File descriptors will be closed in
BinaryDictionary.finalize(); but, this leads to unit test fails.
Bug: 13066902
Change-Id: I2b0d3e54ee91fa844530df54596f86bbbbac81a5
When the cursor is moved by the user, the RichInputConnection
is told about it. However, to work around a framework bug, it
also looks at how many characters are in the buffer before the
cursor, and if that's more than the value it's been passed, it
deduces that's a framework bug and there are at least as many
characters as seen before the cursor, so it puts the expected
cursor position there.
When you move the cursor, TextView calls onUpdateSelection,
and when you move it fast, you'll get rapid-fire calls to
onUpdateSelection. This is fine, the RIC is equipped to
deal with that.
However, these calls take some time to make it to the IME. In
this instance, when the first call gets through and the IME
calls TextView (synchronously) for text before the cursor, the
cursor has already moved in the app, and TextView returns more
characters than the cursor position was declared to be in this
instance, so the RIC sets that as the expected cursor position.
Sure enough, a split second later, the second call to
onUpdateSelection arrives, with the new cursor position set
where the RIC had found it too early. The RIC takes that as an
"expected" cursor move, and the input does not get reset.
Luckily, we have a way out. As far as we know, the framework bug
only manifests itself upon rotation, which means we should only
have to adjust for it in onStartInputView. Doing it in
onUpdateSelection is too zealous (and probably too distrustful of
the app to send the correct cursor positions).
So we should just take care of the rotation case (by calling
tryFixLyingCursorPosition in onStartInputView) and remove the
compensating code in resetCachesUponCursorMoves.
Bug: 12982502
Change-Id: Ic3c1408a1ec45deaea63b01d98376a79ae567d77
Because the previous personalization settings default value was on,
this CL changes the preference key of the personalization settings.
Bug: 10587358
Change-Id: I80233e8af4b532d8c67d8fb184c2865862bb35dd
Some were never closed, other closed twice. This change
makes all Cursor instances behave, having the #close()
call in a finally{} clause, and puts the burden of closing
the cursor squarely on the creator rather than in the
called methods.
There is however one exception that is beyond the scope
of this change: UserDictionarySettings have a Cursor
member, it's never closed, and fixing the problem is not
obvious. This change adds a TODO for now.
It's not very clear if this change actually helps with
bug#12670151, but it may be related and it's a good
think to do anyway.
Bug: 12670151
Change-Id: I87cc44387e7dee3da1488671b93a28d9d73f7dc0