solvespace/src/textwin.cpp

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//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Helper functions for the text-based browser window.
//
// Copyright 2008-2013 Jonathan Westhues.
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#include "solvespace.h"
namespace SolveSpace {
class Button {
public:
virtual std::string Tooltip() = 0;
virtual void Draw(UiCanvas *uiCanvas, int x, int y, bool asHovered) = 0;
virtual int AdvanceWidth() = 0;
virtual void Click() = 0;
};
class SpacerButton : public Button {
public:
std::string Tooltip() override { return ""; }
void Draw(UiCanvas *uiCanvas, int x, int y, bool asHovered) override {
// Draw a darker-grey spacer in between the groups of icons.
uiCanvas->DrawRect(x, x + 4, y, y - 24,
/*fillColor=*/{ 45, 45, 45, 255 },
/*outlineColor=*/{});
}
int AdvanceWidth() override { return 12; }
void Click() override {}
};
class ShowHideButton : public Button {
public:
bool *variable;
std::string tooltip;
std::string iconName;
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> icon;
ShowHideButton(bool *variable, std::string iconName, std::string tooltip)
: variable(variable), tooltip(tooltip), iconName(iconName) {}
std::string Tooltip() override {
return ((*variable) ? "Hide " : "Show ") + tooltip;
}
void Draw(UiCanvas *uiCanvas, int x, int y, bool asHovered) override {
if(icon == NULL) {
icon = LoadPng("icons/text-window/" + iconName + ".png");
}
uiCanvas->DrawPixmap(icon, x, y - 24);
if(asHovered) {
uiCanvas->DrawRect(x - 2, x + 26, y + 2, y - 26,
/*fillColor=*/{ 255, 255, 0, 75 },
/*outlineColor=*/{});
}
if(!*(variable)) {
int s = 0, f = 24;
RgbaColor color = { 255, 0, 0, 150 };
uiCanvas->DrawLine(x+s, y-s, x+f, y-f, color, 2);
uiCanvas->DrawLine(x+s, y-f, x+f, y-s, color, 2);
}
}
int AdvanceWidth() override { return 32; }
void Click() override { SS.GW.ToggleBool(variable); }
};
class FacesButton : public ShowHideButton {
public:
FacesButton()
: ShowHideButton(&(SS.GW.showFaces), "faces", "") {}
std::string Tooltip() override {
if(*variable) {
return "Don't make faces selectable with mouse";
} else {
return "Make faces selectable with mouse";
}
}
};
class OccludedLinesButton : public Button {
public:
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> visibleIcon;
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> stippledIcon;
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> invisibleIcon;
std::string Tooltip() override {
switch(SS.GW.drawOccludedAs) {
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::INVISIBLE:
return "Stipple occluded lines";
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::STIPPLED:
return "Draw occluded lines";
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::VISIBLE:
return "Don't draw occluded lines";
default: ssassert(false, "Unexpected mode");
}
}
void Draw(UiCanvas *uiCanvas, int x, int y, bool asHovered) override {
if(visibleIcon == NULL) {
visibleIcon = LoadPng("icons/text-window/occluded-visible.png");
}
if(stippledIcon == NULL) {
stippledIcon = LoadPng("icons/text-window/occluded-stippled.png");
}
if(invisibleIcon == NULL) {
invisibleIcon = LoadPng("icons/text-window/occluded-invisible.png");
}
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> icon;
switch(SS.GW.drawOccludedAs) {
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::INVISIBLE: icon = invisibleIcon; break;
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::STIPPLED: icon = stippledIcon; break;
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::VISIBLE: icon = visibleIcon; break;
}
uiCanvas->DrawPixmap(icon, x, y - 24);
if(asHovered) {
uiCanvas->DrawRect(x - 2, x + 26, y + 2, y - 26,
/*fillColor=*/{ 255, 255, 0, 75 },
/*outlineColor=*/{});
}
}
int AdvanceWidth() override { return 32; }
void Click() override {
switch(SS.GW.drawOccludedAs) {
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::INVISIBLE:
SS.GW.drawOccludedAs = GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::STIPPLED;
break;
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::STIPPLED:
SS.GW.drawOccludedAs = GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::VISIBLE;
break;
case GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::VISIBLE:
SS.GW.drawOccludedAs = GraphicsWindow::DrawOccludedAs::INVISIBLE;
break;
}
SS.GenerateAll();
InvalidateGraphics();
SS.ScheduleShowTW();
}
};
static SpacerButton spacerButton;
static ShowHideButton workplanesButton =
{ &(SS.GW.showWorkplanes), "workplane", "workplanes from inactive groups" };
static ShowHideButton normalsButton =
{ &(SS.GW.showNormals), "normal", "normals" };
static ShowHideButton pointsButton =
{ &(SS.GW.showPoints), "point", "points" };
static ShowHideButton constraintsButton =
{ &(SS.GW.showConstraints), "constraint", "constraints and dimensions" };
static FacesButton facesButton;
static ShowHideButton shadedButton =
{ &(SS.GW.showShaded), "shaded", "shaded view of solid model" };
static ShowHideButton edgesButton =
{ &(SS.GW.showEdges), "edges", "edges of solid model" };
static ShowHideButton outlinesButton =
{ &(SS.GW.showOutlines), "outlines", "outline of solid model" };
static ShowHideButton meshButton =
{ &(SS.GW.showMesh), "mesh", "triangle mesh of solid model" };
static OccludedLinesButton occludedLinesButton;
static Button *buttons[] = {
&workplanesButton,
&normalsButton,
&pointsButton,
&constraintsButton,
&facesButton,
&spacerButton,
&shadedButton,
&edgesButton,
&outlinesButton,
&meshButton,
&spacerButton,
&occludedLinesButton,
};
const TextWindow::Color TextWindow::fgColors[] = {
{ 'd', RGBi(255, 255, 255) },
{ 'l', RGBi(100, 100, 255) },
{ 't', RGBi(255, 200, 0) },
{ 'h', RGBi( 90, 90, 90) },
{ 's', RGBi( 40, 255, 40) },
{ 'm', RGBi(200, 200, 0) },
{ 'r', RGBi( 0, 0, 0) },
{ 'x', RGBi(255, 20, 20) },
{ 'i', RGBi( 0, 255, 255) },
{ 'g', RGBi(160, 160, 160) },
{ 'b', RGBi(200, 200, 200) },
{ 0, RGBi( 0, 0, 0) }
};
const TextWindow::Color TextWindow::bgColors[] = {
{ 'd', RGBi( 0, 0, 0) },
{ 't', RGBi( 34, 15, 15) },
{ 'a', RGBi( 25, 25, 25) },
{ 'r', RGBi(255, 255, 255) },
{ 0, RGBi( 0, 0, 0) }
};
void TextWindow::MakeColorTable(const Color *in, float *out) {
int i;
for(i = 0; in[i].c != 0; i++) {
int c = in[i].c;
ssassert(c >= 0 && c <= 255, "Unexpected color index");
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
out[c*3 + 0] = in[i].color.redF();
out[c*3 + 1] = in[i].color.greenF();
out[c*3 + 2] = in[i].color.blueF();
}
}
void TextWindow::Init() {
canvas = CreateRenderer();
ClearSuper();
}
void TextWindow::ClearSuper() {
HideEditControl();
// Ugly hack, but not so ugly as the next line
std::shared_ptr<ViewportCanvas> oldCanvas = canvas;
// Cannot use *this = {} here because TextWindow instances
// are 2.4MB long; this causes stack overflows in prologue
// when built with MSVC, even with optimizations.
memset(this, 0, sizeof(*this));
// Return old canvas
canvas = oldCanvas;
MakeColorTable(fgColors, fgColorTable);
MakeColorTable(bgColors, bgColorTable);
ClearScreen();
Show();
}
void TextWindow::HideEditControl() {
editControl.colorPicker.show = false;
HideTextEditControl();
}
void TextWindow::ShowEditControl(int col, const std::string &str, int halfRow) {
if(halfRow < 0) halfRow = top[hoveredRow];
editControl.halfRow = halfRow;
editControl.col = col;
int x = LEFT_MARGIN + CHAR_WIDTH*col;
int y = (halfRow - SS.TW.scrollPos)*(LINE_HEIGHT/2);
ShowTextEditControl(x, y + 18, str);
}
void TextWindow::ShowEditControlWithColorPicker(int col, RgbaColor rgb)
{
SS.ScheduleShowTW();
editControl.colorPicker.show = true;
editControl.colorPicker.rgb = rgb;
editControl.colorPicker.h = 0;
editControl.colorPicker.s = 0;
editControl.colorPicker.v = 1;
ShowEditControl(col, ssprintf("%.2f, %.2f, %.2f", rgb.redF(), rgb.greenF(), rgb.blueF()));
}
void TextWindow::ClearScreen() {
int i, j;
for(i = 0; i < MAX_ROWS; i++) {
for(j = 0; j < MAX_COLS; j++) {
text[i][j] = ' ';
meta[i][j].fg = 'd';
meta[i][j].bg = 'd';
meta[i][j].link = NOT_A_LINK;
}
top[i] = i*2;
}
rows = 0;
}
void TextWindow::Printf(bool halfLine, const char *fmt, ...) {
if(!canvas) return;
va_list vl;
va_start(vl, fmt);
if(rows >= MAX_ROWS) return;
int r, c;
r = rows;
top[r] = (r == 0) ? 0 : (top[r-1] + (halfLine ? 3 : 2));
rows++;
for(c = 0; c < MAX_COLS; c++) {
text[r][c] = ' ';
meta[r][c].link = NOT_A_LINK;
}
char fg = 'd';
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
char bg = 'd';
2015-07-10 11:54:39 +00:00
RgbaColor bgRgb = RGBi(0, 0, 0);
int link = NOT_A_LINK;
uint32_t data = 0;
LinkFunction *f = NULL, *h = NULL;
c = 0;
while(*fmt) {
char buf[1024];
if(*fmt == '%') {
fmt++;
if(*fmt == '\0') goto done;
strcpy(buf, "");
switch(*fmt) {
case 'd': {
int v = va_arg(vl, int);
sprintf(buf, "%d", v);
break;
}
case 'x': {
unsigned int v = va_arg(vl, unsigned int);
sprintf(buf, "%08x", v);
break;
}
case '@': {
double v = va_arg(vl, double);
sprintf(buf, "%.2f", v);
break;
}
case '2': {
double v = va_arg(vl, double);
sprintf(buf, "%s%.2f", v < 0 ? "" : " ", v);
break;
}
case '3': {
double v = va_arg(vl, double);
sprintf(buf, "%s%.3f", v < 0 ? "" : " ", v);
break;
}
case '#': {
double v = va_arg(vl, double);
sprintf(buf, "%.3f", v);
break;
}
case 's': {
char *s = va_arg(vl, char *);
memcpy(buf, s, min(sizeof(buf), strlen(s)+1));
break;
}
case 'c': {
// 'char' is promoted to 'int' when passed through '...'
int v = va_arg(vl, int);
if(v == 0) {
strcpy(buf, "");
} else {
sprintf(buf, "%c", v);
}
break;
}
case 'E':
fg = 'd';
// leave the background, though
link = NOT_A_LINK;
data = 0;
f = NULL;
h = NULL;
break;
case 'F':
case 'B': {
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
char cc = fmt[1]; // color code
2015-07-10 11:54:39 +00:00
RgbaColor *rgbPtr = NULL;
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
switch(cc) {
case 0: goto done; // truncated directive
case 'p': cc = (char)va_arg(vl, int); break;
2015-07-10 11:54:39 +00:00
case 'z': rgbPtr = va_arg(vl, RgbaColor *); break;
}
if(*fmt == 'F') {
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
fg = cc;
} else {
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
bg = cc;
if(rgbPtr) bgRgb = *rgbPtr;
}
fmt++;
break;
}
case 'L':
if(fmt[1] == '\0') goto done;
fmt++;
if(*fmt == 'p') {
link = va_arg(vl, int);
} else {
link = *fmt;
}
break;
case 'f':
f = va_arg(vl, LinkFunction *);
break;
case 'h':
h = va_arg(vl, LinkFunction *);
break;
case 'D': {
unsigned int v = va_arg(vl, unsigned int);
data = (uint32_t)v;
break;
}
case '%':
strcpy(buf, "%");
break;
}
} else {
utf8_iterator it2(fmt), it1 = it2++;
strncpy(buf, fmt, it2 - it1);
buf[it2 - it1] = '\0';
}
for(utf8_iterator it(buf); *it; ++it) {
for(size_t i = 0; i < canvas->GetBitmapFont()->GetWidth(*it); i++) {
if(c >= MAX_COLS) goto done;
text[r][c] = (i == 0) ? *it : ' ';
meta[r][c].fg = fg;
meta[r][c].bg = bg;
meta[r][c].bgRgb = bgRgb;
meta[r][c].link = link;
meta[r][c].data = data;
meta[r][c].f = f;
meta[r][c].h = h;
c++;
}
}
fmt++;
}
while(c < MAX_COLS) {
meta[r][c].fg = fg;
meta[r][c].bg = bg;
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
meta[r][c].bgRgb = bgRgb;
c++;
}
done:
va_end(vl);
}
void TextWindow::Show() {
if(SS.GW.pending.operation == GraphicsWindow::Pending::NONE) SS.GW.ClearPending();
SS.GW.GroupSelection();
auto const &gs = SS.GW.gs;
// Make sure these tests agree with test used to draw indicator line on
// main list of groups screen.
if(SS.GW.pending.description) {
// A pending operation (that must be completed with the mouse in
// the graphics window) will preempt our usual display.
HideEditControl();
ShowHeader(false);
Printf(false, "");
Printf(false, "%s", SS.GW.pending.description);
Printf(true, "%Fl%f%Ll(cancel operation)%E",
&TextWindow::ScreenUnselectAll);
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
} else if((gs.n > 0 || gs.constraints > 0) &&
Convert all enumerations to use `enum class`. Specifically, take the old code that looks like this: class Foo { enum { X = 1, Y = 2 }; int kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::X; ... and convert it to this: class Foo { enum class Kind : uint32_t { X = 1, Y = 2 }; Kind kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::Kind::X; (In some cases the enumeration would not be in the class namespace, such as when it is generally useful.) The benefits are as follows: * The type of the field gives a clear indication of intent, both to humans and tools (such as binding generators). * The compiler is able to automatically warn when a switch is not exhaustive; but this is currently suppressed by the default: ssassert(false, ...) idiom. * Integers and plain enums are weakly type checked: they implicitly convert into each other. This can hide bugs where type conversion is performed but not intended. Enum classes are strongly type checked. * Plain enums pollute parent namespaces; enum classes do not. Almost every defined enum we have already has a kind of ad-hoc namespacing via `NAMESPACE_`, which is now explicit. * Plain enums do not have a well-defined ABI size, which is important for bindings. Enum classes can have it, if specified. We specify the base type for all enums as uint32_t, which is a safe choice and allows us to not change the numeric values of any variants. This commit introduces absolutely no functional change to the code, just renaming and change of types. It handles almost all cases, except GraphicsWindow::pending.operation, which needs minor functional change.
2016-05-20 08:31:20 +00:00
shown.screen != Screen::PASTE_TRANSFORMED)
{
Convert all enumerations to use `enum class`. Specifically, take the old code that looks like this: class Foo { enum { X = 1, Y = 2 }; int kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::X; ... and convert it to this: class Foo { enum class Kind : uint32_t { X = 1, Y = 2 }; Kind kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::Kind::X; (In some cases the enumeration would not be in the class namespace, such as when it is generally useful.) The benefits are as follows: * The type of the field gives a clear indication of intent, both to humans and tools (such as binding generators). * The compiler is able to automatically warn when a switch is not exhaustive; but this is currently suppressed by the default: ssassert(false, ...) idiom. * Integers and plain enums are weakly type checked: they implicitly convert into each other. This can hide bugs where type conversion is performed but not intended. Enum classes are strongly type checked. * Plain enums pollute parent namespaces; enum classes do not. Almost every defined enum we have already has a kind of ad-hoc namespacing via `NAMESPACE_`, which is now explicit. * Plain enums do not have a well-defined ABI size, which is important for bindings. Enum classes can have it, if specified. We specify the base type for all enums as uint32_t, which is a safe choice and allows us to not change the numeric values of any variants. This commit introduces absolutely no functional change to the code, just renaming and change of types. It handles almost all cases, except GraphicsWindow::pending.operation, which needs minor functional change.
2016-05-20 08:31:20 +00:00
if(edit.meaning != Edit::TTF_TEXT) HideEditControl();
ShowHeader(false);
DescribeSelection();
} else {
Convert all enumerations to use `enum class`. Specifically, take the old code that looks like this: class Foo { enum { X = 1, Y = 2 }; int kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::X; ... and convert it to this: class Foo { enum class Kind : uint32_t { X = 1, Y = 2 }; Kind kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::Kind::X; (In some cases the enumeration would not be in the class namespace, such as when it is generally useful.) The benefits are as follows: * The type of the field gives a clear indication of intent, both to humans and tools (such as binding generators). * The compiler is able to automatically warn when a switch is not exhaustive; but this is currently suppressed by the default: ssassert(false, ...) idiom. * Integers and plain enums are weakly type checked: they implicitly convert into each other. This can hide bugs where type conversion is performed but not intended. Enum classes are strongly type checked. * Plain enums pollute parent namespaces; enum classes do not. Almost every defined enum we have already has a kind of ad-hoc namespacing via `NAMESPACE_`, which is now explicit. * Plain enums do not have a well-defined ABI size, which is important for bindings. Enum classes can have it, if specified. We specify the base type for all enums as uint32_t, which is a safe choice and allows us to not change the numeric values of any variants. This commit introduces absolutely no functional change to the code, just renaming and change of types. It handles almost all cases, except GraphicsWindow::pending.operation, which needs minor functional change.
2016-05-20 08:31:20 +00:00
if(edit.meaning == Edit::TTF_TEXT) HideEditControl();
ShowHeader(true);
switch(shown.screen) {
default:
Convert all enumerations to use `enum class`. Specifically, take the old code that looks like this: class Foo { enum { X = 1, Y = 2 }; int kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::X; ... and convert it to this: class Foo { enum class Kind : uint32_t { X = 1, Y = 2 }; Kind kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::Kind::X; (In some cases the enumeration would not be in the class namespace, such as when it is generally useful.) The benefits are as follows: * The type of the field gives a clear indication of intent, both to humans and tools (such as binding generators). * The compiler is able to automatically warn when a switch is not exhaustive; but this is currently suppressed by the default: ssassert(false, ...) idiom. * Integers and plain enums are weakly type checked: they implicitly convert into each other. This can hide bugs where type conversion is performed but not intended. Enum classes are strongly type checked. * Plain enums pollute parent namespaces; enum classes do not. Almost every defined enum we have already has a kind of ad-hoc namespacing via `NAMESPACE_`, which is now explicit. * Plain enums do not have a well-defined ABI size, which is important for bindings. Enum classes can have it, if specified. We specify the base type for all enums as uint32_t, which is a safe choice and allows us to not change the numeric values of any variants. This commit introduces absolutely no functional change to the code, just renaming and change of types. It handles almost all cases, except GraphicsWindow::pending.operation, which needs minor functional change.
2016-05-20 08:31:20 +00:00
shown.screen = Screen::LIST_OF_GROUPS;
// fall through
Convert all enumerations to use `enum class`. Specifically, take the old code that looks like this: class Foo { enum { X = 1, Y = 2 }; int kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::X; ... and convert it to this: class Foo { enum class Kind : uint32_t { X = 1, Y = 2 }; Kind kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::Kind::X; (In some cases the enumeration would not be in the class namespace, such as when it is generally useful.) The benefits are as follows: * The type of the field gives a clear indication of intent, both to humans and tools (such as binding generators). * The compiler is able to automatically warn when a switch is not exhaustive; but this is currently suppressed by the default: ssassert(false, ...) idiom. * Integers and plain enums are weakly type checked: they implicitly convert into each other. This can hide bugs where type conversion is performed but not intended. Enum classes are strongly type checked. * Plain enums pollute parent namespaces; enum classes do not. Almost every defined enum we have already has a kind of ad-hoc namespacing via `NAMESPACE_`, which is now explicit. * Plain enums do not have a well-defined ABI size, which is important for bindings. Enum classes can have it, if specified. We specify the base type for all enums as uint32_t, which is a safe choice and allows us to not change the numeric values of any variants. This commit introduces absolutely no functional change to the code, just renaming and change of types. It handles almost all cases, except GraphicsWindow::pending.operation, which needs minor functional change.
2016-05-20 08:31:20 +00:00
case Screen::LIST_OF_GROUPS: ShowListOfGroups(); break;
case Screen::GROUP_INFO: ShowGroupInfo(); break;
case Screen::GROUP_SOLVE_INFO: ShowGroupSolveInfo(); break;
case Screen::CONFIGURATION: ShowConfiguration(); break;
case Screen::STEP_DIMENSION: ShowStepDimension(); break;
case Screen::LIST_OF_STYLES: ShowListOfStyles(); break;
case Screen::STYLE_INFO: ShowStyleInfo(); break;
case Screen::PASTE_TRANSFORMED: ShowPasteTransformed(); break;
case Screen::EDIT_VIEW: ShowEditView(); break;
case Screen::TANGENT_ARC: ShowTangentArc(); break;
}
}
Printf(false, "");
// Make sure there's room for the color picker
if(editControl.colorPicker.show) {
int pickerHeight = 25;
int halfRow = editControl.halfRow;
if(top[rows-1] - halfRow < pickerHeight && rows < MAX_ROWS) {
rows++;
top[rows-1] = halfRow + pickerHeight;
}
}
InvalidateText();
}
void TextWindow::TimerCallback()
{
tooltippedButton = hoveredButton;
InvalidateText();
}
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
void TextWindow::DrawOrHitTestIcons(UiCanvas *uiCanvas, TextWindow::DrawOrHitHow how,
double mx, double my)
{
int width, height;
GetTextWindowSize(&width, &height);
int x = 20, y = 33 + LINE_HEIGHT;
y -= scrollPos*(LINE_HEIGHT/2);
if(how == PAINT) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
int top = y - 28, bot = y + 4;
uiCanvas->DrawRect(0, width, top, bot,
/*fillColor=*/{ 30, 30, 30, 255 }, /*outlineColor=*/{});
}
Button *oldHovered = hoveredButton;
if(how != PAINT) {
hoveredButton = NULL;
}
for(Button *button : buttons) {
if(how == PAINT) {
button->Draw(uiCanvas, x, y, (button == hoveredButton));
} else if(mx > x - 2 && mx < x + 26 &&
my < y + 2 && my > y - 26) {
// The mouse is hovered over this icon, so do the tooltip
// stuff.
if(button != tooltippedButton) {
oldMousePos = Point2d::From(mx, my);
}
if(button != oldHovered || how == CLICK) {
SetTimerFor(1000);
}
hoveredButton = button;
if(how == CLICK) {
button->Click();
}
}
x += button->AdvanceWidth();
}
if(how != PAINT && hoveredButton != oldHovered) {
InvalidateText();
}
if(tooltippedButton && !tooltippedButton->Tooltip().empty()) {
if(how == PAINT) {
std::string tooltip = tooltippedButton->Tooltip();
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
int ox = (int)oldMousePos.x, oy = (int)oldMousePos.y - LINE_HEIGHT;
ox += 3;
oy -= 3;
int tw = (tooltip.length() + 1) * (CHAR_WIDTH - 1);
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
ox = min(ox, (width - 25) - tw);
oy = max(oy, 5);
uiCanvas->DrawRect(ox, ox+tw, oy, oy+LINE_HEIGHT,
/*fillColor=*/{ 255, 255, 150, 255 },
/*outlineColor=*/{ 0, 0, 0, 255 },
/*zIndex=*/1);
uiCanvas->DrawBitmapText(tooltip, ox+5, oy-3+LINE_HEIGHT, { 0, 0, 0, 255 },
/*zIndex=*/1);
} else {
if(!hoveredButton || (hoveredButton != tooltippedButton)) {
tooltippedButton = NULL;
InvalidateGraphics();
}
// And if we're hovered, then we've set a timer that will cause
// us to show the tool tip later.
}
}
}
//----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Given (x, y, z) = (h, s, v) in [0,6), [0,1], [0,1], return (x, y, z) =
// (r, g, b) all in [0, 1].
//----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vector TextWindow::HsvToRgb(Vector hsv) {
if(hsv.x >= 6) hsv.x -= 6;
Vector rgb;
double hmod2 = hsv.x;
while(hmod2 >= 2) hmod2 -= 2;
double x = (1 - fabs(hmod2 - 1));
if(hsv.x < 1) {
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
rgb = Vector::From(1, x, 0);
} else if(hsv.x < 2) {
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
rgb = Vector::From(x, 1, 0);
} else if(hsv.x < 3) {
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
rgb = Vector::From(0, 1, x);
} else if(hsv.x < 4) {
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
rgb = Vector::From(0, x, 1);
} else if(hsv.x < 5) {
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
rgb = Vector::From(x, 0, 1);
} else {
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
rgb = Vector::From(1, 0, x);
}
double c = hsv.y*hsv.z;
double m = 1 - hsv.z;
rgb = rgb.ScaledBy(c);
rgb = rgb.Plus(Vector::From(m, m, m));
return rgb;
}
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> TextWindow::HsvPattern2d(int w, int h) {
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> pixmap = Pixmap::Create(Pixmap::Format::RGB, w, h);
for(size_t j = 0; j < pixmap->height; j++) {
size_t p = pixmap->stride * j;
for(size_t i = 0; i < pixmap->width; i++) {
Vector hsv = Vector::From(6.0*i/(pixmap->width-1), 1.0*j/(pixmap->height-1), 1);
Vector rgb = HsvToRgb(hsv);
rgb = rgb.ScaledBy(255);
pixmap->data[p++] = (uint8_t)rgb.x;
pixmap->data[p++] = (uint8_t)rgb.y;
pixmap->data[p++] = (uint8_t)rgb.z;
}
}
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
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return pixmap;
}
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> TextWindow::HsvPattern1d(double hue, double sat, int w, int h) {
std::shared_ptr<Pixmap> pixmap = Pixmap::Create(Pixmap::Format::RGB, w, h);
for(size_t i = 0; i < pixmap->height; i++) {
size_t p = i * pixmap->stride;
for(size_t j = 0; j < pixmap->width; j++) {
Vector hsv = Vector::From(6*hue, sat, 1.0*(pixmap->width - 1 - j)/pixmap->width);
Vector rgb = HsvToRgb(hsv);
rgb = rgb.ScaledBy(255);
pixmap->data[p++] = (uint8_t)rgb.x;
pixmap->data[p++] = (uint8_t)rgb.y;
pixmap->data[p++] = (uint8_t)rgb.z;
}
}
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
return pixmap;
}
void TextWindow::ColorPickerDone() {
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RgbaColor rgb = editControl.colorPicker.rgb;
EditControlDone(ssprintf("%.2f, %.2f, %.3f", rgb.redF(), rgb.greenF(), rgb.blueF()).c_str());
}
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
bool TextWindow::DrawOrHitTestColorPicker(UiCanvas *uiCanvas, DrawOrHitHow how, bool leftDown,
double x, double y)
{
bool mousePointerAsHand = false;
if(how == HOVER && !leftDown) {
editControl.colorPicker.picker1dActive = false;
editControl.colorPicker.picker2dActive = false;
}
if(!editControl.colorPicker.show) return false;
if(how == CLICK || (how == HOVER && leftDown)) InvalidateText();
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static const RgbaColor BaseColor[12] = {
RGBi(255, 0, 0),
RGBi( 0, 255, 0),
RGBi( 0, 0, 255),
RGBi( 0, 255, 255),
RGBi(255, 0, 255),
RGBi(255, 255, 0),
RGBi(255, 127, 0),
RGBi(255, 0, 127),
RGBi( 0, 255, 127),
RGBi(127, 255, 0),
RGBi(127, 0, 255),
RGBi( 0, 127, 255),
};
int width, height;
GetTextWindowSize(&width, &height);
int px = LEFT_MARGIN + CHAR_WIDTH*editControl.col;
int py = (editControl.halfRow - SS.TW.scrollPos)*(LINE_HEIGHT/2);
py += LINE_HEIGHT + 5;
static const int WIDTH = 16, HEIGHT = 12;
static const int PITCH = 18, SIZE = 15;
px = min(px, width - (WIDTH*PITCH + 40));
int pxm = px + WIDTH*PITCH + 11,
pym = py + HEIGHT*PITCH + 7;
int bw = 6;
if(how == PAINT) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
uiCanvas->DrawRect(px, pxm+bw, py, pym+bw,
/*fillColor=*/{ 50, 50, 50, 255 },
/*outlineColor=*/{});
uiCanvas->DrawRect(px+(bw/2), pxm+(bw/2), py+(bw/2), pym+(bw/2),
/*fillColor=*/{ 0, 0, 0, 255 },
/*outlineColor=*/{});
} else {
if(x < px || x > pxm+(bw/2) ||
y < py || y > pym+(bw/2))
{
return false;
}
}
px += (bw/2);
py += (bw/2);
int i, j;
for(i = 0; i < WIDTH/2; i++) {
for(j = 0; j < HEIGHT; j++) {
Vector rgb;
2015-07-10 11:54:39 +00:00
RgbaColor d;
if(i == 0 && j < 8) {
d = SS.modelColor[j];
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
rgb = Vector::From(d.redF(), d.greenF(), d.blueF());
} else if(i == 0) {
double a = (j - 8.0)/3.0;
rgb = Vector::From(a, a, a);
} else {
d = BaseColor[j];
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
rgb = Vector::From(d.redF(), d.greenF(), d.blueF());
if(i >= 2 && i <= 4) {
double a = (i == 2) ? 0.2 : (i == 3) ? 0.3 : 0.4;
rgb = rgb.Plus(Vector::From(a, a, a));
}
if(i >= 5 && i <= 7) {
double a = (i == 5) ? 0.7 : (i == 6) ? 0.4 : 0.18;
rgb = rgb.ScaledBy(a);
}
}
rgb = rgb.ClampWithin(0, 1);
int sx = px + 5 + PITCH*(i + 8) + 4, sy = py + 5 + PITCH*j;
if(how == PAINT) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
uiCanvas->DrawRect(sx, sx+SIZE, sy, sy+SIZE,
/*fillColor=*/RGBf(rgb.x, rgb.y, rgb.z),
/*outlineColor=*/{});
} else if(how == CLICK) {
if(x >= sx && x <= sx+SIZE && y >= sy && y <= sy+SIZE) {
editControl.colorPicker.rgb = RGBf(rgb.x, rgb.y, rgb.z);
ColorPickerDone();
}
} else if(how == HOVER) {
if(x >= sx && x <= sx+SIZE && y >= sy && y <= sy+SIZE) {
mousePointerAsHand = true;
}
}
}
}
int hxm, hym;
int hx = px + 5, hy = py + 5;
hxm = hx + PITCH*7 + SIZE;
hym = hy + PITCH*2 + SIZE;
if(how == PAINT) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
uiCanvas->DrawRect(hx, hxm, hy, hym,
/*fillColor=*/editControl.colorPicker.rgb,
/*outlineColor=*/{});
} else if(how == CLICK) {
if(x >= hx && x <= hxm && y >= hy && y <= hym) {
ColorPickerDone();
}
} else if(how == HOVER) {
if(x >= hx && x <= hxm && y >= hy && y <= hym) {
mousePointerAsHand = true;
}
}
hy += PITCH*3;
hxm = hx + PITCH*7 + SIZE;
hym = hy + PITCH*1 + SIZE;
// The one-dimensional thing to pick the color's value
if(how == PAINT) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
uiCanvas->DrawPixmap(HsvPattern1d(editControl.colorPicker.h,
editControl.colorPicker.s,
hxm-hx, hym-hy),
hx, hy);
int cx = hx+(int)((hxm-hx)*(1.0 - editControl.colorPicker.v));
uiCanvas->DrawLine(cx, hy, cx, hym, { 0, 0, 0, 255 });
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
} else if(how == CLICK ||
(how == HOVER && leftDown && editControl.colorPicker.picker1dActive))
{
if(x >= hx && x <= hxm && y >= hy && y <= hym) {
editControl.colorPicker.v = 1 - (x - hx)/(hxm - hx);
Vector rgb = HsvToRgb(Vector::From(
6*editControl.colorPicker.h,
editControl.colorPicker.s,
editControl.colorPicker.v));
editControl.colorPicker.rgb = RGBf(rgb.x, rgb.y, rgb.z);
editControl.colorPicker.picker1dActive = true;
}
}
// and advance our vertical position
hy += PITCH*2;
hxm = hx + PITCH*7 + SIZE;
hym = hy + PITCH*6 + SIZE;
// Two-dimensional thing to pick a color by hue and saturation
if(how == PAINT) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
uiCanvas->DrawPixmap(HsvPattern2d(hxm-hx, hym-hy), hx, hy);
int cx = hx+(int)((hxm-hx)*editControl.colorPicker.h),
cy = hy+(int)((hym-hy)*editControl.colorPicker.s);
uiCanvas->DrawLine(cx - 5, cy, cx + 4, cy, { 255, 255, 255, 255 });
uiCanvas->DrawLine(cx, cy - 5, cx, cy + 4, { 255, 255, 255, 255 });
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
} else if(how == CLICK ||
(how == HOVER && leftDown && editControl.colorPicker.picker2dActive))
{
if(x >= hx && x <= hxm && y >= hy && y <= hym) {
double h = (x - hx)/(hxm - hx),
s = (y - hy)/(hym - hy);
editControl.colorPicker.h = h;
editControl.colorPicker.s = s;
Vector rgb = HsvToRgb(Vector::From(
6*editControl.colorPicker.h,
editControl.colorPicker.s,
editControl.colorPicker.v));
editControl.colorPicker.rgb = RGBf(rgb.x, rgb.y, rgb.z);
editControl.colorPicker.picker2dActive = true;
}
}
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
SetMousePointerToHand(mousePointerAsHand);
return true;
}
void TextWindow::Paint() {
if (!canvas) return;
int width, height;
GetTextWindowSize(&width, &height);
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
Camera camera = {};
camera.width = width;
camera.height = height;
camera.LoadIdentity();
camera.offset.x = -(double)camera.width / 2.0;
camera.offset.y = -(double)camera.height / 2.0;
Lighting lighting = {};
lighting.backgroundColor = RGBi(0, 0, 0);
canvas->NewFrame();
canvas->SetCamera(camera);
canvas->SetLighting(lighting);
2015-03-29 00:30:52 +00:00
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
UiCanvas uiCanvas = {};
uiCanvas.canvas = canvas;
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
uiCanvas.flip = true;
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
halfRows = camera.height / (LINE_HEIGHT/2);
int bottom = top[rows-1] + 2;
scrollPos = min(scrollPos, bottom - halfRows);
scrollPos = max(scrollPos, 0);
// Let's set up the scroll bar first
MoveTextScrollbarTo(scrollPos, top[rows - 1] + 1, halfRows);
// Now paint the window.
int r, c, a;
for(a = 0; a < 2; a++) {
for(r = 0; r < rows; r++) {
int ltop = top[r];
if(ltop < (scrollPos-1)) continue;
if(ltop > scrollPos+halfRows) break;
for(c = 0; c < min((width/CHAR_WIDTH)+1, (int) MAX_COLS); c++) {
int x = LEFT_MARGIN + c*CHAR_WIDTH;
int y = (ltop-scrollPos)*(LINE_HEIGHT/2) + 4;
int fg = meta[r][c].fg;
int bg = meta[r][c].bg;
// On the first pass, all the background quads; on the next
// pass, all the foreground (i.e., font) quads.
if(a == 0) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
RgbaColor bgRgb = meta[r][c].bgRgb;
int bh = LINE_HEIGHT, adj = 0;
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
if(bg == 'z') {
bh = CHAR_HEIGHT;
adj += 2;
} else {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
bgRgb = RgbaColor::FromFloat(bgColorTable[bg*3+0],
bgColorTable[bg*3+1],
bgColorTable[bg*3+2]);
}
Replaced RGB-color integers with dedicated data structure RGB colors were represented using a uint32_t with the red, green and blue values stuffed into the lower three octets (i.e. 0x00BBGGRR), like Microsoft's COLORREF. This approach did not lend itself to type safety, however, so this change replaces it with an RgbColor class that provides the same infomation plus a handful of useful methods to work with it. (Note that sizeof(RgbColor) == sizeof(uint32_t), so this change should not lead to memory bloat.) Some of the new methods/fields replace what were previously macro calls; e.g. RED(c) is now c.red, REDf(c) is now c.redF(). The .Equals() method is now used instead of == to compare colors. RGB colors still need to be represented as packed integers in file I/O and preferences, so the methods .FromPackedInt() and .ToPackedInt() are provided. Also implemented are Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color(), type-safe wrappers around Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Int() that facilitate I/O with preferences. (Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Color() are defined outside of the system-dependent code to minimize the footprint of the latter; because the same can be done with Cnf{Freeze,Thaw}Bool(), those are also moved out of the system code with this commit.) Color integers were being OR'ed with 0x80000000 in some places for two distinct purposes: One, to indicate use of a default color in glxFillMesh(); this has been replaced by use of the .UseDefault() method. Two, to indicate to TextWindow::Printf() that the format argument of a "%Bp"/"%Fp" specifier is an RGB color rather than a color "code" from TextWindow::bgColors[] or TextWindow::fgColors[] (as the specifier can accept either); instead, we define a new flag "z" (as in "%Bz" or "%Fz") to indicate an RGBcolor pointer, leaving "%Bp"/"%Fp" to indicate a color code exclusively. (This also allows TextWindow::meta[][].bg to be a char instead of an int, partly compensating for the new .bgRgb field added immediately after.) In array declarations, RGB colors could previously be specified as 0 (often in a terminating element). As that no longer works, we define NULL_COLOR, which serves much the same purpose for RgbColor variables as NULL serves for pointers.
2013-10-16 20:00:58 +00:00
if(bg != 'd') {
// Move the quad down a bit, so that the descenders
// still have the correct background.
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
uiCanvas.DrawRect(x, x + CHAR_WIDTH, y + adj, y + adj + bh,
/*fillColor=*/bgRgb, /*outlineColor=*/{});
}
} else if(a == 1) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
RgbaColor fgRgb = RgbaColor::FromFloat(fgColorTable[fg*3+0],
fgColorTable[fg*3+1],
fgColorTable[fg*3+2]);
if(text[r][c] != ' ') {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
uiCanvas.DrawBitmapChar(text[r][c], x, y + CHAR_HEIGHT, fgRgb);
}
// If this is a link and it's hovered, then draw the
// underline
if(meta[r][c].link && meta[r][c].link != 'n' &&
(r == hoveredRow && c == hoveredCol))
{
int cs = c, cf = c;
while(cs >= 0 && meta[r][cs].link &&
meta[r][cs].f == meta[r][c].f &&
meta[r][cs].data == meta[r][c].data)
{
cs--;
}
cs++;
while( meta[r][cf].link &&
meta[r][cf].f == meta[r][c].f &&
meta[r][cf].data == meta[r][c].data)
{
cf++;
}
// But don't underline checkboxes or radio buttons
while(((text[r][cs] >= 0xe000 && text[r][cs] <= 0xefff) ||
text[r][cs] == ' ') &&
cs < cf)
{
cs++;
}
// Always use the color of the rightmost character
// in the link, so that underline is consistent color
fg = meta[r][cf-1].fg;
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
fgRgb = RgbaColor::FromFloat(fgColorTable[fg*3+0],
fgColorTable[fg*3+1],
fgColorTable[fg*3+2]);
int yp = y + CHAR_HEIGHT;
uiCanvas.DrawLine(LEFT_MARGIN + cs*CHAR_WIDTH, yp,
LEFT_MARGIN + cf*CHAR_WIDTH, yp,
fgRgb);
}
}
}
}
}
// The line to indicate the column of radio buttons that indicates the
// active group.
SS.GW.GroupSelection();
auto const &gs = SS.GW.gs;
// Make sure this test agrees with test to determine which screen is drawn
if(!SS.GW.pending.description && gs.n == 0 && gs.constraints == 0 &&
Convert all enumerations to use `enum class`. Specifically, take the old code that looks like this: class Foo { enum { X = 1, Y = 2 }; int kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::X; ... and convert it to this: class Foo { enum class Kind : uint32_t { X = 1, Y = 2 }; Kind kind; } ... foo.kind = Foo::Kind::X; (In some cases the enumeration would not be in the class namespace, such as when it is generally useful.) The benefits are as follows: * The type of the field gives a clear indication of intent, both to humans and tools (such as binding generators). * The compiler is able to automatically warn when a switch is not exhaustive; but this is currently suppressed by the default: ssassert(false, ...) idiom. * Integers and plain enums are weakly type checked: they implicitly convert into each other. This can hide bugs where type conversion is performed but not intended. Enum classes are strongly type checked. * Plain enums pollute parent namespaces; enum classes do not. Almost every defined enum we have already has a kind of ad-hoc namespacing via `NAMESPACE_`, which is now explicit. * Plain enums do not have a well-defined ABI size, which is important for bindings. Enum classes can have it, if specified. We specify the base type for all enums as uint32_t, which is a safe choice and allows us to not change the numeric values of any variants. This commit introduces absolutely no functional change to the code, just renaming and change of types. It handles almost all cases, except GraphicsWindow::pending.operation, which needs minor functional change.
2016-05-20 08:31:20 +00:00
shown.screen == Screen::LIST_OF_GROUPS)
{
int x = 29, y = 70 + LINE_HEIGHT;
y -= scrollPos*(LINE_HEIGHT/2);
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
RgbaColor color = RgbaColor::FromFloat(fgColorTable['t'*3+0],
fgColorTable['t'*3+1],
fgColorTable['t'*3+2]);
uiCanvas.DrawLine(x, y, x, y+40, color);
}
// The header has some icons that are drawn separately from the text
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
DrawOrHitTestIcons(&uiCanvas, PAINT, 0, 0);
// And we may show a color picker for certain editable fields
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
DrawOrHitTestColorPicker(&uiCanvas, PAINT, false, 0, 0);
canvas->FlushFrame();
canvas->Clear();
}
void TextWindow::MouseEvent(bool leftClick, bool leftDown, double x, double y) {
if(TextEditControlIsVisible() || GraphicsEditControlIsVisible()) {
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-05-31 00:55:13 +00:00
if(DrawOrHitTestColorPicker(NULL, leftClick ? CLICK : HOVER, leftDown, x, y))
{
return;
}
if(leftClick) {
HideEditControl();
HideGraphicsEditControl();
} else {
SetMousePointerToHand(false);
}
return;
}
Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface. This has several desirable consequences: * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that only have that OpenGL version; * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive reuploads; * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now a straightforward Canvas implementation; * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection) in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple viewports; * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa and GTK; * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp. * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to identifier conflicts are no longer included globally; * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different OpenGL version. Note these implementation details of Canvas: * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which would provide assurance against code that could accidentally put something projection-dependent in the cache; * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles. * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix. This is so that a future renderer into an output format that uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those. Some additional internal changes were required to enable this: * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>. This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak) reference. * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well as rendergl1.cpp). * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed. While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes happened anyway: * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly rendered much wider. * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned. * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing some minor artifacts. * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render the workplane name. * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style. * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates those. Some debug functionality was added: * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when rendering under 60fps is drawn.
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DrawOrHitTestIcons(NULL, leftClick ? CLICK : HOVER, x, y);
GraphicsWindow::Selection ps = SS.GW.hover;
SS.GW.hover.Clear();
int prevHoveredRow = hoveredRow,
prevHoveredCol = hoveredCol;
hoveredRow = 0;
hoveredCol = 0;
// Find the corresponding character in the text buffer
int c = (int)((x - LEFT_MARGIN) / CHAR_WIDTH);
int hh = (LINE_HEIGHT)/2;
y += scrollPos*hh;
int r;
for(r = 0; r < rows; r++) {
if(y >= top[r]*hh && y <= (top[r]+2)*hh) {
break;
}
}
if(r >= 0 && c >= 0 && r < rows && c < MAX_COLS) {
SetMousePointerToHand(false);
hoveredRow = r;
hoveredCol = c;
const auto &item = meta[r][c];
if(leftClick) {
if(item.link && item.f) {
(item.f)(item.link, item.data);
Show();
InvalidateGraphics();
}
} else {
if(item.link) {
SetMousePointerToHand(true);
if(item.h) {
(item.h)(item.link, item.data);
}
} else {
SetMousePointerToHand(false);
}
}
}
if((!ps.Equals(&(SS.GW.hover))) ||
prevHoveredRow != hoveredRow ||
prevHoveredCol != hoveredCol)
{
InvalidateGraphics();
InvalidateText();
}
}
void TextWindow::MouseLeave() {
tooltippedButton = NULL;
hoveredButton = NULL;
hoveredRow = 0;
hoveredCol = 0;
InvalidateText();
}
void TextWindow::ScrollbarEvent(int newPos) {
if(TextEditControlIsVisible())
return;
int bottom = top[rows-1] + 2;
newPos = min(newPos, bottom - halfRows);
newPos = max(newPos, 0);
if(newPos != scrollPos) {
scrollPos = newPos;
MoveTextScrollbarTo(scrollPos, top[rows - 1] + 1, halfRows);
InvalidateText();
}
}
}