Wrap the fullscreen provider with the core suspender so it can read escExitFullscreen through useSettings instead of manually parsing core event payloads.
Addresses review feedback: the explanatory block comments in
FullscreenProvider (source-of-truth rationale, CoreTransport typing
note) were noise — the same context already lives in the PR
description and commit history. Copyright headers on the four new
files were carried over from the template at 2023; bumped to 2026.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
shortcuts.json already declares fullscreen -> F, but the provider was
listening for KeyF on its own keydown handler in parallel — both fired
on every F press, with the canonical shortcuts dispatch going nowhere.
Subscribe via onShortcut('fullscreen', toggleFullscreen, ...) and drop
the KeyF branch (plus the now-unused inputFocused check). Escape stays
local because its action is gated on the escExitFullscreen profile
setting; F11 stays local because it's shell-only and not in
shortcuts.json.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
The previous NewState listener fired on every change to the ctx model —
notifications, search history, library sync, streaming-server URL — and
each fire triggered a getState('ctx') round-trip to the worker just to
re-read escExitFullscreen.
Switch to the CoreEvent / SettingsUpdated channel (same pattern App.js
uses for interfaceLanguage/quitOnClose), reading the new value straight
from the event payload. Initial seed still uses getState('ctx') once
on mount.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
useServices is already typed via src/services/ServicesContext/useServices.d.ts,
so the @ts-expect-error suppression on the import was unnecessary and
masked two real type holes that surfaced once it was removed:
- core.transport.getState('ctx') returns Promise<object>; cast to the
ambient Ctx type so escExitFullscreen is read through a typed path.
- CoreTransport.on/off types listeners as () => void, but the 'NewState'
event actually emits a string[]. Use a (...args: unknown[]) wrapper +
Array.isArray narrowing so the call site stays type-safe without
weakening the ambient transport signature.
No behavior change.
Made-with: Cursor
FullscreenProvider sits above the router, but useSettings() ->
useProfile() -> useModelState() requires CoreSuspenderContext which is
only provided by withCoreSuspender below the router. Mounting the
provider therefore crashed with "Cannot read properties of null
(reading 'getState')".
Switch the provider to read profile.settings.escExitFullscreen directly
from core.transport.getState('ctx') and refresh on the 'NewState' event
when 'ctx' changes. core is available via useServices(), whose provider
sits at the very top of the tree and is always reachable here.
Behavior is preserved: ESC still exits fullscreen iff the user has the
escExitFullscreen setting enabled, and updates to that setting from the
Settings tab take effect on the next ctx NewState push.
Made-with: Cursor
Introduce a single, app-root-owned source of truth for fullscreen state,
mirroring the existing provider pattern (ToastProvider, FileDropProvider).
The provider centralizes the fullscreenchange / win-visibility-changed /
keydown listeners and exposes the same [fullscreen, requestFullscreen,
exitFullscreen, toggleFullscreen] tuple that consumers already destructure.
Not yet wired up - both the legacy src/common/useFullscreen hook and the
new module coexist. Subsequent commits mount the provider in App.js and
switch consumers over.
Made-with: Cursor