Commit Graph

104 Commits (bb7a6cbbbaa266c2b8103bd4c0037772b534ff3e)

Author SHA1 Message Date
whitequark 4c01461316 OS X: move resources to res/. 2016-05-18 11:24:23 +00:00
whitequark e36ee32def freedesktop: move resources to res/. 2016-05-18 11:24:23 +00:00
whitequark a6b6d98a94 Win32: move resources to res/. 2016-05-18 11:24:23 +00:00
whitequark f4c01f670c Implement a resource system.
Currently, icons, fonts, etc are converted to C structures at compile
time and are hardcoded to the binary. This presents several problems:

  * Cross-compilation is complicated. Right now, it is necessary
    to be able to run executables for the target platform; this
    happens to work with wine-binfmt installed, but is rather ugly.

  * Icons can only have one resolution. On OS X, modern software is
    expected to take advantage of high-DPI ("Retina") screens and
    use so-called @2x assets when ran in high-DPI mode.

  * Localization is complicated. Win32 and OS X provide built-in
    support for loading the resource appropriate for the user's
    locale.

  * Embedding strings can only be done as raw strings, using C++'s
    R"(...)" literals. This precludes embedding sizable strings,
    e.g. JavaScript libraries as used in Three.js export, and makes
    git history less useful. Not embedding the libraries means we
    have to rely on external CDNs, which requires an Internet
    connection and adds a glaring point of failure.

  * Linux distribution guidelines are violated. All architecture-
    independent data, especially large data such as fonts, is
    expected to be in /usr/share, not in the binary.

  * Customization is impossible without recompilation. Minor
    modifications like adding a few missing vector font characters
    or adjusting localization require a complete development
    environment, which is unreasonable to expect from users of
    a mechanical CAD.

As such, this commit adds a resource system that bundles (and
sometimes builds) resources with the executable. Where they go is
platform-dependent:

  * on Win32: into resources of the executable, which allows us to
    keep distributing one file;
  * on OS X: into the app bundle;
  * on other *nix: into /usr/share/solvespace/ or ../res/ (relative
    to the executable path), the latter allowing us to run freshly
    built executables without installation.

It also subsides the platform-specific resources that are in src/.

The resource system is not yet used for anything; this will be added
in later commits.
2016-05-18 11:24:23 +00:00