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1a9f99098a
Also, fixed some crashiness in the can-execute tests for hints. If you crash an a can-execute method you get a really unhelpful failure message. Asserts don't work there either. Yay WPF.
94 lines
3.6 KiB
C#
94 lines
3.6 KiB
C#
/*
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* Copyright 2019 faddenSoft
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*
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* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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* You may obtain a copy of the License at
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*
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* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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*
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* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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* limitations under the License.
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*/
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using System;
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using System.Collections.Generic;
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using System.Diagnostics;
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using System.IO;
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using CommonUtil;
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/*
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There are a few different options for viewing help files:
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(1) Microsoft HTML Help. Requires writing stuff in a specific way and then running a
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tool to turn it into a .chm file, which then requires a help viewer application.
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Feels a little weak in terms of future-proofing and cross-platform support.
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(2) Plain HTML, using System.Windows.Forms.WebBrowser class. This seems like a nice
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way to go, but we need to provide all the standard controls, and it means we have
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a web browser running in-process.
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(3) Plain HTML, with the Microsoft.Toolkit.Win32.UI.Controls.WinForms.WebView control.
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Similar to WebBrowser, but newer and fancier, and probably less portable.
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(4) Plain HTML, viewed with the system browser. We outsource the problem. The big
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problem here is that the easy/portable way (Process.Start(url)) discards the anchor
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part (the bit after '#'). There are workarounds, but they seem to involve dredging
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the default browser out of the Registry.
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(5) Custom roll-your-own solution. Have you seen this round thing I invented? I'm
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calling it a "wheel".
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For now I'm going with #4, and dealing with anchors by ignoring them: the help menu item
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just opens the TOC, and individual UI items don't have help buttons.
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What we need in terms of API is a way to say, "show the help for XYZ". The rest can be
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encapsulated here.
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TODO(maybe): the web viewer accessible from WPF appears to be much better, so we could create a
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simple browser window.
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*/
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namespace SourceGenWPF {
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/// <summary>
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/// Help viewer API.
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/// </summary>
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public static class HelpAccess {
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private const string HELP_DIR = "Help"; // directory inside RuntimeData
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/// <summary>
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/// Help topics.
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/// </summary>
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public enum Topic {
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Contents, // table of contents
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Main, // main window, general workflow
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// Editors
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EditLongComment,
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}
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private static Dictionary<Topic, string> sTopicMap = new Dictionary<Topic, string>() {
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{ Topic.Contents, "index.html" },
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{ Topic.Main, "main.html" },
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{ Topic.EditLongComment, "editor.html#long-comment" }
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};
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/// <summary>
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/// Opens a window with the specified help topic.
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/// </summary>
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/// <param name="topic"></param>
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public static void ShowHelp(Topic topic) {
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if (!sTopicMap.TryGetValue(topic, out string fileName)) {
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Debug.Assert(false, "Unable to find " + topic + " in map");
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return;
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}
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string helpFilePath = Path.Combine(RuntimeDataAccess.GetDirectory(),
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HELP_DIR, fileName);
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string url = "file://" + helpFilePath;
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//url = url.Replace("#", "%23");
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Debug.WriteLine("Requesting help URL: " + url);
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ShellCommand.OpenUrl(url);
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}
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}
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}
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