Today I can control "terminal" and "new" by changing the terminal
alias but I always need to choose a concrete implementation, like
"tmux-terminal-horizontal", even when there is otherwise no need to
mention tmux in my config.
Allow to configure windowing system and window placement independently
by introducing dedicated options.
This allows to create mappings that work in any windowing system like
map global user c %{:with-option windowing_placement window new<ret>}
map global user '"' %{:with-option windowing_placement vertical new<ret>}
map global user '%' %{:with-option windowing_placement horizontal new<ret>}
For windowing systems that don't support all placements, you can wrap
the above in try/catch to fall back on the "window" variant which is
defined for all windowing systems.
When using multiple (nested) windowing systems, you might want to
add mappings like
map global user t %{:with-option windowing_module tmux new<ret>}
map global user T %{:with-option windowing_module wayland new<ret>}
---
This changes the default "terminal" alias for some modules. In
particular, instead of delegating to
iterm-terminal-vertical
screen-terminal-vertical
tmux-terminal-horizontal
wezterm-terminal-vertical
it will now by default delegate to the respective "-window" variant.
We could maintain backwards compatiblity here by setting the
"windowing_placement" option accordingly, but the new behavior seems
more logical?
Also, this removes the "terminal-tab" alias which was only defined
by the kitty module.
We could try to keep the alias approach and implement a "with-alias"
command, however that approach can only capture both dimensions
(windowing system and placement) if we add tons of commands
like "terminal-horizontal" (with implied windowing system) and
"tmux-terminal" (with implied placement).
Side thought: we could also get rid of the "focus" alias and instead
define
define-command focus %{
"%opt{windowing_module}-focus"
}
Closes#3943, #4425
The x11-terminal command spawns a potentially long-lived terminal
process. The terminal can is completely independent of the Kakoune
session that created it.
Due to how it's implemented, the spawned terminals will have
environment variables "kak_opt_termcmd" and "kak_quoted_reg_a"
set. This can be surprising, especially since, by convention, the
environment contains no lowercase variables. Let's stop exporting them.
While Wayland offers nothing general to help us support `focus` on all
window managers, WM-specific implementations are generally possible.
Sway is a tiling window manager that mimics i3, and has a reasonably
powerful CLI that can help us achieve this.
In addition to supporting `focus` for Sway, this change paves the way
for additional WM-specific Wayland functionality by adding a detection
step to wayland.kak, in a similar fashion to detection.kak.