Preferences::sanitizeInputPhrase() transforms an input phrase by
removing its whitespace/punctuation prefix and suffix. Translating a
phrase from X11 primary selection or from clipboard, via mouse-over or
from the command line results in such sanitization. This is useful when
a punctuation mark or a space is selected accidentally alongside a word.
This sanitization can be undesirable, however, when an abbreviated word
is selected. For example: "etc.", "e.g.", "i.e.".
This commit implements searching for the input word with the punctuation
suffix preserved as an alternative form of the sanitized word to show
articles for both. For example, when the word "etc." is translated from
the clipboard, both "ETC" and "etc." articles are displayed.
The punctuation suffix is preserved when the word is passed from the
scan popup to the main window and when the translate line text is
refreshed (e.g. when the current group is changed). The suffix is not
stored in history and favorites (doing so would require file format
changes and possibly substantial code changes, this can be implemented
later if need be).
Trim the input phrase once in ArticleNetworkAccessManager::getResource()
instead of verbose trimming in multiple places in
ArticleMaker::makeDefinitionFor().
Closes #1350.
The article view focus is necessary to navigate a word definition via
keyboard rather than mouse. The shortcut - Ctrl+N - is the same as
the one in the main window for the corresponding action.
* add a new interface class AudioPlayerInterface;
* inherit a new proxy class Ffmpeg::AudioPlayer from it;
* partially switch ArlticleView to using the interface;
* expose MainWindow's AudioPlayerInterface instance to all ArticleView
instances;
* add a new AudioPlayerFactory class responsible for creating instances
of concrete classes derived from AudioPlayerInterface depending on
relevant Config::Preferences values;
* increase minimum supported Qt version from 4.5 to 4.6 in README
in order to use QScopedPointer introduced in Qt 4.6.
This forces the jump even when the dictionary is already a current/active dictionary.
This is convenient for the following use-cases:
1. User manually scrolls far away from the current dictionary and would like to return.
2. User jumps far away from the current dictionary when doing search (Ctrl+F).
3. User scrolls a huge article and would like to get back to the beginning of it.