I don't know why I ruled this out originally, it's more visually
pleasing to me now especially that threshold is likely to remain
set at "+" for a long time.
Finally! Changing the message visibility threshold doesn't totally
screw up scroll position. Neither do horizontal resizes, but vertical
resizes drift because the value of windowTop() changes before and
after...
The scroll position is anchored to the top of the window. It's
arbitrary whether to anchor the top or the bottom, but other scrolling
commands like M-p and C-r are anchored to the top, so this is
consistent.
This directly correlates hard-wrapped lines with the soft lines
they were wrapped from.
Choosing uint here because it doesn't change the size of struct
Line. It doesn't at all matter since buffers only hold 1024 lines
at a time anyway.
Don't search base directories if path starts with "/", "./" or
"../", but still do if the path simply starts with ".". Bail early
if HOME is needed but unset. Don't attempt to open the original
path in configOpen and dataOpen.
Log files and state save/restore both require read/write access to
the filesystem, both during start and exit.
If neither features are used, catgirl may run with "stdio tty".
catgirl has no reconnect feature and generally must not do
anything but read/write from/to the connected socket which
does not require "inet" or "dns" promises.
Simplify logic, be more idiomatic and finalize by pledging after
all unveiling is done by omitting the "unveil" promise and thereby
not allowing further calls to it.
Restrict mode will focus on sandboxing, while kiosk will continue
to restrict IRC access through a public kiosk. Kiosk mode without
restrict mode allows execution of man 1 catgirl with /help, assuming
external sandboxing.
The /list and /part commands are also added to the list of disabled
commands in kiosk mode, since they are pointless without access to
/join.
Don't wait for getopt_long to move all the arguments to the end. This
allows overriding options set by config files by placing flags after
them on the command line.