some users (maybe only myself) may want to sort the task bar by app_id
which then places occurrences of the same task next to each other.
Signed-off-by: Louis DeLosSantos <louis.delos@gmail.com>
There were two main issues with fmtlib and C++20 mode:
- `fmt::format` defaults to compile-time argument checking and requires
using `fmt::runtime(format_string)` to bypass that.
- `std::format` implementation introduces conflicting declarations and
we have to specify the namespace for all `format`/`format_to` calls.
The first crash occurs when trying to parse the
ID of a workspace as an uint, since named
workspaces has negative IDs. This is fixed by
using ints for workspace IDs instead of uints.
The second crash occurs when converting a
workspace name that isn't a number to an integer.
This is fixed by wrapping std::stoi in a try
block and only sorting by number, when both names
can successfully be converted to integers.
Destroy request is not specified for foreign toplevel manager and it
does not prevent the compositor from sending more events.
Libwayland would ignore events to a destroyed objects, but that could
indirectly cause a gap in the sequence of new object ids and trigger
error condition in the library.
With this commit waybar sends a `stop` request to notify the compositor
about the destruction of a toplevel manager. That fixes abnormal
termination of the bar with following errors:
```
(waybar:11791): Gdk-DEBUG: 20:04:19.778: not a valid new object id (4278190088), message toplevel(n)
Gdk-Message: 20:04:19.778: Error reading events from display: Invalid argument
```
Previously we only checked when connecting to the server whether it had
the minimum required version but didn't act accordingly in the various
functions that use the functionality of later versions. If there were a
server in the wild, that actually would not have this functionality,
there would have been a crash. Fix this by checking the version before
using the functionality and gracefully abort it.