- Fix many instances of incorrect and incomplete doxygen annotations.
- Teach doxygen not to complain when it comes accross gcc __attribute__
specifications.
- Turn off graph generation by default.
- Make doxygen quiet, so we can actually see warnings when they occur.
protocol to speak to them. Given a textbox widget definition like this:
textbox mail {
default = 0
}
textbox time {}
We can update the boxes individually by going:
echo 0 tell_widget mail 10
echo 0 tell_widget time 12:01
Text boxes will dynamically resize to fit their contents. A textbox can be
cleared by going:
echo 0 tell_widget name
A text-box containing no text will take up 0 space in the bar, i.e. it will not
be visible at all
Textboxes now supersede statusbar_set_text, so this call has been removed.
- rename parse_config to config_parse
- move KeyModList and ButtonList in their own functions
- move LayoutsList in layout.c
- move static fcts around in config.c
The problem is as follows. In the end, different types of widget are going to
have distinct configurable options. This means that we need to have a
different section type for every widget type, if we are ever to make the
configuration nice. In fact, a configuration syntax like this would suit us
very well:
textbox name {
foo = bar
}
focuslist name2 {
bar = voing
}
This is all very well, but libconfuse has a limitation - there is no "nice"
way to retrieve the order of disparate sections (i.e. sections of different
types), and order is important to us. This patch goes to some effort to
retrieve the section order by extracting an array of widgets, and sorting them
based on line number.
The big change here is that we now keep our configuration structure in a global
variable called globalconf. This radically simplifies many interfaces, since
passing awesomeconf everywhere is no longer necessary. There are also more
subtle interface effects - now we can reliably identify a screen from just a
screen ID, rather than an awesomeconf, screenid tuple.
Overall, this patch makes most of the interfaces in awesome much nicer to use -
enjoy!
Yes, this is a huge patch, but since a lot of the refactoring was done
systematically using vim macros, splitting this up would have been very hard.