All of lore.kernel.org
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
* terminal enhancement
@ 2004-09-18 14:32 Yoshinori K. Okuji
  2004-09-19 11:07 ` Marco Gerards
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Yoshinori K. Okuji @ 2004-09-18 14:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: The development of GRUB 2

To support Unicode in the menu interface, I think we need to add one 
more function into the terminal system. For now, the menu only thinks 
about ASCII characters. So the number of bytes in a string is identical 
to the number of columns to be used for displaying the string.

This is not true, generally speaking. In UTF-8, most Latin characters 
are 2-bytes but one column is used to show each character. Simply 
speaking, width(string) != length(string).

In POSIX, the function wcwidth is defined to get the width of a string 
of wide characters. We need a similar function in GRUB.

Basically, only terminal drivers know how many columns are used for a 
given string. If a terminal driver uses the font manager completely, we 
can get the information from the font manager, but not all terminals 
use the font manager (such as the PC console).

So I'd like to propose adding a new member 'getwidth' into struct 
grub_term. This function would be like this:

int
getwidth (grub_uint32_t code)
{
  /* CODE is encoded in UCS-4.  */

  /* Do something here.  */

  width = ...;
  return width;
}

Anyway, you need this kind of function to implement a terminal.

What do you think?

Okuji



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2004-09-19 15:16 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2004-09-18 14:32 terminal enhancement Yoshinori K. Okuji
2004-09-19 11:07 ` Marco Gerards
2004-09-19 14:35   ` Yoshinori K. Okuji
2004-09-19 14:51     ` Marco Gerards

This is an external index of several public inboxes,
see mirroring instructions on how to clone and mirror
all data and code used by this external index.