Hello,
Some applications employing the ncurses library seem to play very nicely
with BRLTTy whilst others do not. The main problem usually stems from
poor or no cursor tracking. Does anybody on this list know what factor
is into play here? What do you usually look for when trying to make an
ncurses
Hello,
On 09/02/2016 00:20, S. Massy wrote:
> Hello,
> Some applications employing the ncurses library seem to play very nicely
> with BRLTTy whilst others do not. The main problem usually stems from
> poor or no cursor tracking. Does anybody on this list know what factor
> is into play here? What
[quoted lines by Aura Kelloniemi on 2016/02/09 at 08:35 +0200]
>I would have preferred modifying the braille table of OP so that it has 0x00
>defined with no dots. I don't think that special casing space will do lots of
>harm though, but if other characters are going to be added, then I prefer a
>
[quoted lines by S. Massy on 2016/02/08 at 18:20 -0500]
>Some applications employing the ncurses library seem to play very nicely
>with BRLTTy whilst others do not. The main problem usually stems from
>poor or no cursor tracking. Does anybody on this list know what factor
>is into play here? What
On 09/02/2016 03:46, Didier Spaier wrote:
> On 09/02/2016 01:20, Dave Mielke wrote:
>> [quoted lines by Didier Spaier on 2016/02/07 at 00:09 +0100]
>>
>>> Additional information: Philippe also tested an installer shipping
>>> brtty 5.3.1 and observed the same behavior.
>>
>> Are you able to verify
[quoted lines by Didier Spaier on 2016/02/09 at 18:02 +0100]
>Good news: Philippe just told me that the issue is fixed, thanks Dave.
Excellent! But, while it may have been myself who coded the fix, it was Samuel
who figured out what the problem was and who proposed the solution.
--
Dave Mielke
On 09/02/2016 19:04, Dave Mielke wrote:
> Excellent! But, while it may have been myself who coded the fix, it was
> Samuel
> who figured out what the problem was and who proposed the solution.
Thanks to Samuel too!
___
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