Ubuntu 18.04 uses GTKMM 3.22.2-2, which doesn't support native file chooser.
Commit bc3e09edbf checks if native file chooser
is available, but the result is overridden with a hardcoded define,
probably for debugging.
Removing the debugging code fixes build on Ubuntu 18.04.
We plan to use flatbuffers in the future for the next generation of
the .slvs file format, so flatbuffers are built unconditionally; and
the Q3DO exporter itself is tiny.
This serves two purposes.
First, we want to (some day) convert these messages into a less
obtrustive form, something like toaster notifications, such that they
don't interrupt workflow as harshly. That would, of course, be
nonblocking.
Second, some platforms, like Emscripten, do not support nested event
loops, and it's not possible to display a modal dialog on them
synchronously.
When making this commit, I've reviewed all Error() and Message()
calls to ensure that only some of the following is true for all
of them:
* The call is followed a break or return statement that exits
an UI entry point (e.g. an MenuX function);
* The call is followed by cleanup (in fact, in this case the new
behavior is better, since even with a synchronous modal dialog
we have to be reentrant);
* The message is an informational message only and nothing
unexpected will happen if the operation proceeds in background.
In general, all Error() calls already satisfied the above conditions,
although in some cases I changed control flow aroudn them to more
clearly show that. The Message() calls that didn't satisfy these
conditions were reworked into an asynchronous form.
There are three explicit RunModal() calls left that need to be
reworked into an async form.
We have a lot of classes with virtual functions but no virtual
destructor, mostly under render/. While this is not a problem
due to how our hierarchy is structured, some versions of clang
warn about this on the delete statement inside shared_ptr.
We could add a virtual destructor, but adding final qualifiers
expresses intent better, is generally more efficient (since it allows
devirtualizing most virtual calls in render/), and solves
the potential problem clang is warning us about.
We currently support MSVC 2013, and MSVC 2013 has weird bugs around
std::unique_ptr; the one we hit is Connect ID 858243. You can't
actually open the bug report anymore because Microsoft has shut down
Microsoft Connect. We probably shouldn't support a compiler so old
its bugtracker doesn't exist anymore, but there isn't any very good
reason to use unique_ptr for TimerRef either, so let's change that
for the time being.
This commit removes Platform::Window::Redraw function, and rewrites
its uses to run on timer events. Most UI toolkits have obscure issues
with recursive event handling loops, and Emscripten is purely event-
driven and cannot handle imperative redraws at all.
As a part of this change, the Platform::Timer::WindUp function
is split into three to make the interpretation of its argument
less magical. The new functions are RunAfter (a regular timeout,
setTimeout in browser terms), RunAfterNextFrame (an animation
request, requestAnimationFrame in browser terms), and
RunAfterProcessingEvents (a request to run something after all
events for the current frame are processed, used for coalescing
expensive operations in face of input event queues).
This commit changes two uses of Redraw(): the AnimateOnto() and
ScreenStepDimGo() functions. The latter was actually broken in that
on small sketches, it would run very quickly and not animate
the dimension change at all; this has been fixed.
While we're at it, get rid of unused Platform::Window::NativePtr
function as well.
This is to address MSVC warnings.
This commit changes a few configuration fields to use double instead
of float. There doesn't seem to be any reason these use float except
for the legacy Windows code using float for saved configuration.
Changing their type to double improves consistency.
This commit merges all ad-hoc file dialog code, such as the feature
where dialogs remember last location and format, and exposes it
through a common interface.
This commit also significantly improves Gtk dialog handling code.
This commit changes the awfully specific code for dialogs with
messages duplicated three times to go through a generic interface.
It also fixes some issues with the way translated messages
were parameterized.
This commit removes the custom message dialog box used on Windows,
for several reasons. First, it was the last element not respecting
HiDPI displays. Second, other OSes do not easily provide this much
control over rendering default message boxes, and both Gnome and
macOS frown upon non-standard renderings such as those; so the custom
rendering was already not used on the other OSes.
This commit mostly just changes the settings code to be in line with
the rest of the platform abstractions, although it also fixes some
settings names to be consistent with others, and uses native bool
types where applicable.
This commit also makes settings-related operations much less
wasteful, not that it should matter.
This commit removes a large amount of code partially duplicated
between the text and the graphics windows, and opens the path to
having more than one model window on screen at any given time,
as well as simplifies platform work.
This commit also adds complete support for High-DPI device pixel
ratio. It adds support for font scale factor (a fractional factor
on top of integral device pixel ratio) on the platform side, but not
on the application side.
This commit also adds error checking to all Windows API calls
(within the abstracted code) and fixes a significant number of
misuses and non-future-proof uses of Windows API.
This commit also makes uses of Windows API idiomatic, e.g. using
the built-in vertical scroll bar, native tooltips, control
subclassing instead of hooks in the global dispatch loop, and so on.
It reinstates tooltip support and removes menu-related hacks.
This commit removes a large amount of redundant code that needed
to be kept in sync between platforms and also makes it much easier
to add new menu-related functionality since little to no platform
code needs to be altered anymore.
This commit also greatly improves code locality in context menu
handling by allowing context menu click handlers to be closures.
This commit temporarily introduces a SetMainMenu API, which is rather
hacky but only necessary until an abstraction for windows is added.
This changes the assertion failure behavior to be the same in debug
and release builds: to show the complete failure message, and
to offer to restart the application or defer to Windows Error
Reporting to generate a backtrace. Contrary to popular belief,
WER is not useless, and since SolveSpace publishes pdb files,
WER-generated reports can be symbolized.
This commit also addresses the long-standing problem where showing
a dialog on fatal error would re-enter the application code, thus
causing another error or a crash that is more fatal than the current
one.
glibc defines a CHAR_WIDTH macro in limits.h since about 6.3.*.
This is apparently added as a part of ISO TS 18661-1:2014, which
I cannot read because it is not publicly available, and which covers
some sort of floating-point extensions. This is one of those changes
that should never have been done yet here we are.
This commit updates a *lot* of rather questionable path handling
logic to be robust. Specifically:
* All path operations go through Platform::Path.
* All ad-hoc path handling functions are removed, together with
PATH_SEP. This removes code that was in platform-independent
parts, but had platform-dependent behavior.
* Group::linkFileRel is removed; only an absolute path is stored
in Group::linkFile. However, only Group::linkFileRel is saved,
with the relative path calculated on the fly, from the filename
passed into SaveToFile. This eliminates dependence on global
state, and makes it unnecessary to have separare code paths
for saved and not yet saved files.
* In a departure from previous practice, functions with
platform-independent code but platform-dependent behavior
are all grouped under platform/. This makes it easy to grep
for functions with platform-dependent behavior.
* Similarly, new (GUI-independent) code for all platforms is added
in the same platform.cpp file, guarded with #ifs. It turns out
that implementations for different platforms had a lot of shared
code that tended to go out of sync.
Before this commit, DoLater would be run as an idle callback,
which (depending on system performance) could either result in
a half-regenerated sketch being displayed, with only the dragged
entity updated, or no regeneration whatsoever during the drag.
After this commit, the GTK behavior matches macOS and Win32 ones.
The somewhat confusingly named set_has_alpha() function does not
affect whether alpha can be used during rendering to the area.
Rather, it affects whether alpha will be used when composing
the contents of the area with the window underneath it.
We want to suppress accelerators but still get input to (at least)
the window where the editor is opened. It's no harm to permit input
to other windows, but it is bad to route all of it to the editor,
since color chooser depends on being able to receive input.
So, what we do is add modal grab to the *overlay*, which has
the editor and the underlay widget, route all events as usual
to children, and just force the key events to go to the editor,
since otherwise they would still propagate up for some reason.
It's a deprecated platform that has weird OpenGL-related bugs and
is incompatible with using EGL anyway. It was clear we're going
to drop it, the only question was when. Answer: now.
It was broken because of three bugs:
* Uninitialized variables in RunCommand;
* Trying to use (OEM-encoded) main() argc/argv arguments instead
of GetCommandLineW();
* Trying to pass relative paths directly into ssfopen.
All of our executables need resources; e.g. the vector font is
a resource and it is necessary for generation. Before this commit,
the GUI executable loaded the resources in a nice way, and everything
else did it in a very ad-hoc, fragile way.
After this commit, all executables are placed in <build>/bin and
follow the same algorithm:
* On Windows, resources are compiled and linked into every
executable.
* On Linux, resources are copied into <build>/res (which is
tried first) and <prefix>/share/solvespace (which is tried
second).
* On macOS, resources are copied into <build>/res (which is
tried first) and <build>/bin/solvespace.app/Contents/Resources
(which is tried second).
In practice this means that we can add as many executables as we want
without duplicating lots of code. In addition, on macOS, we can
place supplementary executables into the bundle, and they can use
resources from the bundle transparently.
The only thing we need it anymore is the package version and platform
configuration, so only include it for that. As a result, less files
are rebuilt when the git commit changes and config.h is regenerated.
This commit performs two main changes:
* Alters the shaders to use only strictly conformant GLSL 2.0.
* Alters the Windows UI to use ANGLE via GL ES 2.0 and EGL 1.4.
This commit also drops official support for Windows XP, since ANGLE
requires a non-XP toolset to build. It is still possible to build
SolveSpace for Windows XP using:
cmake -T v120_xp -DOPENGL=1
This is a common and convenient behavior; the basename is
pre-selected, so exporting multiple views requires just one keystroke
to put the cursor after the basename.
Before this commit, every debug message was correctly printed
to stdout, but they were all concatenated onto a single line in
the Visual Studio "Output" pane.
Abstract the exact details of the OpenGL renderer in the render.h
header; this allows us to use GL-specific types in the renderer
class and functions without including OpenGL (and Windows, where
applicable) headers in every source file.
Apitrace uses swapping buffers to determine frame boundaries; before
this commit, everything solvespace renders gets put into a single
frame. Since we don't use double-buffered rendering, the call does
nothing (and is legal to perform), but apitrace output becomes
readable.
The libspnav library doesn't even define SI_APP_FIT_BUTTON, which
appears to be Windows-specific functionality, perhaps a physical
button remapped with some logic. Just use 0 instead, since that
seems always safe.
Unfortunately there is no portable way to open an Unicode path with
std::fstream. On *nix, it is enough to call the const char*
constructor. On MSVC, it is enough to call a nonstandard
const wchar_t* constructor. However, on MinGW, there is no way at all
to construct an std::fstream with a wide path, not even using
undocumented APIs. (There used to be a const wchar_t* overload added
back in libstdc++ 4.7, but it got removed for a reason that I was not
able to find out.)
This commit alters the build system substantially; it adds another
platform, `headless`, that provides stubs in place of all GUI
functions, and provides a library `solvespace_headless` alongside
the main executable. To cut down build times, only the few files
that have #if defined(HEADLESS) are built twice for the executable
and the library; the rest is grouped into a new `solvespace_cad`
library. It is not usable on its own and just serves for grouping.
This commit also gates the tests behind a -DENABLE_TESTS=ON CMake
option, ON by default (but suggested as OFF in the README so that
people don't ever have to install cairo to build the executable.)
The tests introduced in this commit are (so far) rudimentary,
although functional, and they serve as a stepping point towards
introducing coverage analysis.