A recent change (8dffb00f) removed this ability. This change restores
it, and also allows reading from standard input multiple times -- maybe
not useful, but it works.
Also when a dash is the first "file" mentioned on the command line,
nano should show this buffer at startup and not the next.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51207.
In the tiny version, Ctrl+Left and Ctrl+Right are available only
in the editor itself and in the file browser.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51173.
The old praxis of calling total_refresh() upon a SIGCONT was confusing,
because the screen would look as if nano had returned from suspension,
but in fact the shell was still active.
Instead of calling total_refresh(), put a no-op key into ncurses' buffer,
so that, when nano actually does return out of suspension (through 'fg'),
this key will be read and discarded, upon which nano will go sit and wait
for the next key, just before which it calls doupdate(). The latter is
all we need to get the entire screen restored.
This also fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51131 for "tiny".
When receiving a SIGCONT, don't call regenerate_screen() directly
but act as if a SIGWINCH occurred. Also insert a dummy key, and
thus let the relevant input routine redraw the relevant subwindows.
Use KEY_F0 as the dummy key, as both Ncurses and Slang know it, and
it should normally do nothing at all.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51124.
When we are in the file browser, browser_refresh() will take care of
redrawing the title bar and the file list, so total_refresh() should
leave those two subwindows alone in that case.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51147.
Achieve this by making the suppression flag global, so that we can
just reset it instead of making an improper call of do_cursorpos().
This fixes the secondary part of https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51134.
It is no longer necessary to assign up() and down() separately for
the help viewer because by now the movement keys have been sorted
in order of ascending stride also in the main menu.
The two string definitions are relocated just to reduce the number
of #ifdefs.
All this "not is no" has me turning around in circles
at least ten times before I know which side is which.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51061
Reported-by: Vicente Olivert Riera <vincent.riera@imgtec.com>
Apparently the curses on SunOS is less forgiving than the one on GNU.
Or rather: delwin(NULL) should just return an error, it shouldn't crash.
This fixes https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?51053.
Reported-by: John Wiersba <jrw32982@yahoo.com>
Solved-by: John Wiersba <jrw32982@yahoo.com>