timed = false;
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for (size_t i = 0; i < str.size(); ++i) {
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// Treat all strings beginning with control codes (0x00-0x1F) as timed characters, meaning they are assumed to be
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// their literal representation if not followed up with another character within the defined timeout. Obviously
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// we never time out on the first character in the sequence.
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bool timed = i && timed_first_char;
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wchar_t read = input_common_readch(timed);
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if (read != str[i]) {
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@ -393,6 +389,10 @@ static bool input_mapping_is_match(const input_mapping_t &m) {
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}
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return false;
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}
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// If we just read an escape, we need to add a timeout for the next char,
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// to distinguish between the actual escape key and an "alt"-modifier.
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timed = (str[i] == L'\e');
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}
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return true;
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