The intention of the block removed appears to be to indent wrapped lines to the column the line started at. What actually happens is that all wrapped lines wrap to column 0.
After adding the sticky short prompt feature, the block removed caused a bug with wrapping wide characters in addition to not appearing to change anything else.
Wide characters would change between wrapping to column 0 and the column the command started at, depending on what column the wide character was at before wrapping.
I am keeping the existing behavior rather than restoring the block's original intention. If the original intention should be restored, it should be on a different branch.
From the Python webbrowser documentation:
"If text-mode browsers are used, the calling process will block until the user exits the browser."
Running fish_config on an ssh server with no GUI browser will open a CLI browser which blocks and stops the server from handling requests.
Using multiprocess to run the server in the background lets CLI browsers access the page, but the page is unusable.
For now, disable CLI browsers and recommend opening the page in a graphical browser.
In the future, maybe write a CLI utility to change prompts and delete history items.
printf expects unsigned long (%lu) argument, however, size_t doesn't
have to be declared as such. As %zu is C99 (but not C++), it shouldn't
be used directly. Instead, I have to cast value to the correct type.
When launching the first instance of fish and fishd is not launched already, this should not be considered an error as long as it can be launched. So ignore the first failure of connect(), as the calling function get_socket() will try again. May need a bit of cleanup.
Prefer the standard library lzma module if available. This change prevents
using the backports-lzma when it is installed for a version of Python that
already has the lzma module in its standard library.
- expunge LIBS_COMMON, it doesn't get used anywhere
- don't reset LIBS to empty
- move the gettext test as every binary depends on it
- only include one set of libraries