The bug: ctrl+shift+enter on macOS 15 shows a context menu and doesn't
encode to the terminal.
This avoids a system-wide keybind that shows a context menu in macOS
15+. In general Ghostty doesn't try to override system-wide keybinds
but this one is particularly annoying and not useful to terminal users.
We've discussed making this logic configurable for all system level
keybinds but for now this is a quick fix specifically for
ctrl+shift+enter.
Fixes#2565
This appears to be a bug in macOS 15. Specifically on macOS 15 when the
new native window snapping feature is used, `cascadeTopLeft(from: zero)`
will move the window frame back to its prior unsnapped position.
The docs for `cascadeTopLeft(from:)` explicitly say:
> When NSZeroPoint, the window is not moved, except as needed to constrain
> to the visible screen
This is not the behavior we are seeing on macOS 15. The window is on the
visible screen, we're using NSZeroPoint, and yet the window is still
being moved. This does not happen on macOS 14 (but its hard to say
exactly because macOS 14 didn't have window snapping).
This commit works around the issue by saving the window frame before
calling `cascadeTopLeft(from: zero)` and then restoring it afterwards
if it has changed.
I've also filed a radar with Apple for this issue.
Fixes#2537
This matches Terminal.app. iTerm2 requires cmd+option (our old
behavior). Kitty doesn't seem to support rectangle select or I couldn't
figure out how to make it work. WezTerm matches Terminal.app too.
Outside of terminal emulators, this is also the rectangular select
binding for neovim.
Fixes#2519
This sets up the colorspace for terminal windows in the base controller.
This also modifies some of our logic so its easier for subclasses of
base controllers to specify custom logic when the configuration reloads,
since that's likely to be a common thing.
Fixes#2462
This sets up a listener for screen parameter changes. This only triggers
when a screen is added, removed, or a parameter such as its resolution
changes. This doesn't trigger when a window is simply moved from one
screen to another.
On parameter change, we ensure that the window is within the bounds of
the screen. As an exception, if the window was previously already
outside the bounds of the screen, we don't move it back in.