* Instead of abusing BArchive::Archive() we now use a BMailSettingsView as
a base view for all filter/protocol settings that works with
BMailAddOnSettings.
* Cleanups in E-mail which is now completely layout friendly. But also still
crashes when changing the views.
* The path will now be relativized before storing it.
* On load, the add-on will be tried to load from the user, then common
and finally system add-on directory.
* Not everything compiles; all protocols, and inbound filters do, though.
* Renamed a few classes to give a better idea what they are for; prefixed
public classes with the 'B' prefix.
* Moved ProtocolConfigView's classes into the BPrivate namespace.
* Moved BMailFilter into its own file.
* Added BMailFilter::DescriptiveName(). This is now used by the RuleFilter
in order to give a description of what it's doing (ie. no more dozens of
"Rule filter" entries in the preferences).
* Removed no longer used MailAddon.h.
* Renamed Addon to AddOn where found, since that is more consistent with the
rest of the API.
* Merged the former MailProtocol with the former MailProtocolThread; the
differentiation between those two was pretty messy.
* All configuration views touched so far are now using the layout kit.
* The RuleFilter is currently broken functionality wise; I have not yet decided
how to solve the stuff it uses (TriggerFileMove() does not exist anymore,
for example).
* BMailAddOnSettings (formerly known as AddonSettings) now directly subclass
BMessage; there are no Settings() and EditSettings() method anymore. The
class uses a copy of itself to determine whether or not it has been changed.
* Lots of cleanup.
* Renamed to BMailNotifier, as it's part of the public API.
* Renamed Notifier.{cpp|h} to DefaultNotifier.{cpp|h} as that's the class it
implements.
* Made the mail counts uint32, and the byte counts uint64.
* This was never implemented and no one noticed until now.
* A default value for a pointer doesn't make that much sense anyway, so
using the FindPointer method is fine.
Created docs for NumberFormat, DateFormat, DateTimeFormat, and TimeFormat
and moved the docs from BLocale to the respective new file. Also
DurationFormat was updated as well.
doxygen once again compiles the docs without warnings.
There doesn't seem to be anything ini the implementation that would
cause a problem, as long as you don't try to change this while the
window is already open.
* There is no need to delay this to AllAttached
* Apps may want to override the SetDivider, and doing it as late as
AllAttached can be annoying.
Fixes#10734.
* Make it possible to extract more useful data from the certificate
* Also get the OpenSSL error message when a certificate can't be
validated. Send it to the verification failure callback so it can be
shown to the user.
This isn't really a bus_manager yet, but just minimal support so
we can get rid of hardcoded ARM SoC support from the core kernel
code.
Needs lots of work, like proper handling of #address-cells and
the like. Also, generic attribute handling, device_manager
integration, and I could go on for hours ;)
The language and formatting conventions can now only be set when
creating the objects. This removed the needs for locking them when
formatting to avoid some other thread changing the format while it's
being used.
Adjust tests and DeskBar TimeView to the API changes.
Although done with the best intentions, the usage of #warning in the
ARM build makes it hard to see what's going on, or see any "real"
warnings.
Remove at least this particularly often triggered one, so we can
have a relatively "quiet" build again...
* Added VFS helper function check_access_permissions() that combines
several partially correct versions to the one true version (tm).
* All but BFS (since recently) missed the S_IXOTH for root on directories,
and all but packagefs missed proper group handling.
* Since DNS are normally restricted to ASCII, the use of UTF-8 in domain
names is implemented using a "punycode" encoding.
* The request to the DNS server must be sent with the ASCII
representation of the domain name, however the Unicode one should be
used for user-visible parts.
* ICU provides an implementation of the conversion, which we use here.
* Conversion is currently done in-place and modifies the BUrl object
(this is similar to UrlEncode/UrlDecode).
* Adjust existing IDN test to make use of these methods. It's passing
now.
* We archive views using "managed" archives, and the children are not
attached in the BView(BMessage*) constructor, but later. So it's not
possible to find the target and scrollbars in the constructor of
BScrollView.
* Make BScrollView override AllUnarchived and find the target and
scrollbars again there. The code is slightly different as there is no
guarantee that the first child will be the target in that case. The
existing code in the constructor is preserved for non-managed archives.
* Instead of parsing the pattern everytime Format() is called, parse it
only once when the object is created.
* Adjust all callers to make use of the feature and reuse the instance
as much as possible. This also allows calling B_TRANSLATE only once
instead of everytime the formatting needs to be done. We use either a
static instance (when the message pattern is constant) or a field (when
it is not known to be constant).
* Since the BMessageFormat instances are now reused, add locking to
avoid race conditions (ICU itself is thread safe, but the format pattern
is recreated when the locale is changed)
This can be used to format complex messages properly. It moves the
complexity of handling plural forms, gender, and anything else needed
into the localizable string, rather than hardcoding it in the code.
This moves the difficulty of handling these things properly to people
doing translations, rather than relying on developers to do it.
Fixes#10755, but our localization must now be updated to make use of
the feature.
* ... and adjust all callers
* Remove NumberFormatImpl: we rely on ICU to provide this and it can be
fully wrapped into the C++ file. The class was a stub anyway.
* "Monetary" format is included in NumberFormat for now. There may be a
more generic solution to handle monetary and BTimeUnitFormat (and other
arbitrary units)
* Harmonize API for all B*Format to take an output BString by reference
as the first parameter,
* Move the FormatTime methods from BLocale to BTimeFormat
* Adjust all callers for BTimeFormat, BTimeUnitFormat and
BDurationFormat.
* Move relevant parts up into BFormat so other format classes can use
those
* Adjust BDurationFormat and BTimeUnitFormat for the changes
* Remove the "default" date format, it is better to keep only a default
locale and let applications create B*Formats from it as needed.
* Creating a B*Format without arguments to the constructor now
configures it for the default locale, which allows for easy use in
standard cases (formatting something with the current language and
format)
* Creating a B*Format is potentially an expansive operation, it is
advised to keep the instance around and reuse it whenever possible.
However it must be "refreshed" when the locale changes, for apps which
supports that, since it keeps a copy of the language and formatting
convention, rather than a pointer to the locale as it did before.
* MarkAsInvalid is used to enable or disable the mark
* The B_INVALID BControlLook flag is used
* invalid BTextControls are drawn with a red border.
* You ar encouraged to let the user know more precisely what's wrong, by
showing an helpful error message next to the control or in a tooltip.
* BDate setters don't perform any validation, use with caution.
* BCalendarView setters do perform validation checks, and will adjust
the day so it fits the requested month or year.
* Add tests for the BCalendarView setters.
* Add setters for the language and formatting conventions
* Add shortcut getter and setter for the date format
* Use those in the locale roster to make the BDateFormat actually use
the system preferred language and format.
* Applications can also use this to extract specific information from
the system format (eg. set date format to "LLLL" to extract month
names), or define specific formats more easily (eg. for parsing and
generating e-mail headers or HTTP cookies).