This is much better interface-wise. It eliminates all blinking
of the line in the practice.
Bug: 8874148
Bug: 8864306
Change-Id: I87754e44784327c2e9c8b162d598d145e20668e8
This change utilizes the no panel auto more key feature to implement
long press shift key for shift lock.
Change-Id: I3995d25dc35aea3c67b5aa29299815462eff9cad
This is about as ad-hoc as it gets, but then again, what we want
is probably as ad-hoc as it gets.
All URL boxes I know of double as search bars, and not adding
automatic spaces there sucks (e.g. in Chrome URL bar).
And in other boxes actually you don't want to add a space if
it looks like a URL. QSB isn't even a search box, and it behaves
like this.
So I think this is actually the right answer to the problem.
Bug: 7062925
Change-Id: Ib09472b34644fd5bf2dc84bb97cedeeba28bcd02
Upon pressing Shift, if there is currently a selected string, have
Latin IME change its capitalization.
This does not yet have the keyboard mode follow the mode - the change
is complicated enough as is.
Bug: 7657025
Change-Id: I54fe8485f44e04efd72c71ac9feee5ce21ba06f2
There are two problems here. The first one is the tests would send
an invalid unicode character. Although we could want dicttool to
handle this more gracefully, it's fine for now.
The second problem is much more serious. If a node has more than
128 children, then the java code will crash trying to read the
dictionary back because of a bug that this change fixes. In
theory, it's possible that happens when we try to load the user
history dictionary back from the disk - native code is not affected
so there is no other point that may cause a problem.
In the practice, that means you'd need to have 129 words with a
common prefix (including empty string) but all different after
this. It's almost impossible with Google Keyboard since there are
only so many keys on the keyboard that you can make a word out
of, and then again you'd have to do it repeatedly until it
actually enters the user history dictionary, wait for it to get
saved on the disk.
The bad news is, if you manage to get this far, the keyboard will
crash every time and won't be able to get up until you clear
data for the package.
The good news is, the dictionary itself is not corrupted and only
the reading code is wrong. So updating to a newer version would
actually even recover from this situation.
All in all, considering how almost-impossible this is to trigger,
I don't think even a single user actually did hit this bug.
Bug: 8583091
Change-Id: Iabb2a7f47cbd9ed3193d2a3487318d280753e071