Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Don-Vito
fd37e1dc9f Add support for setting tabColor on the command line (#8102)
* Add a tabColor parameter to the `new-tab` and `split-panes` command
* Add --tabColor to the command line, to allow bootstrapping with tabs
  of different colors

Add another field to NewTerminalArgs. Use this field to set
StartingTabColor in Terminal. This color gets overridden by the color
defined by the profile / VT, however can be overridden with the color
picker.

Since the color is the property of the Terminal, when defined for the
tab this color is associated only with the first pane/terminal of the
tab. Additional panes will not inherit this color (to prevent advanced
resolution, where we need to resolve between the inherited color and the
one specified for the pane).

## Validation Steps Performed
* UT for parameters parsing
* Running system with several tabs of different colors.
* Adding custom actions with colors
* Performing operations like split pane, duplicate and so on

Closes #8075
2020-11-19 20:36:18 -08:00
Don-Vito
435e45726e Fix combining wt args and "wt new-tab" args in implicit context (#8315)
Currently when implicit tab command is specified (i.e., we have
parameters for new-tab, but don't have the explicit subcommand name) we
fallback to parsing the entire arg list as new tab command.

However, if we also have a launch profile (or anything else that might in
the future belong to the upper scope) it is passed as a parameter to the
new tab command, failing the parsing.

The idea behind my solution is to run the parser as a prefix command -
i.e., as long as we succeed to parse [options] / [subcommand] we will
parse them (populating the fields like a launch mode), but once we will
discover something unfamiliar, like profile, we will know that the
prefix is over and will handle the remaining suffix as a new tab
command.

## Validation Steps Performed
* UT added
* Manual run of different options

Closes #7318
2020-11-18 13:04:35 -08:00
Don-Vito
f86045e041 7124: Add focus and maximizedFocus launch modes (#7873)
This commit introduces two new launch modes: focus and maximizedFocus. 
* Focused mode, behaves like a default mode, but with the Focus Mode
  enabled.
* Maximized focused mode, behaves like a Maximized mode, but with the
  Focus Mode enabled.

There two ways to invoke these new modes:
* In the settings file: you set the "launchMode" to either "focus" or
  "maximizedFocus"
* In the command line options, you can path -f / --focus, which is
  mutually exclusive with the --fullscreen, but can be combined with the
  --maximized:
  * Passing -f / --focus will launch the terminal in the "focus" mode
  * Passing -fM / --focus --maximized will launch the terminal in the
    "maximizedFocus" mode

This should resolve a relevant part in the command line arguments
mega-thread #4632

Closes #7124
Closes #7825
Closes #7875
2020-10-14 22:19:51 +00:00
Carlos Zamora
2608e94822 Introduce TerminalSettingsModel project (#7667)
Introduces a new TerminalSettingsModel (TSM) project. This project is
responsible for (de)serializing and exposing Windows Terminal's settings
as WinRT objects.

## References
#885: TSM epic
#1564: Settings UI is dependent on this for data binding and settings access
#6904: TSM Spec

In the process of ripping out TSM from TerminalApp, a few other changes
were made to make this possible:
1. AppLogic's `ApplicationDisplayName` and `ApplicationVersion` was
   moved to `CascadiaSettings`
   - These are defined as static functions. They also no longer check if
     `AppLogic::Current()` is nullptr.
2. `enum LaunchMode` was moved from TerminalApp to TSM
3. `AzureConnectionType` and `TelnetConnectionType` were moved from the
   profile generators to their respective TerminalConnections
4. CascadiaSettings' `SettingsPath` and `DefaultSettingsPath` are
   exposed as `hstring` instead of `std::filesystem::path`
5. `Command::ExpandCommands()` was exposed via the IDL
   - This required some of the warnings to be saved to an `IVector`
     instead of `std::vector`, among some other small changes.
6. The localization resources had to be split into two halves.
   - Resource file linked in init.cpp. Verified at runtime thanks to the
     StaticResourceLoader.
7. Added constructors to some `ActionArgs`
8. Utils.h/cpp were moved to `cascadia/inc`. `JsonKey()` was moved to
   `JsonUtils`. Both TermApp and TSM need access to Utils.h/cpp.

A large amount of work includes moving to the new namespace
(`TerminalApp` --> `Microsoft::Terminal::Settings::Model`).

Fixing the tests had its own complications. Testing required us to split
up TSM into a DLL and LIB, similar to TermApp. Discussion on creating a
non-local test variant can be found in #7743.

Closes #885
2020-10-06 09:56:59 -07:00
Mike Griese
d0ff5f6b5e Add support for running a wt commandline in the curent window WITH A KEYBINDING (#6537)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds a execute commandline action (`wt`), which lets a user bind a key to a specific `wt` commandline. This commandline will get parsed and run _in the current window_. 

## References

* Related to #4472 
* Related to #5400 - I need this for the commandline mode of the Command Palette
* Related to #5970

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes oh, there's not actually an issue for this.
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - yes it does

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

One important part of this change concerns how panes are initialized at runtime. We've had some persistent trouble with initializing multiple panes, because they rely on knowing how big they'll actually be, to be able to determine if they can split again. 

We previously worked around this by ignoring the size check when we were in "startup", processing an initial commandline. This PR however requires us to be able to know the initial size of a pane at runtime, but before the parents have necessarily been added to the tree, or had their renderer's set up.

This led to the development of `Pane::PreCalculateCanSplit`, which is very highly similar to `Pane::PreCalculateAutoSplit`. This method attempts to figure out how big a pane _will_ take, before the parent has necessarily laid out. 

This also involves a small change to `TermControl`, because if its renderer hasn't been set up yet, it'll always think the font is `{0, fontHeight}`, which will let the Terminal keep splitting in the x direction. This change also makes the TermControl set up a renderer to get the real font size when it hasn't yet been initialized.

## Validation Steps Performed

This was what the json blob I was using for testing evolved into

```json
        {
            "command": {
                "action":"wt",
                "commandline": "new-tab cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k media-commandline ; new-tab powershell dev\\symbols.ps1 ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ; new-tab -p \"haunter.gif\" ; focus-tab -t 0",

            },
            "keys": ["ctrl+shift+n"]
        }
```

I also added some tests.

# TODO
* [x] Creating a `{ "command": "wt" }` action without a commandline will spawn a new `wt.exe` process?
  - Probably should just do nothing for the empty string
2020-07-17 21:05:29 +00:00
Mike Griese
445da4bae4 wt.exe: Add support for "short" sub-commands (#6576)
This adds `nt`, `sp`, and `ft` as aliases for `new-tab`, `split-pane`,
and `focus-tab`, respectively. These do exactly the same thing as their
long for counterparts, but are just shorter, for those of us who type
slower than a fifth grader 👀 

Now you can do
```
wt nt cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; sp cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; sp cmd.exe /k
media-commandline ; nt powershell dev\\symbols.ps1 ; nt -p \"Ubuntu\" ;
nt -p \"Ubuntu\" ; ft -t 0
``` 

instead of 

```
new-tab cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k #work 15 ;
split-pane cmd.exe /k media-commandline ; new-tab powershell
dev\\symbols.ps1 ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ;
focus-tab -t 0
```

The pattern I'm using here is that each of these subcommands now has a
little helper lambda that actually sets up the subcommand with the
required arguments, and we just call that lambda twice, once for the
long-form of the command, and again for the short.

I imagine that in the future, we won't necessarily have short-forms for
every subcommands, so if there are future conflicts we'd have to figure
that out pre-emptively, but these all seem like they'll need a short
form. 

Closes #5466
2020-07-14 18:50:32 +00:00
Mike Griese
a621a6fabb Use an Automatic split for splitPane by default (#5194)
## Summary of the Pull Request

You no longer _need_ to specify the `split` argument to `splitPane`, it will default to `Automatic` instead of `None`


## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes a discussion we had in team sync
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests updated
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

Also disables the tests that are broken in #5169 while I investigate
2020-04-01 00:59:31 +00:00
Leon Liang
99a28f9e9e Convert Tab to a WinRT type (#4350)
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR will make the existing `Tab` class into a WinRT type. This will allow any XAML to simply bind to the `ObservableVector` of Tabs. 

This PR will be followed up with a future PR to change our TabView to use the ObservableVector, which will in turn eliminate the need for maintaining two vectors of Tabs. (We currently maintain `_tabs` in `TerminalPage` and we also maintain `TabView().TabViewItems()` at the same time as described here: #2740)

## References
#3922 

## PR Checklist
* [x] CLA signed.
* [x] Tests added/passed

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
I've currently only exposed a Tab's Title and IconPath to keep things simple. I foresee XAML elements that bind to Tabs to only really need these two properties for displaying.

I've also converted `TerminalPage`'s `std::vector<std::shared_ptr> _tabs` into a `IObservableVector<winrt::TerminalPage::Tab> _tabs` just so that future PRs will have the ground set for binding to this vector of tabs.

## Validation Steps Performed
Played around with Tabs and Panes and all sorts of combinations of keybindings for interacting with tabs and dragging and whatnot, it all seemed fine! Tab Tests also all pass.
2020-02-04 21:51:11 +00:00
Dustin L. Howett (MSFT)
3487664cb0 Configure CLI11 to stuff all unknown positionals into the cmdli… (#4388)
This commit fixes an issue where "wt -d C: wsl -d Alpine" would be
parsed as "wt -d C: -d Alpine wsl" and rejected as invalid due to the
repeated -d. It also fixes support for the option parsing terminator,
--, in all command lines.

Fixes #4277.
2020-01-29 13:01:05 -08:00
Mike Griese
830c22b73e Add support for commandline args to wt.exe (#4023)
## Summary of the Pull Request

Adds support for commandline arguments to the Windows Terminal, in accordance with the spec in #3495

## References

* Original issue: #607
* Original spec: #3495

## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes #607
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] We should probably add some docs on these commands
* [x] The spec (#3495) needs to be merged first!

## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments

🛑 **STOP** 🛑 - have you read #3495 yet? If you haven't, go do that now.

This PR adds support for three initial sub-commands to the `wt.exe` application:
* `new-tab`: Used to create a new tab.
* `split-pane`: Used to create a new split.
* `focus-tab`: Moves focus to another tab.

These commands are largely POC to prove that the commandlines work. They're not totally finished, but they work well enough. Follow up work items will be filed to track adding support for additional parameters and subcommands

Important scenarios added:
* `wt -d .`: Open a new wt instance in the current working directory #878
* `wt -p <profile name>`: Create a wt instance running the given profile, to unblock  #576, #1357, #2339
* `wt ; new-tab ; split-pane -V`: Launch the terminal with multiple tabs, splits, to unblock #756 

## Validation Steps Performed

* Ran tests
* Played with it a bunch
2020-01-27 15:34:12 +00:00