X-Git-Url: https://git.josue.xyz/?p=VSoRC%2F.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=node_modules%2Fnode-pty%2Fdeps%2Fwinpty%2Fmisc%2FMouseInputNotes.txt;fp=node_modules%2Fnode-pty%2Fdeps%2Fwinpty%2Fmisc%2FMouseInputNotes.txt;h=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000;hp=18460c6861e9e135483733f832f52fd0eac2c0ea;hb=5e96dd57ddd883604e87f62bdddcb111c63a6e1a;hpb=acb5f682a2b75b972710cabd81658f63071324b0 diff --git a/node_modules/node-pty/deps/winpty/misc/MouseInputNotes.txt b/node_modules/node-pty/deps/winpty/misc/MouseInputNotes.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 18460c6..0000000 --- a/node_modules/node-pty/deps/winpty/misc/MouseInputNotes.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,90 +0,0 @@ -Introduction -============ - -The only specification I could find describing mouse input escape sequences -was the /usr/share/doc/xterm/ctlseqs.txt.gz file installed on my Ubuntu -machine. - -Here are the relevant escape sequences: - - * [ON] CSI '?' M 'h' Enable mouse input mode M - * [OFF] CSI '?' M 'l' Disable mouse input mode M - * [EVT] CSI 'M' F X Y Mouse event (default or mode 1005) - * [EVT6] CSI '<' F ';' X ';' Y 'M' Mouse event with mode 1006 - * [EVT6] CSI '<' F ';' X ';' Y 'm' Mouse event with mode 1006 (up) - * [EVT15] CSI F ';' X ';' Y 'M' Mouse event with mode 1015 - -The first batch of modes affect what events are reported: - - * 9: Presses only (not as well-supported as the other modes) - * 1000: Presses and releases - * 1002: Presses, releases, and moves-while-pressed - * 1003: Presses, releases, and all moves - -The next batch of modes affect the encoding of the mouse events: - - * 1005: The X and Y coordinates are UTF-8 codepoints rather than bytes. - * 1006: Use the EVT6 sequences instead of EVT - * 1015: Use the EVT15 sequence instead of EVT (aka URVXT-mode) - -Support for modes in existing terminals -======================================= - - | 9 1000 1002 1003 | 1004 | overflow | defhi | 1005 1006 1015 ----------------------------------+---------------------+------+--------------+-------+---------------- -Eclipse TM Terminal (Neon) | _ _ _ _ | _ | n/a | n/a | _ _ _ -gnome-terminal 3.6.2 | X X X X | _ | suppressed*b | 0x07 | _ X X -iTerm2 2.1.4 | _ X X X | OI | wrap*z | n/a | X X X -jediterm/IntelliJ | _ X X X | _ | ch='?' | 0xff | X X X -Konsole 2.13.2 | _ X X *a | _ | suppressed | 0xff | X X X -mintty 2.2.2 | X X X X | OI | ch='\0' | 0xff | X X X -putty 0.66 | _ X X _ | _ | suppressed | 0xff | _ X X -rxvt 2.7.10 | X X _ _ | _ | wrap*z | n/a | _ _ _ -screen(under xterm) | X X X X | _ | suppressed | 0xff | _ _ _ -urxvt 9.21 | X X X X | _ | wrap*z | n/a | X _ X -xfce4-terminal 0.6.3 (GTK2 VTE) | X X X X | _ | wrap | n/a | _ _ _ -xterm | X X X X | OI | ch='\0' | 0xff | X X X - -*a: Mode 1003 is handled the same way as 1002. -*b: The coordinate wraps from 0xff to 0x00, then maxs out at 0x07. I'm - guessing this behavior is a bug? I'm using the Xubuntu 14.04 - gnome-terminal. -*z: These terminals have a bug where column 224 (and row 224, presumably) - yields a truncated escape sequence. 224 + 32 is 0, so it would normally - yield `CSI 'M' F '\0' Y`, but the '\0' is interpreted as a NUL-terminator. - -Problem 1: How do these flags work? -=================================== - -Terminals accept the OFF sequence with any of the input modes. This makes -little sense--there are two multi-value settings, not seven independent flags! - -All the terminals handle Granularity the same way. ON-Granularity sets -Granularity to the specified value, and OFF-Granularity sets Granularity to -OFF. - -Terminals vary in how they handle the Encoding modes. For example: - - * xterm. ON-Encoding sets Encoding. OFF-Encoding with a non-active Encoding - has no effect. OFF-Encoding otherwise resets Encoding to Default. - - * mintty (tested 2.2.2), iTerm2 2.1.4, and jediterm. ON-Encoding sets - Encoding. OFF-Encoding resets Encoding to Default. - - * Konsole (tested 2.13.2) seems to configure each encoding method - independently. The effective Encoding is the first enabled encoding in this - list: - - Mode 1006 - - Mode 1015 - - Mode 1005 - - Default - - * gnome-terminal (tested 3.6.2) also configures each encoding method - independently. The effective Encoding is the first enabled encoding in - this list: - - Mode 1006 - - Mode 1015 - - Default - Mode 1005 is not supported. - - * xfce4 terminal 0.6.3 (GTK2 VTE) always outputs the default encoding method.