- TidySlideStyle
- TidyBurstSlides
- Added documentation for TidyEmacsFile, since it's a valid option.
- Because TidyEmacsFile is a valid option, tweaked tidy.c so that it can
be specified in a configuration file without being overwritten by the console
app. Why a user might do this is dumb, but who are we to stop them.
- Consolidated all output string definitions enums into `tidyenum.h`, which
is where they belong, and where they have proper visibility.
- Re-arranged `messages.c/h` with several comments useful to developers.
- Properly added the key lookup functions and the language localization
functions into tidy.h/tidylib.c with proper name-spacing.
- Previous point restored a *lot* of sanity to the #include pollution that's
been introduced in light of these.
- Note that opaque types have been (properly) introduced. Look at the updated
headers for `language.h`. In particular only an opaque structure is passed
outside of LibTidy, and so use TidyLangWindowsName and TidyLangPosixName
to poll these objects.
- Console application updated as a result of this.
- Removed dead code:
- void TY_(UnknownOption)( TidyDocImpl* doc, char c );
- void TY_(UnknownFile)( TidyDocImpl* doc, ctmbstr program, ctmbstr file );
- Redundant strings were removed with the removal of this dead code.
- Several enums were given fixed starting values. YOUR PROGRAMS SHOULD NEVER
depend on enum values. `TidyReportLevel` is an example of such.
- Some enums were removed as a result of this. `TidyReportLevel` now has
matching strings, so the redundant `TidyReportLevelStrings` was removed.
- All of the PO's and language header files were regenerated as a result of
the string cleanup and header cleanup.
- Made the interface to the library version and release date consistent.
- CMakeLists.txt now supports SUPPORT_CONSOLE_APP. The intention is to
be able to remove console-only code from LibTidy (for LibTidy users).
- Updated README/MESSAGES.md, which is *vastly* more simple now.
Previously Tidy produced different output based on the compilation target, NOT based on
the file encoding and specified options. Every platform was equal except Mac OS. Now unless
the encoding is specifically set to a Mac file type, all encoding assumptions are the same
across platforms.