- kill trailing whitespace (grep -n ' $' src/*.{c,cc,h})
- eliminate space before tab (grep -n ' ' src/*.{c,cc,h})
(insert tab by pressing CTRL-v first)
- little indenting fixup in configure.ac.in (we indent using tabs, not
spaces)
note: this should not change the actual code at all - if it does, feel
free to blame me personally ;)
instead:
- call XDefaultScreen() and XScreenCount() directly from the print
callback
- have no update callback at all for the desktop objects (seems to work
well without)
This was really creepy stuff. Last updated in April, 2006 to work with
kernels > 2.6.12. I consider this "fobar" (fscking obsolete beyond all
recognition) and doubt anyone still uses this. If you do, blame me. :)
-d was broken because fork-to-background was done after the update thread creation, so the
threads ended up in the wrong process. This delays the thread creation until after the fork.
* Remove leftover INFO_* values from object definitions which didn't
trigger anything.
* Drop the whole INFO_* enum as it's values are not used anymore.
Besides improving performance when updating stuff, we ideally have no
text object specific code in update_stuff() anymore (aside some
leftovers).
The macros in construct_text_object() have gotten a bit crazier than
they were before:
* using CALLBACK(&func) instead of an INFO_* parameter to OBJ() will
make it add the given callback to the list of callbacks to be iterated
over at each update interval.
* BEWARE: the above assumes function pointer values to be > 0!
* This implicitly fixes a bug in the code: passing 0 as INFO_* value
led to selecting INFO_MAIL (1 << 0 == 1).
* Now it would select INFO_CPU (== 0), which got unused and therefore is
not a problem at all (the 0 value should be unused in enums anyway).
This needs some more work, then we should be able to drop the whole
INFO_* enum. Then CALLBACK() can die again and with it goes the ugly
casting stuff done to distinguish callbacks from INFO_* values.