As for now here are two sets of inputmethod options:
- -enable-inputmethod/disable-inputmethod - which seems to supposed to
control whether build the 'inputmethod' module or not
- -inputmethod/-no-inputmethod - which seems to supposed to
enable/disable inputmethod support without changing the ABI.
Before the patch both -disable-inputmethod and -no-inputmethod were just
breaking the build: -no-inputmethod were disabling some code with
support for the module, but didn't disabled the module build itself nor
build of plugins. -disable-inputmethod were disabling build of plugins
and module, but didn't disabled code depending upon it.
It seems the inputmethod support were still WIP when the last release of
Qt3 came to be, hence the mess.
This patch fixes the build if both -disable-inputmethod AND
-no-inputmethod are supplied. Disabling only one is not enough due to
tqmake/configure have problems handling two different options of the
same name. Later the -inputmethod/-no-inputmethod should be probably
removed entirely.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Golubev <fatzer2@gmail.com>
The analogue of XkbKeycodeToKeysym() used to be XKeycodeToKeysym(), but
it was deprecated in favour of XGetKeyboardMapping() method.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Golubev <fatzer2@gmail.com>
This is the first part of the replacement process.
Usage of Q_WS_* has been replaced with the equivalent TQ_WS_*.
Definition of Q_WS_* has been mirrored into TQ_WS_* defines, to allow
TDE code to continue building till replacement is carried over to all
other modules.
Once that is completed, the original Q_WS_* defines will
be removed.
Signed-off-by: Michele Calgaro <michele.calgaro@yahoo.it>
A new README with markdown format, updated information on TQt, contributor section and translations status.
The old README has been preserved as README.Qt3 for historical reasons.
Signed-off-by: Mavridis Philippe <mavridisf@gmail.com>
Commit b167d09c was functionally incorrect and is causing issues on
selected distributions.
This reverts commit b167d09c43.
This resolves issue TDE/tde#128.
When using the pthreads recursive mutex, the level method was only able
to return either zero or one, but a recursive mutex can be locked more
than once.
Additionally, the way this detected if the mutex was already locked was
to test whether it can be locked again. If testing from the thread that
is currently holding the lock, this locking attempt always succeeds, and
therefore determines that the lock is _not_ held at all. This is
especially bad, as this operation only makes sense to perform from the
thread that holds the lock -- if any thread not holding the lock queries
the number of times the lock is held, that answer can change before the
thread can used it.
Signed-off-by: Bobby Bingham <koorogi@koorogi.info>
This helps keeping the object root list shorter, speeding up operations
which require lot of TQObject trees. This relates to TDE/tdebase#309.
Signed-off-by: Michele Calgaro <michele.calgaro@yahoo.it>