Previously it was used to prevent the Editor from being displayed
when running in command-line mode. Now the Editor is not created at
all, so this parameter is useless.
This is also confirmed by the remaining calls to `handleOpen` that
all have the parameter set to `true`.
Move the initialization of Editor into the GUI section of the big
if-then-elseif chain. This actually breaks cases for Verify and
Upload that uses Editor to access core functions.
This will be fixed in next commits.
This commit makes this changes:
- SplashScreenHelper is now local in Base constructor
- if SplashScreenHelper is instantiated with a null SplashScreen
instance then it outputs progress in console and avoid to make
calls to Swing toolkit
- The parsing of command line arguments is anticipated so we can
determine if we are in command line or GUI mode early and setup
objects that produces output to not use graphics toolkits.
- In this case the SplashScreenHelper is initialized with a real
splashscreen only if we are in GUI mode
Previously it was selected always the last tab because the action
sequence was:
- create the new tab (in the last position)
- select the new tab index (last)
- sort the tabs (the new tab is now in the middle but the selected
is always the last)
instead the correct action sequence is
- create the new tab (in the last position)
- sort the tabs (now the new tab is in the middle)
- select the new tab index (now the correct index is selected)
The snippet:
boolean wrapNeeded = false;
if (wrap && nextIndex == -1) {
// if wrapping, a second chance is ok, start from the end
wrapNeeded = true;
}
Can be moved inside the `if (nextIndex == -1)` that follows, this way:
if (nextIndex == -1) {
boolean wrapNeeded = false;
if (wrap) {
// if wrapping, a second chance is ok, start from the end
wrapNeeded = true;
}
[...CUT...]
if (wrapNeeded) {
nextIndex = backwards ? text.lastIndexOf(search) : text.indexOf(search, 0);
}
}
but since `wrapNeeded` is used only at the very end of the `if` statement
we can move it forward:
if (nextIndex == -1) {
[...CUT...]
boolean wrapNeeded = false;
if (wrap) {
// if wrapping, a second chance is ok, start from the end
wrapNeeded = true;
}
if (wrapNeeded) {
nextIndex = backwards ? text.lastIndexOf(search) : text.indexOf(search, 0);
}
}
and finally simplify it by removing `wrapNeeded` altogether:
if (nextIndex == -1) {
[...CUT...]
if (wrap) {
nextIndex = backwards ? text.lastIndexOf(search) : text.indexOf(search, 0);
}
}
The snippet:
boolean wrapNeeded = false;
if (wrap && nextIndex == -1) {
// if wrapping, a second chance is ok, start from the end
wrapNeeded = true;
}
is present on both sides of the `if` statement so it can be factored out.
From: `Examples from Built-in Libraries`
To: `Examples for any board`
From: `Examples from Arduino AVR Boards Libraries` (selected platform)
To: `Examples for Arduino/Genuino Micro` (selected board)
From: `Examples from Arduino AVR Boards Libraries` (referenced platform)
To: `Examples for Arduino AVR Boards` (referenced platform)
When searching through all tabs, the order was accidentally reversed.
This was broken by commit d2bac86 (Remove tab switching logic from
Sketch).
This also fixes a problem where "replace all" would only work on the
first and last tab (since it would search backwards from the first tab
to the last tab and then conclude it was done).
This fixes a part of #5380.