Allows for high dpi displays to get odd numbered pixel sizes, for
example, 13.5pt @ 2px/pt for 27px font. This implementation performs
all the sizing calculations with f32, rounding to the nearest pixel
size when it comes to rendering. In the future this can be enhanced
by adding fractional scaling to support fractional pixel sizes.
This change adds automatic bash shell detection and integration.
Unlike our other shell integrations, bash doesn't provide a built-in
mechanism for injecting our ghostty.bash script into the new shell
environment.
Instead, we start bash in POSIX mode and use the ENV environment
variable to load our integration script, and the rest of the bash
startup sequence becomes the responsibility of our script to emulate
(along with disabling POSIX mode).
We don't actually use libc wcswidth to determine width and even if we
did some terminals use wcwidth (which behaves differently), some use
the Python wcswidth library (which behaves differently), etc. The
reality is there is no real consistency on "legacy" behavior so by
naming it "legacy" we show that we're doing our best but also gives us
wiggle room to change our behavior in the future.
Functionally nothing changes with this commit.
This adds a new option to the shell integration feature set, `no-title`.
If this option is set, the shell integration will not automatically
update the window title.
Add support for configurable fonts for window and tab titles. This is
only implemented for macOS (and could be macOS-only if other platforms
aren't able to support this using their windowing toolkits). It plays
nicely with regular and titlebar tabs.
Fixes#1403
This changes the behavior of `grapheme-width-method = unicode` to change
the default state of mode 2027 to true. Prior to this, setting this
config would force grapheme clustering regardless of mode 2027. Now,
this only sets the default and running TUI programs can disable it if
they want.