This is the result of running the `include-what-you-use` wrapper, followed by
the `clang-format` wrapper on the Kaleidoscope codebase. It is now safe to use
both without needed any manual corrections after the fact, but it's still
necessary to run clang-format after IWYU, because the two differ in the way they
indent comments after header files.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
This standardizes namespace closing brackets for namespace blocks. Each one is
on its own line, with a comment clearly marking which namespace it closes.
Consecutive lines closing namespace blocks have no whitespace between them, but
there is one blank line before and after a set of namespace block closing lines.
To generate the namespace comments, I used clang-format, with
`FixNamespaceComments: true`. But since clang-format can't exactly duplicate
our astyle formatting, it made lots of other changes, too. To isolate the
namespace comments from the other formatting changes, I first ran clang-format
with `FixNamespaceComments: false`, committed those changes, then ran it again
to generate the namespace comments. Then I stashed the namespace comments,
reset `HEAD` to remove the other changes, applied the stashed namespace
comments, and committed the results (after examining them and making a few minor
adjustments by hand).
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
Under Windows, we use an input method that requires a registry edit, mention
that in the README, and describe how to do it.
Fixes#1031.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
When there are different input methods available on Linux (Chinese, Japanese,
etc), using the numpad is more reliable than the number row. As both work,
rather than making it configurable, just switch to numpad on Linux.
Fixes#1064.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
To account for non-qwerty host-side layouts, we want to be able to easily set
the last part of the sequence used to start Unicode input on Linux. The newly
introduced `Unicode.setLinuxKey(Key_S)` function does just that.
Fixes#1063.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>