For some reason the code previously mixed up a selection cursor with the
result cursor. The problem seemed to have corrected itself before as a
result of conversion between offsets and cursors, but my recent changes
made this bug more severe.
The function was used in one place, and was simply a wrapper around a
call to ME_InsertRunAtCursor, so I removed it to avoids it use in other
parts of the code.
Previously the function was only used to move a single character in
either direction, so I made the function more general so that it could
be used in more places.
The test that succeeded from this change was as a result of allowing the
end of the character format change be specified using NULL as the rest
of the text. Before, the end paragraph run at the end of the text was
not being set for this case, when all the text was supposed to have its
character format changed.
Plenty of places in the code find following or preceding runs, then
afterwards find the paragraph from the run. This is inefficient because
the same linked list is used for both runs and paragraphs, so changes in
paragraphs can be detected while returning the next or previous run.
The code was previously getting the same text in the loop from the
editor, and it was converting each of the prefixes to compare against
for each URL candidate.
Before a single length was used for the number of characters to retrieve
from the text, and to keep track of the size of the buffer. These are
not equivalent, since there is a possible end of line conversion.
Previously the only convenient way to get the start and end of the
selection was through offsets, which eventually need to get converted
back into items in the linked list storing the text. The new function
will help with eliminating these inefficiencies.
This function will make it easier to work with ME_Cursor objects, which
should be used in a lot of places instead of character offsets (which
often require seeking through the linked lists to perform operations
with).
Since the table row start is inserted after the rest of the table is
inserted, the cursor is saved, and temporarily moved to the start of the
row to insert the table row start paragraph. Unfortunately the
paragraph in saved cursor becomes invalid during this insertion and
needs to be updated, so this code introduced a regression once
paragraphs started to be stored in cursors.
Style objects are referenced counted in richedit controls, so I tried to
make sure styles were released properly. This can be checked using with
the all_refs global reference count to see if everything is cleaned up.
Previously inserting the object didn't result in the text being wrapped,
which would cause an assertion error when this is checked for during
repainting the text. It is also important to invalidate the affected
areas of text, update the scrollbar, and end the creation of undo
transactions for this insertion.
The application AutoGK was getting the length of the text with
WM_GETTEXTLENGTH to allocate an appropriate buffer size, but then
claimed the buffer was twice the size when sending WM_GETTEXTEX. This
caused the memcpy call to overflow the actual buffer since the count
is based on the size of the buffer alone, regardless of the amount of
text retrieved.
ME_GetTextEx directly handles EM_GETTEXTEX, and previously a NULL buffer
would be dereferenced, and a 0 buffer length would cause nCount an
underflow in the nCount value which would allow a buffer overflow to
occur.
The application Blitzin2 was sending WM_VSCROLL messages to the
richedit control directly, when normally this message is supposed to
be a notification sent after the scrollinfo is set. Native richedit
controls always use the 16-bit value passed to this message to set the
scroll position for SB_THUMBPOSITION, rather than trying to find a
32-bit value through GetScrollInfo like I had previously done.
The missing return was to prevent automatic vertically scrolling when
style for it is not set, but is set for the horizontal scrollbar. I
initially missed this by testing with no autoscrolling on either
scrollbar.
Rich text files have groupings of text, where styles are pushed onto
the stack when encountering a start of the group, then popped at the
end of the group. This was being handled improperly before, because a
single styleChanged flag was being stored to keep track of whether the
style needed to be restored at the end of a group. This fails to work
properly since the single flag isn't keeping track of all the levels
of the stack, so some styles are not restored properly.
When a colour table entry is empty, then the default colour is used.
For an incomplete colour table entry 0 is used for the missing colours.
Previously the -1 value used internally for missing colours was being
converted into white, where it should be using the default colour that
is normally black.
This bug could be seen by loading the following rich text into wordpad:
{\rtf{\colortbl;;}\cf1 text}
Previously after initial window creation of a richedit control with the
ES_DISABLENOSCROLL window style flag the scrollbar would be shown but
not disabled. This patch fixes this issue by explicitly disabling and
showing the scrollbar.
When the richedit control is created without the ES_AUTOHSCROLL or the
ES_AUTOVSCROLL, then scrolling isn't done automatically when moving the
cursor with the arrow keys, drag selecting with the mouse, or even from
using the EM_SCROLLCARET (based on testing using a modified version of
wordpad).
WM_SETTEXT seems to check for {\rtf or {\urtf to determine if it is an
ascii RTF string, even if it is a unicode message. So I removed the
check to see if it is a unicode message, and added a check for {\urtf.