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/*
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
* ***** BEGIN GPL LICENSE BLOCK *****
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
* of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
2010-02-12 13:34:04 +00:00
* Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
*
* The Original Code is Copyright (C) 2001-2002 by NaN Holding BV.
* All rights reserved.
*
Drag and drop 2.5 integration! Finally, slashdot regulars can use Blender too now! :) ** Drag works as follows: - drag-able items are defined by the standard interface ui toolkit - each button can get this feature, via uiButSetDragXXX(but, ...). There are calls to define drag-able images, ID blocks, RNA paths, file paths, and so on. By default you drag an icon, exceptionally an ImBuf - Drag items are registered centrally in the WM, it allows more drag items simultaneous too, but not implemented ** Drop works as follows: - On mouse release, and if drag items exist in the WM, it converts the mouse event to an EVT_DROP type. This event then gets the full drag info as customdata - drop regions are defined with WM_dropbox_add(), similar to keymaps you can make a "drop map" this way, which become 'drop map handlers' in the queues. - next to that the UI kit handles some common button types (like accepting ID or names) to be catching a drop event too. - Every "drop box" has two callbacks: - poll() = check if the event drag data is relevant for this box - copy() = fill in custom properties in the dropbox to initialize an operator - The dropbox handler then calls its standard Operator with its dropbox properties. ** Currently implemented Drag items: - ID icons in browse buttons - ID icons in context menu of properties region - ID icons in outliner and rna viewer - FileBrowser icons - FileBrowser preview images Drag-able icons are subtly visualized by making them brighter a bit on mouse-over. In case the icon is a button or UI element too (most cases), the drag-able feature will make the item react to mouse-release instead of mouse-press. Drop options: - UI buttons: ID and text buttons (paste name) - View3d: Object ID drop copies object - View3d: Material ID drop assigns to object under cursor - View3d: Image ID drop assigns to object UV texture under cursor - Sequencer: Path drop will add either Image or Movie strip - Image window: Path drop will open image ** Drag and drop Notes: - Dropping into another Blender window (from same application) works too. I've added code that passes on mousemoves and clicks to other windows, without activating them though. This does make using multi-window Blender a bit friendler. - Dropping a file path to an image, is not the same as dropping an Image ID... keep this in mind. Sequencer for example wants paths to be dropped, textures in 3d window wants an Image ID. - Although drop boxes could be defined via Python, I suggest they're part of the UI and editor design (= how we want an editor to work), and not default offered configurable like keymaps. - At the moment only one item can be dragged at a time. This is for several reasons.... For one, Blender doesn't have a well defined uniform way to define "what is selected" (files, outliner items, etc). Secondly there's potential conflicts on what todo when you drop mixed drag sets on spots. All undefined stuff... nice for later. - Example to bypass the above: a collection of images that form a strip, should be represented in filewindow as a single sequence anyway. This then will fit well and gets handled neatly by design. - Another option to check is to allow multiple options per drop... it could show the operator as a sort of menu, allowing arrow or scrollwheel to choose. For time being I'd prefer to try to design a singular drop though, just offer only one drop action per data type on given spots. - What does work already, but a tad slow, is to use a function that detects an object (type) under cursor, so a drag item's option can be further refined (like drop object on object = parent). (disabled) ** More notes - Added saving for Region layouts (like split points for toolbar) - Label buttons now handle mouse over - File list: added full path entry for drop feature. - Filesel bugfix: wm_operator_exec() got called there and fully handled, while WM event code tried same. Added new OPERATOR_HANDLED flag for this. Maybe python needs it too? - Cocoa: added window move event, so multi-win setups work OK (didnt save). - Interface_handlers.c: removed win->active - Severe area copy bug: area handlers were not set to NULL - Filesel bugfix: next/prev folder list was not copied on area copies ** Leftover todos - Cocoa windows seem to hang on cases still... needs check - Cocoa 'draw overlap' swap doesn't work - Cocoa window loses focus permanently on using Spotlight (for these reasons, makefile building has Carbon as default atm) - ListView templates in UI cannot become dragged yet, needs review... it consists of two overlapping UI elements, preventing handling icon clicks. - There's already Ghost library code to handle dropping from OS into Blender window. I've noticed this code is unfinished for Macs, but seems to be complete for Windows. Needs test... currently, an external drop event will print in console when succesfully delivered to Blender's WM.
2010-01-26 18:18:21 +00:00
* Contributor(s): Blender Foundation
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
*
* ***** END GPL LICENSE BLOCK *****
*/
2011-02-27 20:29:51 +00:00
/** \file blender/editors/interface/interface_draw.c
* \ingroup edinterface
*/
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
#include <math.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "DNA_color_types.h"
#include "DNA_object_types.h"
#include "DNA_screen_types.h"
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
#include "DNA_movieclip_types.h"
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
#include "BLI_math.h"
#include "BLI_rect.h"
#include "BLI_string.h"
#include "BLI_utildefines.h"
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
#include "BKE_colortools.h"
Merge of the PyNodes branch (aka "custom nodes") into trunk. PyNodes opens up the node system in Blender to scripters and adds a number of UI-level improvements. === Dynamic node type registration === Node types can now be added at runtime, using the RNA registration mechanism from python. This enables addons such as render engines to create a complete user interface with nodes. Examples of how such nodes can be defined can be found in my personal wiki docs atm [1] and as a script template in release/scripts/templates_py/custom_nodes.py [2]. === Node group improvements === Each node editor now has a tree history of edited node groups, which allows opening and editing nested node groups. The node editor also supports pinning now, so that different spaces can be used to edit different node groups simultaneously. For more ramblings and rationale see (really old) blog post on code.blender.org [3]. The interface of node groups has been overhauled. Sockets of a node group are no longer displayed in columns on either side, but instead special input/output nodes are used to mirror group sockets inside a node tree. This solves the problem of long node lines in groups and allows more adaptable node layout. Internal sockets can be exposed from a group by either connecting to the extension sockets in input/output nodes (shown as empty circle) or by adding sockets from the node property bar in the "Interface" panel. Further details such as the socket name can also be changed there. [1] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Phonybone/Python_Nodes [2] http://projects.blender.org/scm/viewvc.php/trunk/blender/release/scripts/templates_py/custom_nodes.py?view=markup&root=bf-blender [3] http://code.blender.org/index.php/2012/01/improving-node-group-interface-editing/
2013-03-18 16:34:57 +00:00
#include "BKE_node.h"
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
#include "BKE_texture.h"
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
#include "BKE_tracking.h"
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
#include "IMB_imbuf.h"
#include "IMB_imbuf_types.h"
Color Management, Stage 2: Switch color pipeline to use OpenColorIO Replace old color pipeline which was supporting linear/sRGB color spaces only with OpenColorIO-based pipeline. This introduces two configurable color spaces: - Input color space for images and movie clips. This space is used to convert images/movies from color space in which file is saved to Blender's linear space (for float images, byte images are not internally converted, only input space is stored for such images and used later). This setting could be found in image/clip data block settings. - Display color space which defines space in which particular display is working. This settings could be found in scene's Color Management panel. When render result is being displayed on the screen, apart from converting image to display space, some additional conversions could happen. This conversions are: - View, which defines tone curve applying before display transformation. These are different ways to view the image on the same display device. For example it could be used to emulate film view on sRGB display. - Exposure affects on image exposure before tone map is applied. - Gamma is post-display gamma correction, could be used to match particular display gamma. - RGB curves are user-defined curves which are applying before display transformation, could be used for different purposes. All this settings by default are only applying on render result and does not affect on other images. If some particular image needs to be affected by this transformation, "View as Render" setting of image data block should be set to truth. Movie clips are always affected by all display transformations. This commit also introduces configurable color space in which sequencer is working. This setting could be found in scene's Color Management panel and it should be used if such stuff as grading needs to be done in color space different from sRGB (i.e. when Film view on sRGB display is use, using VD16 space as sequencer's internal space would make grading working in space which is close to the space using for display). Some technical notes: - Image buffer's float buffer is now always in linear space, even if it was created from 16bit byte images. - Space of byte buffer is stored in image buffer's rect_colorspace property. - Profile of image buffer was removed since it's not longer meaningful. - OpenGL and GLSL is supposed to always work in sRGB space. It is possible to support other spaces, but it's quite large project which isn't so much important. - Legacy Color Management option disabled is emulated by using None display. It could have some regressions, but there's no clear way to avoid them. - If OpenColorIO is disabled on build time, it should make blender behaving in the same way as previous release with color management enabled. More details could be found at this page (more details would be added soon): http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Color_Management -- Thanks to Xavier Thomas, Lukas Toene for initial work on OpenColorIO integration and to Brecht van Lommel for some further development and code/ usecase review!
2012-09-15 10:05:07 +00:00
#include "IMB_colormanagement.h"
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
#include "BIF_gl.h"
#include "BIF_glutil.h"
#include "BLF_api.h"
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
#include "UI_interface.h"
/* own include */
#include "interface_intern.h"
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
static int roundboxtype = UI_CNR_ALL;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
void uiSetRoundBox(int type)
{
/* Not sure the roundbox function is the best place to change this
* if this is undone, its not that big a deal, only makes curves edges
* square for the */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
roundboxtype = type;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
int uiGetRoundBox(void)
{
2009-04-27 13:44:11 +00:00
return roundboxtype;
}
void uiDrawBox(int mode, float minx, float miny, float maxx, float maxy, float rad)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
{
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
float vec[7][2] = {{0.195, 0.02}, {0.383, 0.067}, {0.55, 0.169}, {0.707, 0.293},
{0.831, 0.45}, {0.924, 0.617}, {0.98, 0.805}};
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
int a;
/* mult */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
mul_v2_fl(vec[a], rad);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
glBegin(mode);
/* start with corner right-bottom */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_BOTTOM_RIGHT) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx - rad, miny);
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
glVertex2f(maxx - rad + vec[a][0], miny + vec[a][1]);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx, miny + rad);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
else {
glVertex2f(maxx, miny);
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* corner right-top */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_TOP_RIGHT) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx, maxy - rad);
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
glVertex2f(maxx - vec[a][1], maxy - rad + vec[a][0]);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx - rad, maxy);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
else {
glVertex2f(maxx, maxy);
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* corner left-top */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_TOP_LEFT) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx + rad, maxy);
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
glVertex2f(minx + rad - vec[a][0], maxy - vec[a][1]);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx, maxy - rad);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
else {
glVertex2f(minx, maxy);
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* corner left-bottom */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_BOTTOM_LEFT) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx, miny + rad);
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
glVertex2f(minx + vec[a][1], miny + rad - vec[a][0]);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx + rad, miny);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
else {
glVertex2f(minx, miny);
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glEnd();
}
static void round_box_shade_col(const float col1[3], float const col2[3], const float fac)
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
{
float col[3];
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
col[0] = (fac * col1[0] + (1.0f - fac) * col2[0]);
col[1] = (fac * col1[1] + (1.0f - fac) * col2[1]);
col[2] = (fac * col1[2] + (1.0f - fac) * col2[2]);
glColor3fv(col);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
/* linear horizontal shade within button or in outline */
/* view2d scrollers use it */
void uiDrawBoxShade(int mode, float minx, float miny, float maxx, float maxy, float rad, float shadetop, float shadedown)
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{
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float vec[7][2] = {{0.195, 0.02}, {0.383, 0.067}, {0.55, 0.169}, {0.707, 0.293},
{0.831, 0.45}, {0.924, 0.617}, {0.98, 0.805}};
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
const float div = maxy - miny;
const float idiv = 1.0f / div;
float coltop[3], coldown[3], color[4];
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
int a;
/* mult */
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for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
mul_v2_fl(vec[a], rad);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
/* get current color, needs to be outside of glBegin/End */
glGetFloatv(GL_CURRENT_COLOR, color);
/* 'shade' defines strength of shading */
coltop[0] = min_ff(1.0f, color[0] + shadetop);
coltop[1] = min_ff(1.0f, color[1] + shadetop);
coltop[2] = min_ff(1.0f, color[2] + shadetop);
coldown[0] = max_ff(0.0f, color[0] + shadedown);
coldown[1] = max_ff(0.0f, color[1] + shadedown);
coldown[2] = max_ff(0.0f, color[2] + shadedown);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
2009-04-27 13:44:11 +00:00
glShadeModel(GL_SMOOTH);
glBegin(mode);
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/* start with corner right-bottom */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_BOTTOM_RIGHT) {
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round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, 0.0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx - rad, miny);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, vec[a][1] * idiv);
glVertex2f(maxx - rad + vec[a][0], miny + vec[a][1]);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
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round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, rad * idiv);
glVertex2f(maxx, miny + rad);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
else {
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, 0.0);
glVertex2f(maxx, miny);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
/* corner right-top */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_TOP_RIGHT) {
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, (div - rad) * idiv);
glVertex2f(maxx, maxy - rad);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, (div - rad + vec[a][1]) * idiv);
glVertex2f(maxx - vec[a][1], maxy - rad + vec[a][0]);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, 1.0);
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glVertex2f(maxx - rad, maxy);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
else {
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, 1.0);
glVertex2f(maxx, maxy);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
/* corner left-top */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_TOP_LEFT) {
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round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, 1.0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx + rad, maxy);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, (div - vec[a][1]) * idiv);
glVertex2f(minx + rad - vec[a][0], maxy - vec[a][1]);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, (div - rad) * idiv);
glVertex2f(minx, maxy - rad);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
else {
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, 1.0);
glVertex2f(minx, maxy);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
/* corner left-bottom */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_BOTTOM_LEFT) {
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, rad * idiv);
glVertex2f(minx, miny + rad);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, (rad - vec[a][1]) * idiv);
glVertex2f(minx + vec[a][1], miny + rad - vec[a][0]);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, 0.0);
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glVertex2f(minx + rad, miny);
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}
else {
round_box_shade_col(coltop, coldown, 0.0);
glVertex2f(minx, miny);
}
glEnd();
glShadeModel(GL_FLAT);
}
/* linear vertical shade within button or in outline */
/* view2d scrollers use it */
void uiDrawBoxVerticalShade(int mode, float minx, float miny, float maxx, float maxy,
float rad, float shadeLeft, float shadeRight)
{
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
float vec[7][2] = {{0.195, 0.02}, {0.383, 0.067}, {0.55, 0.169}, {0.707, 0.293},
{0.831, 0.45}, {0.924, 0.617}, {0.98, 0.805}};
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
const float div = maxx - minx;
const float idiv = 1.0f / div;
float colLeft[3], colRight[3], color[4];
int a;
/* mult */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
mul_v2_fl(vec[a], rad);
}
/* get current color, needs to be outside of glBegin/End */
glGetFloatv(GL_CURRENT_COLOR, color);
/* 'shade' defines strength of shading */
colLeft[0] = min_ff(1.0f, color[0] + shadeLeft);
colLeft[1] = min_ff(1.0f, color[1] + shadeLeft);
colLeft[2] = min_ff(1.0f, color[2] + shadeLeft);
colRight[0] = max_ff(0.0f, color[0] + shadeRight);
colRight[1] = max_ff(0.0f, color[1] + shadeRight);
colRight[2] = max_ff(0.0f, color[2] + shadeRight);
2009-04-27 13:44:11 +00:00
glShadeModel(GL_SMOOTH);
glBegin(mode);
/* start with corner right-bottom */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_BOTTOM_RIGHT) {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 0.0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx - rad, miny);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, vec[a][0] * idiv);
glVertex2f(maxx - rad + vec[a][0], miny + vec[a][1]);
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, rad * idiv);
glVertex2f(maxx, miny + rad);
}
else {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 0.0);
glVertex2f(maxx, miny);
}
/* corner right-top */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_TOP_RIGHT) {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 0.0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx, maxy - rad);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, (div - rad - vec[a][0]) * idiv);
glVertex2f(maxx - vec[a][1], maxy - rad + vec[a][0]);
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, (div - rad) * idiv);
glVertex2f(maxx - rad, maxy);
}
else {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 0.0);
glVertex2f(maxx, maxy);
}
/* corner left-top */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_TOP_LEFT) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, (div - rad) * idiv);
glVertex2f(minx + rad, maxy);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, (div - rad + vec[a][0]) * idiv);
glVertex2f(minx + rad - vec[a][0], maxy - vec[a][1]);
}
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 1.0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx, maxy - rad);
}
else {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 1.0);
glVertex2f(minx, maxy);
}
/* corner left-bottom */
if (roundboxtype & UI_CNR_BOTTOM_LEFT) {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 1.0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx, miny + rad);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 7; a++) {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, (vec[a][0]) * idiv);
glVertex2f(minx + vec[a][1], miny + rad - vec[a][0]);
}
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 1.0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx + rad, miny);
}
else {
round_box_shade_col(colLeft, colRight, 1.0);
glVertex2f(minx, miny);
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
}
glEnd();
glShadeModel(GL_FLAT);
}
/* plain antialiased unfilled rectangle */
void uiRoundRect(float minx, float miny, float maxx, float maxy, float rad)
{
float color[4];
if (roundboxtype & UI_RB_ALPHA) {
glGetFloatv(GL_CURRENT_COLOR, color);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
color[3] = 0.5;
glColor4fv(color);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
}
/* set antialias line */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
uiDrawBox(GL_LINE_LOOP, minx, miny, maxx, maxy, rad);
2013-02-04 00:18:09 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
glDisable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
}
/* (old, used in outliner) plain antialiased filled box */
void uiRoundBox(float minx, float miny, float maxx, float maxy, float rad)
{
ui_draw_anti_roundbox(GL_POLYGON, minx, miny, maxx, maxy, rad, roundboxtype & UI_RB_ALPHA);
}
2008-11-19 03:15:52 +00:00
/* ************** SPECIAL BUTTON DRAWING FUNCTIONS ************* */
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
void ui_draw_but_IMAGE(ARegion *UNUSED(ar), uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *UNUSED(wcol), rcti *rect)
{
#ifdef WITH_HEADLESS
(void)rect;
(void)but;
#else
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
ImBuf *ibuf = (ImBuf *)but->poin;
//GLint scissor[4];
Holiday coding log :) Nice formatted version (pictures soon): http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.66/Usability Short list of main changes: - Transparent region option (over main region), added code to blend in/out such panels. - Min size window now 640 x 480 - Fixed DPI for ui - lots of cleanup and changes everywhere. Icon image need correct size still, layer-in-use icon needs remake. - Macbook retina support, use command line --no-native-pixels to disable it - Timeline Marker label was drawing wrong - Trackpad and magic mouse: supports zoom (hold ctrl) - Fix for splash position: removed ghost function and made window size update after creation immediate - Fast undo buffer save now adds UI as well. Could be checked for regular file save even... Quit.blend and temp file saving use this now. - Dixed filename in window on reading quit.blend or temp saves, and they now add a warning in window title: "(Recovered)" - New Userpref option "Keep Session" - this always saves quit.blend, and loads on start. This allows keeping UI and data without actual saves, until you actually save. When you load startup.blend and quit, it recognises the quit.blend as a startup (no file name in header) - Added 3D view copy/paste buffers (selected objects). Shortcuts ctrl-c, ctrl-v (OSX, cmd-c, cmd-v). Coded partial file saving for it. Could be used for other purposes. Todo: use OS clipboards. - User preferences (themes, keymaps, user settings) now can be saved as a separate file. Old option is called "Save Startup File" the new one "Save User Settings". To visualise this difference, the 'save startup file' button has been removed from user preferences window. That option is available as CTRL+U and in File menu still. - OSX: fixed bug that stopped giving mouse events outside window. This also fixes "Continuous Grab" for OSX. (error since 2009)
2012-12-12 18:58:11 +00:00
int w, h;
if (!ibuf) return;
Holiday coding log :) Nice formatted version (pictures soon): http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.66/Usability Short list of main changes: - Transparent region option (over main region), added code to blend in/out such panels. - Min size window now 640 x 480 - Fixed DPI for ui - lots of cleanup and changes everywhere. Icon image need correct size still, layer-in-use icon needs remake. - Macbook retina support, use command line --no-native-pixels to disable it - Timeline Marker label was drawing wrong - Trackpad and magic mouse: supports zoom (hold ctrl) - Fix for splash position: removed ghost function and made window size update after creation immediate - Fast undo buffer save now adds UI as well. Could be checked for regular file save even... Quit.blend and temp file saving use this now. - Dixed filename in window on reading quit.blend or temp saves, and they now add a warning in window title: "(Recovered)" - New Userpref option "Keep Session" - this always saves quit.blend, and loads on start. This allows keeping UI and data without actual saves, until you actually save. When you load startup.blend and quit, it recognises the quit.blend as a startup (no file name in header) - Added 3D view copy/paste buffers (selected objects). Shortcuts ctrl-c, ctrl-v (OSX, cmd-c, cmd-v). Coded partial file saving for it. Could be used for other purposes. Todo: use OS clipboards. - User preferences (themes, keymaps, user settings) now can be saved as a separate file. Old option is called "Save Startup File" the new one "Save User Settings". To visualise this difference, the 'save startup file' button has been removed from user preferences window. That option is available as CTRL+U and in File menu still. - OSX: fixed bug that stopped giving mouse events outside window. This also fixes "Continuous Grab" for OSX. (error since 2009)
2012-12-12 18:58:11 +00:00
w = BLI_rcti_size_x(rect);
h = BLI_rcti_size_y(rect);
/* scissor doesn't seem to be doing the right thing...? */
#if 0
//glColor4f(1.0, 0.f, 0.f, 1.f);
//fdrawbox(rect->xmin, rect->ymin, rect->xmax, rect->ymax)
2012-07-07 22:51:57 +00:00
/* prevent drawing outside widget area */
glGetIntegerv(GL_SCISSOR_BOX, scissor);
glScissor(ar->winrct.xmin + rect->xmin, ar->winrct.ymin + rect->ymin, w, h);
#endif
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
glColor4f(0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0);
Holiday coding log :) Nice formatted version (pictures soon): http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.66/Usability Short list of main changes: - Transparent region option (over main region), added code to blend in/out such panels. - Min size window now 640 x 480 - Fixed DPI for ui - lots of cleanup and changes everywhere. Icon image need correct size still, layer-in-use icon needs remake. - Macbook retina support, use command line --no-native-pixels to disable it - Timeline Marker label was drawing wrong - Trackpad and magic mouse: supports zoom (hold ctrl) - Fix for splash position: removed ghost function and made window size update after creation immediate - Fast undo buffer save now adds UI as well. Could be checked for regular file save even... Quit.blend and temp file saving use this now. - Dixed filename in window on reading quit.blend or temp saves, and they now add a warning in window title: "(Recovered)" - New Userpref option "Keep Session" - this always saves quit.blend, and loads on start. This allows keeping UI and data without actual saves, until you actually save. When you load startup.blend and quit, it recognises the quit.blend as a startup (no file name in header) - Added 3D view copy/paste buffers (selected objects). Shortcuts ctrl-c, ctrl-v (OSX, cmd-c, cmd-v). Coded partial file saving for it. Could be used for other purposes. Todo: use OS clipboards. - User preferences (themes, keymaps, user settings) now can be saved as a separate file. Old option is called "Save Startup File" the new one "Save User Settings". To visualise this difference, the 'save startup file' button has been removed from user preferences window. That option is available as CTRL+U and in File menu still. - OSX: fixed bug that stopped giving mouse events outside window. This also fixes "Continuous Grab" for OSX. (error since 2009)
2012-12-12 18:58:11 +00:00
if (w != ibuf->x || h != ibuf->y) {
float facx = (float)w / (float)ibuf->x;
float facy = (float)h / (float)ibuf->y;
glPixelZoom(facx, facy);
}
Bunch of fixes for GLSL display transform - GLSL shader wasn't aware of alpha predivide option, always assuming alpha is straight. Gave wrong results when displaying transparent float buffers. - GLSL display wasn't aware of float buffers with number of channels different from 4, crashing when trying to display image with different number of channels. This required a bit larger changes, namely now it's possible to pass format (GL_RGB, GL_RGBAm GL_LUMINANCE) to glaDrawPixelsTex, This also implied adding format to glaDrawPixelsAuto and modifying all places where this functions are called. Now GLSL will handle both 3 and 4 channels buffers, single channel images are handled by CPU. - Replaced hack for render result displaying with a bit different hack. Namely CPU conversion will happen only during render, once render is done GLSL would be used for displaying render result on a screen. This is so because of the way renderer updates parts of the image -- it happens without respect to active render layer in image user. This is harmless because only display buffer is modifying, but this is tricky because we don't have original buffer opened during rendering. One more related fix here was about when rendering multiple layers, wrong image would be displaying when rendering is done. Added a signal to invalidate display buffer once rendering is done (only happens when using multiple layers). This solves issue with wrong buffer stuck on the display when using regular CPU display space transform and if GLSL is available it'll make image displayed with a GLSL shader. - As an additional change, byte buffers now also uses GLSL display transform. So now only dutehr and RGB curves are stoppers for using GLSL for all kind of display transforms.
2013-04-03 15:59:54 +00:00
glaDrawPixelsAuto((float)rect->xmin, (float)rect->ymin, ibuf->x, ibuf->y, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, GL_NEAREST, ibuf->rect);
Holiday coding log :) Nice formatted version (pictures soon): http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.66/Usability Short list of main changes: - Transparent region option (over main region), added code to blend in/out such panels. - Min size window now 640 x 480 - Fixed DPI for ui - lots of cleanup and changes everywhere. Icon image need correct size still, layer-in-use icon needs remake. - Macbook retina support, use command line --no-native-pixels to disable it - Timeline Marker label was drawing wrong - Trackpad and magic mouse: supports zoom (hold ctrl) - Fix for splash position: removed ghost function and made window size update after creation immediate - Fast undo buffer save now adds UI as well. Could be checked for regular file save even... Quit.blend and temp file saving use this now. - Dixed filename in window on reading quit.blend or temp saves, and they now add a warning in window title: "(Recovered)" - New Userpref option "Keep Session" - this always saves quit.blend, and loads on start. This allows keeping UI and data without actual saves, until you actually save. When you load startup.blend and quit, it recognises the quit.blend as a startup (no file name in header) - Added 3D view copy/paste buffers (selected objects). Shortcuts ctrl-c, ctrl-v (OSX, cmd-c, cmd-v). Coded partial file saving for it. Could be used for other purposes. Todo: use OS clipboards. - User preferences (themes, keymaps, user settings) now can be saved as a separate file. Old option is called "Save Startup File" the new one "Save User Settings". To visualise this difference, the 'save startup file' button has been removed from user preferences window. That option is available as CTRL+U and in File menu still. - OSX: fixed bug that stopped giving mouse events outside window. This also fixes "Continuous Grab" for OSX. (error since 2009)
2012-12-12 18:58:11 +00:00
glPixelZoom(1.0f, 1.0f);
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
#if 0
// restore scissortest
glScissor(scissor[0], scissor[1], scissor[2], scissor[3]);
#endif
#endif
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
static void draw_scope_end(const rctf *rect, GLint *scissor)
{
float scaler_x1, scaler_x2;
/* restore scissortest */
glScissor(scissor[0], scissor[1], scissor[2], scissor[3]);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
/* scale widget */
scaler_x1 = rect->xmin + BLI_rctf_size_x(rect) / 2 - SCOPE_RESIZE_PAD;
scaler_x2 = rect->xmin + BLI_rctf_size_x(rect) / 2 + SCOPE_RESIZE_PAD;
glColor4f(0.f, 0.f, 0.f, 0.25f);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
fdrawline(scaler_x1, rect->ymin - 4, scaler_x2, rect->ymin - 4);
fdrawline(scaler_x1, rect->ymin - 7, scaler_x2, rect->ymin - 7);
glColor4f(1.f, 1.f, 1.f, 0.25f);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
fdrawline(scaler_x1, rect->ymin - 5, scaler_x2, rect->ymin - 5);
fdrawline(scaler_x1, rect->ymin - 8, scaler_x2, rect->ymin - 8);
/* outline */
glColor4f(0.f, 0.f, 0.f, 0.5f);
uiSetRoundBox(UI_CNR_ALL);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
uiDrawBox(GL_LINE_LOOP, rect->xmin - 1, rect->ymin, rect->xmax + 1, rect->ymax + 1, 3.0f);
}
static void histogram_draw_one(float r, float g, float b, float alpha,
float x, float y, float w, float h, float *data, int res, const short is_line)
{
int i;
if (is_line) {
glLineWidth(1.5);
glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE);
glColor4f(r, g, b, alpha);
/* curve outline */
glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE);
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
for (i = 0; i < res; i++) {
float x2 = x + i * (w / (float)res);
glVertex2f(x2, y + (data[i] * h));
}
glEnd();
glDisable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glLineWidth(1.0);
}
else {
/* under the curve */
glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE);
glColor4f(r, g, b, alpha);
glShadeModel(GL_FLAT);
glBegin(GL_QUAD_STRIP);
glVertex2f(x, y);
glVertex2f(x, y + (data[0] * h));
for (i = 1; i < res; i++) {
float x2 = x + i * (w / (float)res);
glVertex2f(x2, y + (data[i] * h));
glVertex2f(x2, y);
}
glEnd();
/* curve outline */
glColor4f(0.f, 0.f, 0.f, 0.25f);
glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
for (i = 0; i < res; i++) {
float x2 = x + i * (w / (float)res);
glVertex2f(x2, y + (data[i] * h));
}
glEnd();
glDisable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
}
}
#define HISTOGRAM_TOT_GRID_LINES 4
void ui_draw_but_HISTOGRAM(ARegion *ar, uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *UNUSED(wcol), rcti *recti)
{
Histogram *hist = (Histogram *)but->poin;
int res = hist->x_resolution;
rctf rect;
int i;
float w, h;
const short is_line = (hist->flag & HISTO_FLAG_LINE) != 0;
//float alpha;
GLint scissor[4];
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rect.xmin = (float)recti->xmin + 1;
rect.xmax = (float)recti->xmax - 1;
rect.ymin = (float)recti->ymin + SCOPE_RESIZE_PAD + 2;
rect.ymax = (float)recti->ymax - 1;
w = BLI_rctf_size_x(&rect);
h = BLI_rctf_size_y(&rect) * hist->ymax;
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
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glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
glColor4f(0.f, 0.f, 0.f, 0.3f);
uiSetRoundBox(UI_CNR_ALL);
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uiDrawBox(GL_POLYGON, rect.xmin - 1, rect.ymin - 1, rect.xmax + 1, rect.ymax + 1, 3.0f);
/* need scissor test, histogram can draw outside of boundary */
glGetIntegerv(GL_VIEWPORT, scissor);
glScissor(ar->winrct.xmin + (rect.xmin - 1),
ar->winrct.ymin + (rect.ymin - 1),
(rect.xmax + 1) - (rect.xmin - 1),
(rect.ymax + 1) - (rect.ymin - 1));
glColor4f(1.f, 1.f, 1.f, 0.08f);
/* draw grid lines here */
for (i = 1; i <= HISTOGRAM_TOT_GRID_LINES; i++) {
const float fac = (float)i / (float)HISTOGRAM_TOT_GRID_LINES;
/* so we can tell the 1.0 color point */
if (i == HISTOGRAM_TOT_GRID_LINES) {
glColor4f(1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 0.5f);
}
fdrawline(rect.xmin, rect.ymin + fac * h, rect.xmax, rect.ymin + fac * h);
fdrawline(rect.xmin + fac * w, rect.ymin, rect.xmin + fac * w, rect.ymax);
}
if (hist->mode == HISTO_MODE_LUMA) {
histogram_draw_one(1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 0.75, rect.xmin, rect.ymin, w, h, hist->data_luma, res, is_line);
}
else if (hist->mode == HISTO_MODE_ALPHA) {
histogram_draw_one(1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 0.75, rect.xmin, rect.ymin, w, h, hist->data_a, res, is_line);
}
else {
if (hist->mode == HISTO_MODE_RGB || hist->mode == HISTO_MODE_R)
histogram_draw_one(1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.75, rect.xmin, rect.ymin, w, h, hist->data_r, res, is_line);
if (hist->mode == HISTO_MODE_RGB || hist->mode == HISTO_MODE_G)
histogram_draw_one(0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.75, rect.xmin, rect.ymin, w, h, hist->data_g, res, is_line);
if (hist->mode == HISTO_MODE_RGB || hist->mode == HISTO_MODE_B)
histogram_draw_one(0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.75, rect.xmin, rect.ymin, w, h, hist->data_b, res, is_line);
}
/* outline, scale gripper */
draw_scope_end(&rect, scissor);
}
#undef HISTOGRAM_TOT_GRID_LINES
void ui_draw_but_WAVEFORM(ARegion *ar, uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *UNUSED(wcol), rcti *recti)
{
Scopes *scopes = (Scopes *)but->poin;
rctf rect;
int i, c;
float w, w3, h, alpha, yofs;
GLint scissor[4];
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float colors[3][3] = MAT3_UNITY;
float colorsycc[3][3] = {{1, 0, 1}, {1, 1, 0}, {0, 1, 1}};
float colors_alpha[3][3], colorsycc_alpha[3][3]; /* colors pre multiplied by alpha for speed up */
float min, max;
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if (scopes == NULL) return;
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rect.xmin = (float)recti->xmin + 1;
rect.xmax = (float)recti->xmax - 1;
rect.ymin = (float)recti->ymin + SCOPE_RESIZE_PAD + 2;
rect.ymax = (float)recti->ymax - 1;
if (scopes->wavefrm_yfac < 0.5f)
scopes->wavefrm_yfac = 0.98f;
w = BLI_rctf_size_x(&rect) - 7;
h = BLI_rctf_size_y(&rect) * scopes->wavefrm_yfac;
yofs = rect.ymin + (BLI_rctf_size_y(&rect) - h) / 2.0f;
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w3 = w / 3.0f;
/* log scale for alpha */
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alpha = scopes->wavefrm_alpha * scopes->wavefrm_alpha;
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for (c = 0; c < 3; c++) {
for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
colors_alpha[c][i] = colors[c][i] * alpha;
colorsycc_alpha[c][i] = colorsycc[c][i] * alpha;
}
}
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
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glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
glColor4f(0.f, 0.f, 0.f, 0.3f);
uiSetRoundBox(UI_CNR_ALL);
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uiDrawBox(GL_POLYGON, rect.xmin - 1, rect.ymin - 1, rect.xmax + 1, rect.ymax + 1, 3.0f);
/* need scissor test, waveform can draw outside of boundary */
glGetIntegerv(GL_VIEWPORT, scissor);
glScissor(ar->winrct.xmin + (rect.xmin - 1),
ar->winrct.ymin + (rect.ymin - 1),
(rect.xmax + 1) - (rect.xmin - 1),
(rect.ymax + 1) - (rect.ymin - 1));
glColor4f(1.f, 1.f, 1.f, 0.08f);
/* draw grid lines here */
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for (i = 0; i < 6; i++) {
char str[4];
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BLI_snprintf(str, sizeof(str), "%-3d", i * 20);
str[3] = '\0';
fdrawline(rect.xmin + 22, yofs + (i / 5.f) * h, rect.xmax + 1, yofs + (i / 5.f) * h);
BLF_draw_default(rect.xmin + 1, yofs - 5 + (i / 5.f) * h, 0, str, sizeof(str) - 1);
/* in the loop because blf_draw reset it */
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
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glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
}
/* 3 vertical separation */
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if (scopes->wavefrm_mode != SCOPES_WAVEFRM_LUMA) {
for (i = 1; i < 3; i++) {
fdrawline(rect.xmin + i * w3, rect.ymin, rect.xmin + i * w3, rect.ymax);
}
}
/* separate min max zone on the right */
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fdrawline(rect.xmin + w, rect.ymin, rect.xmin + w, rect.ymax);
/* 16-235-240 level in case of ITU-R BT601/709 */
glColor4f(1.f, 0.4f, 0.f, 0.2f);
if (ELEM(scopes->wavefrm_mode, SCOPES_WAVEFRM_YCC_601, SCOPES_WAVEFRM_YCC_709)) {
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fdrawline(rect.xmin + 22, yofs + h * 16.0f / 255.0f, rect.xmax + 1, yofs + h * 16.0f / 255.0f);
fdrawline(rect.xmin + 22, yofs + h * 235.0f / 255.0f, rect.xmin + w3, yofs + h * 235.0f / 255.0f);
fdrawline(rect.xmin + 3 * w3, yofs + h * 235.0f / 255.0f, rect.xmax + 1, yofs + h * 235.0f / 255.0f);
fdrawline(rect.xmin + w3, yofs + h * 240.0f / 255.0f, rect.xmax + 1, yofs + h * 240.0f / 255.0f);
}
/* 7.5 IRE black point level for NTSC */
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if (scopes->wavefrm_mode == SCOPES_WAVEFRM_LUMA)
fdrawline(rect.xmin, yofs + h * 0.075f, rect.xmax + 1, yofs + h * 0.075f);
if (scopes->ok && scopes->waveform_1 != NULL) {
/* LUMA (1 channel) */
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glBlendFunc(GL_ONE, GL_ONE);
glColor3f(alpha, alpha, alpha);
if (scopes->wavefrm_mode == SCOPES_WAVEFRM_LUMA) {
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glBlendFunc(GL_ONE, GL_ONE);
glPushMatrix();
glEnableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glTranslatef(rect.xmin, yofs, 0.f);
glScalef(w, h, 0.f);
glVertexPointer(2, GL_FLOAT, 0, scopes->waveform_1);
glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, 0, scopes->waveform_tot);
glDisableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glPopMatrix();
/* min max */
glColor3f(0.5f, 0.5f, 0.5f);
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min = yofs + scopes->minmax[0][0] * h;
max = yofs + scopes->minmax[0][1] * h;
CLAMP(min, rect.ymin, rect.ymax);
CLAMP(max, rect.ymin, rect.ymax);
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fdrawline(rect.xmax - 3, min, rect.xmax - 3, max);
}
/* RGB / YCC (3 channels) */
else if (ELEM4(scopes->wavefrm_mode,
SCOPES_WAVEFRM_RGB,
SCOPES_WAVEFRM_YCC_601,
SCOPES_WAVEFRM_YCC_709,
SCOPES_WAVEFRM_YCC_JPEG))
{
int rgb = (scopes->wavefrm_mode == SCOPES_WAVEFRM_RGB);
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glBlendFunc(GL_ONE, GL_ONE);
glPushMatrix();
glEnableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glTranslatef(rect.xmin, yofs, 0.f);
glScalef(w3, h, 0.f);
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glColor3fv((rgb) ? colors_alpha[0] : colorsycc_alpha[0]);
glVertexPointer(2, GL_FLOAT, 0, scopes->waveform_1);
glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, 0, scopes->waveform_tot);
glTranslatef(1.f, 0.f, 0.f);
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glColor3fv((rgb) ? colors_alpha[1] : colorsycc_alpha[1]);
glVertexPointer(2, GL_FLOAT, 0, scopes->waveform_2);
glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, 0, scopes->waveform_tot);
glTranslatef(1.f, 0.f, 0.f);
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glColor3fv((rgb) ? colors_alpha[2] : colorsycc_alpha[2]);
glVertexPointer(2, GL_FLOAT, 0, scopes->waveform_3);
glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, 0, scopes->waveform_tot);
glDisableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glPopMatrix();
/* min max */
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for (c = 0; c < 3; c++) {
if (scopes->wavefrm_mode == SCOPES_WAVEFRM_RGB)
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glColor3f(colors[c][0] * 0.75f, colors[c][1] * 0.75f, colors[c][2] * 0.75f);
else
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glColor3f(colorsycc[c][0] * 0.75f, colorsycc[c][1] * 0.75f, colorsycc[c][2] * 0.75f);
min = yofs + scopes->minmax[c][0] * h;
max = yofs + scopes->minmax[c][1] * h;
CLAMP(min, rect.ymin, rect.ymax);
CLAMP(max, rect.ymin, rect.ymax);
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fdrawline(rect.xmin + w + 2 + c * 2, min, rect.xmin + w + 2 + c * 2, max);
}
}
}
/* outline, scale gripper */
draw_scope_end(&rect, scissor);
}
static float polar_to_x(float center, float diam, float ampli, float angle)
{
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return center + diam *ampli * cosf(angle);
}
static float polar_to_y(float center, float diam, float ampli, float angle)
{
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return center + diam *ampli * sinf(angle);
}
static void vectorscope_draw_target(float centerx, float centery, float diam, const float colf[3])
{
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float y, u, v;
float tangle = 0.f, tampli;
float dangle, dampli, dangle2, dampli2;
rgb_to_yuv(colf[0], colf[1], colf[2], &y, &u, &v);
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if (u > 0 && v >= 0) tangle = atanf(v / u);
else if (u > 0 && v < 0) tangle = atanf(v / u) + 2.0f * (float)M_PI;
else if (u < 0) tangle = atanf(v / u) + (float)M_PI;
else if (u == 0 && v > 0.0f) tangle = (float)M_PI / 2.0f;
else if (u == 0 && v < 0.0f) tangle = -(float)M_PI / 2.0f;
tampli = sqrtf(u * u + v * v);
/* small target vary by 2.5 degree and 2.5 IRE unit */
glColor4f(1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0, 0.12f);
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dangle = DEG2RADF(2.5f);
dampli = 2.5f / 200.0f;
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
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glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle + dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle + dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle + dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle + dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle - dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle - dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle - dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle - dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle + dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle + dangle));
glEnd();
/* big target vary by 10 degree and 20% amplitude */
glColor4f(1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0, 0.12f);
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dangle = DEG2RADF(10.0f);
dampli = 0.2f * tampli;
dangle2 = DEG2RADF(5.0f);
dampli2 = 0.5f * dampli;
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
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glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli - dampli2, tangle + dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli - dampli2, tangle + dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle + dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle + dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle + dangle - dangle2), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle + dangle - dangle2));
glEnd();
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
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glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli - dampli + dampli2, tangle + dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli - dampli + dampli2, tangle + dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle + dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle + dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle + dangle - dangle2), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle + dangle - dangle2));
glEnd();
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
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glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli - dampli + dampli2, tangle - dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli - dampli + dampli2, tangle - dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle - dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle - dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle - dangle + dangle2), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli - dampli, tangle - dangle + dangle2));
glEnd();
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
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glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli - dampli2, tangle - dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli - dampli2, tangle - dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle - dangle), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle - dangle));
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle - dangle + dangle2), polar_to_y(centery, diam, tampli + dampli, tangle - dangle + dangle2));
glEnd();
}
void ui_draw_but_VECTORSCOPE(ARegion *ar, uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *UNUSED(wcol), rcti *recti)
{
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const float skin_rad = DEG2RADF(123.0f); /* angle in radians of the skin tone line */
Scopes *scopes = (Scopes *)but->poin;
rctf rect;
int i, j;
float w, h, centerx, centery, diam;
float alpha;
const float colors[6][3] = {
{0.75, 0.0, 0.0}, {0.75, 0.75, 0.0}, {0.0, 0.75, 0.0},
{0.0, 0.75, 0.75}, {0.0, 0.0, 0.75}, {0.75, 0.0, 0.75}};
GLint scissor[4];
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rect.xmin = (float)recti->xmin + 1;
rect.xmax = (float)recti->xmax - 1;
rect.ymin = (float)recti->ymin + SCOPE_RESIZE_PAD + 2;
rect.ymax = (float)recti->ymax - 1;
w = BLI_rctf_size_x(&rect);
h = BLI_rctf_size_y(&rect);
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centerx = rect.xmin + w / 2;
centery = rect.ymin + h / 2;
diam = (w < h) ? w : h;
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alpha = scopes->vecscope_alpha * scopes->vecscope_alpha * scopes->vecscope_alpha;
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
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glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
glColor4f(0.f, 0.f, 0.f, 0.3f);
uiSetRoundBox(UI_CNR_ALL);
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uiDrawBox(GL_POLYGON, rect.xmin - 1, rect.ymin - 1, rect.xmax + 1, rect.ymax + 1, 3.0f);
/* need scissor test, hvectorscope can draw outside of boundary */
glGetIntegerv(GL_VIEWPORT, scissor);
glScissor(ar->winrct.xmin + (rect.xmin - 1),
ar->winrct.ymin + (rect.ymin - 1),
(rect.xmax + 1) - (rect.xmin - 1),
(rect.ymax + 1) - (rect.ymin - 1));
glColor4f(1.f, 1.f, 1.f, 0.08f);
/* draw grid elements */
/* cross */
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fdrawline(centerx - (diam / 2) - 5, centery, centerx + (diam / 2) + 5, centery);
fdrawline(centerx, centery - (diam / 2) - 5, centerx, centery + (diam / 2) + 5);
/* circles */
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for (j = 0; j < 5; j++) {
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
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for (i = 0; i <= 360; i = i + 15) {
const float a = DEG2RADF((float)i);
const float r = (j + 1) / 10.0f;
glVertex2f(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, r, a), polar_to_y(centery, diam, r, a));
}
glEnd();
}
/* skin tone line */
glColor4f(1.f, 0.4f, 0.f, 0.2f);
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fdrawline(polar_to_x(centerx, diam, 0.5f, skin_rad), polar_to_y(centery, diam, 0.5, skin_rad),
polar_to_x(centerx, diam, 0.1f, skin_rad), polar_to_y(centery, diam, 0.1, skin_rad));
/* saturation points */
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for (i = 0; i < 6; i++)
vectorscope_draw_target(centerx, centery, diam, colors[i]);
if (scopes->ok && scopes->vecscope != NULL) {
/* pixel point cloud */
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glBlendFunc(GL_ONE, GL_ONE);
glColor3f(alpha, alpha, alpha);
glPushMatrix();
glEnableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glTranslatef(centerx, centery, 0.f);
glScalef(diam, diam, 0.f);
glVertexPointer(2, GL_FLOAT, 0, scopes->vecscope);
glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, 0, scopes->waveform_tot);
glDisableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glPopMatrix();
}
/* outline, scale gripper */
draw_scope_end(&rect, scissor);
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
}
void ui_draw_but_COLORBAND(uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *UNUSED(wcol), rcti *rect)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
{
ColorBand *coba;
CBData *cbd;
float x1, y1, sizex, sizey;
float v3[2], v1[2], v2[2], v1a[2], v2a[2];
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
int a;
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
float pos, colf[4] = {0, 0, 0, 0}; /* initialize in case the colorband isn't valid */
Color Management, Stage 2: Switch color pipeline to use OpenColorIO Replace old color pipeline which was supporting linear/sRGB color spaces only with OpenColorIO-based pipeline. This introduces two configurable color spaces: - Input color space for images and movie clips. This space is used to convert images/movies from color space in which file is saved to Blender's linear space (for float images, byte images are not internally converted, only input space is stored for such images and used later). This setting could be found in image/clip data block settings. - Display color space which defines space in which particular display is working. This settings could be found in scene's Color Management panel. When render result is being displayed on the screen, apart from converting image to display space, some additional conversions could happen. This conversions are: - View, which defines tone curve applying before display transformation. These are different ways to view the image on the same display device. For example it could be used to emulate film view on sRGB display. - Exposure affects on image exposure before tone map is applied. - Gamma is post-display gamma correction, could be used to match particular display gamma. - RGB curves are user-defined curves which are applying before display transformation, could be used for different purposes. All this settings by default are only applying on render result and does not affect on other images. If some particular image needs to be affected by this transformation, "View as Render" setting of image data block should be set to truth. Movie clips are always affected by all display transformations. This commit also introduces configurable color space in which sequencer is working. This setting could be found in scene's Color Management panel and it should be used if such stuff as grading needs to be done in color space different from sRGB (i.e. when Film view on sRGB display is use, using VD16 space as sequencer's internal space would make grading working in space which is close to the space using for display). Some technical notes: - Image buffer's float buffer is now always in linear space, even if it was created from 16bit byte images. - Space of byte buffer is stored in image buffer's rect_colorspace property. - Profile of image buffer was removed since it's not longer meaningful. - OpenGL and GLSL is supposed to always work in sRGB space. It is possible to support other spaces, but it's quite large project which isn't so much important. - Legacy Color Management option disabled is emulated by using None display. It could have some regressions, but there's no clear way to avoid them. - If OpenColorIO is disabled on build time, it should make blender behaving in the same way as previous release with color management enabled. More details could be found at this page (more details would be added soon): http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Color_Management -- Thanks to Xavier Thomas, Lukas Toene for initial work on OpenColorIO integration and to Brecht van Lommel for some further development and code/ usecase review!
2012-09-15 10:05:07 +00:00
struct ColorManagedDisplay *display = NULL;
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
coba = (ColorBand *)(but->editcoba ? but->editcoba : but->poin);
if (coba == NULL) return;
Color Management, Stage 2: Switch color pipeline to use OpenColorIO Replace old color pipeline which was supporting linear/sRGB color spaces only with OpenColorIO-based pipeline. This introduces two configurable color spaces: - Input color space for images and movie clips. This space is used to convert images/movies from color space in which file is saved to Blender's linear space (for float images, byte images are not internally converted, only input space is stored for such images and used later). This setting could be found in image/clip data block settings. - Display color space which defines space in which particular display is working. This settings could be found in scene's Color Management panel. When render result is being displayed on the screen, apart from converting image to display space, some additional conversions could happen. This conversions are: - View, which defines tone curve applying before display transformation. These are different ways to view the image on the same display device. For example it could be used to emulate film view on sRGB display. - Exposure affects on image exposure before tone map is applied. - Gamma is post-display gamma correction, could be used to match particular display gamma. - RGB curves are user-defined curves which are applying before display transformation, could be used for different purposes. All this settings by default are only applying on render result and does not affect on other images. If some particular image needs to be affected by this transformation, "View as Render" setting of image data block should be set to truth. Movie clips are always affected by all display transformations. This commit also introduces configurable color space in which sequencer is working. This setting could be found in scene's Color Management panel and it should be used if such stuff as grading needs to be done in color space different from sRGB (i.e. when Film view on sRGB display is use, using VD16 space as sequencer's internal space would make grading working in space which is close to the space using for display). Some technical notes: - Image buffer's float buffer is now always in linear space, even if it was created from 16bit byte images. - Space of byte buffer is stored in image buffer's rect_colorspace property. - Profile of image buffer was removed since it's not longer meaningful. - OpenGL and GLSL is supposed to always work in sRGB space. It is possible to support other spaces, but it's quite large project which isn't so much important. - Legacy Color Management option disabled is emulated by using None display. It could have some regressions, but there's no clear way to avoid them. - If OpenColorIO is disabled on build time, it should make blender behaving in the same way as previous release with color management enabled. More details could be found at this page (more details would be added soon): http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Color_Management -- Thanks to Xavier Thomas, Lukas Toene for initial work on OpenColorIO integration and to Brecht van Lommel for some further development and code/ usecase review!
2012-09-15 10:05:07 +00:00
if (but->block->color_profile)
display = ui_block_display_get(but->block);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
x1 = rect->xmin;
y1 = rect->ymin;
sizex = rect->xmax - x1;
sizey = rect->ymax - y1;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* first background, to show tranparency */
glColor4ub(UI_TRANSP_DARK, UI_TRANSP_DARK, UI_TRANSP_DARK, 255);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glRectf(x1, y1, x1 + sizex, y1 + sizey);
glEnable(GL_POLYGON_STIPPLE);
glColor4ub(UI_TRANSP_LIGHT, UI_TRANSP_LIGHT, UI_TRANSP_LIGHT, 255);
glPolygonStipple(checker_stipple_sml);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glRectf(x1, y1, x1 + sizex, y1 + sizey);
glDisable(GL_POLYGON_STIPPLE);
glShadeModel(GL_FLAT);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
cbd = coba->data;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
v1[0] = v2[0] = x1;
v1[1] = y1;
v2[1] = y1 + sizey;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glBegin(GL_QUAD_STRIP);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glColor4fv(&cbd->r);
glVertex2fv(v1);
glVertex2fv(v2);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 1; a <= sizex; a++) {
pos = ((float)a) / (sizex - 1);
do_colorband(coba, pos, colf);
Color Management, Stage 2: Switch color pipeline to use OpenColorIO Replace old color pipeline which was supporting linear/sRGB color spaces only with OpenColorIO-based pipeline. This introduces two configurable color spaces: - Input color space for images and movie clips. This space is used to convert images/movies from color space in which file is saved to Blender's linear space (for float images, byte images are not internally converted, only input space is stored for such images and used later). This setting could be found in image/clip data block settings. - Display color space which defines space in which particular display is working. This settings could be found in scene's Color Management panel. When render result is being displayed on the screen, apart from converting image to display space, some additional conversions could happen. This conversions are: - View, which defines tone curve applying before display transformation. These are different ways to view the image on the same display device. For example it could be used to emulate film view on sRGB display. - Exposure affects on image exposure before tone map is applied. - Gamma is post-display gamma correction, could be used to match particular display gamma. - RGB curves are user-defined curves which are applying before display transformation, could be used for different purposes. All this settings by default are only applying on render result and does not affect on other images. If some particular image needs to be affected by this transformation, "View as Render" setting of image data block should be set to truth. Movie clips are always affected by all display transformations. This commit also introduces configurable color space in which sequencer is working. This setting could be found in scene's Color Management panel and it should be used if such stuff as grading needs to be done in color space different from sRGB (i.e. when Film view on sRGB display is use, using VD16 space as sequencer's internal space would make grading working in space which is close to the space using for display). Some technical notes: - Image buffer's float buffer is now always in linear space, even if it was created from 16bit byte images. - Space of byte buffer is stored in image buffer's rect_colorspace property. - Profile of image buffer was removed since it's not longer meaningful. - OpenGL and GLSL is supposed to always work in sRGB space. It is possible to support other spaces, but it's quite large project which isn't so much important. - Legacy Color Management option disabled is emulated by using None display. It could have some regressions, but there's no clear way to avoid them. - If OpenColorIO is disabled on build time, it should make blender behaving in the same way as previous release with color management enabled. More details could be found at this page (more details would be added soon): http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Color_Management -- Thanks to Xavier Thomas, Lukas Toene for initial work on OpenColorIO integration and to Brecht van Lommel for some further development and code/ usecase review!
2012-09-15 10:05:07 +00:00
if (display)
IMB_colormanagement_scene_linear_to_display_v3(colf, display);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
v1[0] = v2[0] = x1 + a;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glColor4fv(colf);
glVertex2fv(v1);
glVertex2fv(v2);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
glEnd();
glShadeModel(GL_FLAT);
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
/* outline */
glColor4f(0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
fdrawbox(x1, y1, x1 + sizex, y1 + sizey);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* help lines */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
v1[0] = v2[0] = v3[0] = x1;
v1[1] = y1;
v1a[1] = y1 + 0.25f * sizey;
v2[1] = y1 + 0.5f * sizey;
v2a[1] = y1 + 0.75f * sizey;
v3[1] = y1 + sizey;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
cbd = coba->data;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glBegin(GL_LINES);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < coba->tot; a++, cbd++) {
v1[0] = v2[0] = v3[0] = v1a[0] = v2a[0] = x1 + cbd->pos * sizex;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
if (a == coba->cur) {
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glColor3ub(0, 0, 0);
glVertex2fv(v1);
glVertex2fv(v3);
glEnd();
setlinestyle(2);
glBegin(GL_LINES);
glColor3ub(255, 255, 255);
glVertex2fv(v1);
glVertex2fv(v3);
glEnd();
setlinestyle(0);
glBegin(GL_LINES);
#if 0
glColor3ub(0, 0, 0);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glVertex2fv(v1);
glVertex2fv(v1a);
glColor3ub(255, 255, 255);
glVertex2fv(v1a);
glVertex2fv(v2);
glColor3ub(0, 0, 0);
glVertex2fv(v2);
glVertex2fv(v2a);
glColor3ub(255, 255, 255);
glVertex2fv(v2a);
glVertex2fv(v3);
#endif
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
else {
glColor3ub(0, 0, 0);
glVertex2fv(v1);
glVertex2fv(v2);
glColor3ub(255, 255, 255);
glVertex2fv(v2);
glVertex2fv(v3);
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
glEnd();
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
2009-04-27 13:44:11 +00:00
void ui_draw_but_NORMAL(uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *wcol, rcti *rect)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
{
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
static GLuint displist = 0;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
int a, old[8];
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
GLfloat diff[4], diffn[4] = {1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f};
float vec0[4] = {0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f};
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
float dir[4], size;
/* store stuff */
glGetMaterialfv(GL_FRONT, GL_DIFFUSE, diff);
/* backdrop */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glColor3ubv((unsigned char *)wcol->inner);
uiSetRoundBox(UI_CNR_ALL);
uiDrawBox(GL_POLYGON, rect->xmin, rect->ymin, rect->xmax, rect->ymax, 5.0f);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* sphere color */
glMaterialfv(GL_FRONT, GL_DIFFUSE, diffn);
glCullFace(GL_BACK);
glEnable(GL_CULL_FACE);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* disable blender light */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 8; a++) {
old[a] = glIsEnabled(GL_LIGHT0 + a);
glDisable(GL_LIGHT0 + a);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
/* own light */
glEnable(GL_LIGHT7);
glEnable(GL_LIGHTING);
ui_get_but_vectorf(but, dir);
dir[3] = 0.0f; /* glLightfv needs 4 args, 0.0 is sun */
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glLightfv(GL_LIGHT7, GL_POSITION, dir);
glLightfv(GL_LIGHT7, GL_DIFFUSE, diffn);
glLightfv(GL_LIGHT7, GL_SPECULAR, vec0);
glLightf(GL_LIGHT7, GL_CONSTANT_ATTENUATION, 1.0f);
glLightf(GL_LIGHT7, GL_LINEAR_ATTENUATION, 0.0f);
/* transform to button */
glPushMatrix();
glTranslatef(rect->xmin + 0.5f * BLI_rcti_size_x(rect), rect->ymin + 0.5f * BLI_rcti_size_y(rect), 0.0f);
if (BLI_rcti_size_x(rect) < BLI_rcti_size_y(rect))
size = BLI_rcti_size_x(rect) / 200.f;
else
size = BLI_rcti_size_y(rect) / 200.f;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glScalef(size, size, size);
if (displist == 0) {
GLUquadricObj *qobj;
displist = glGenLists(1);
glNewList(displist, GL_COMPILE);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
qobj = gluNewQuadric();
gluQuadricDrawStyle(qobj, GLU_FILL);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glShadeModel(GL_SMOOTH);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
gluSphere(qobj, 100.0, 32, 24);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glShadeModel(GL_FLAT);
gluDeleteQuadric(qobj);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glEndList();
}
glCallList(displist);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* restore */
glDisable(GL_LIGHTING);
glDisable(GL_CULL_FACE);
glMaterialfv(GL_FRONT, GL_DIFFUSE, diff);
glDisable(GL_LIGHT7);
/* AA circle */
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glColor3ubv((unsigned char *)wcol->inner);
glutil_draw_lined_arc(0.0f, M_PI * 2.0, 100.0f, 32);
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glDisable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
/* matrix after circle */
glPopMatrix();
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* enable blender light */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 8; a++) {
if (old[a])
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glEnable(GL_LIGHT0 + a);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
}
static void ui_draw_but_curve_grid(rcti *rect, float zoomx, float zoomy, float offsx, float offsy, float step)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
{
float dx, dy, fx, fy;
glBegin(GL_LINES);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
dx = step * zoomx;
fx = rect->xmin + zoomx * (-offsx);
if (fx > rect->xmin) fx -= dx * (floorf(fx - rect->xmin));
while (fx < rect->xmax) {
glVertex2f(fx, rect->ymin);
glVertex2f(fx, rect->ymax);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
fx += dx;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
dy = step * zoomy;
fy = rect->ymin + zoomy * (-offsy);
if (fy > rect->ymin) fy -= dy * (floorf(fy - rect->ymin));
while (fy < rect->ymax) {
glVertex2f(rect->xmin, fy);
glVertex2f(rect->xmax, fy);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
fy += dy;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
glEnd();
}
static void gl_shaded_color(unsigned char *col, int shade)
2009-04-27 13:44:11 +00:00
{
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glColor3ub(col[0] - shade > 0 ? col[0] - shade : 0,
col[1] - shade > 0 ? col[1] - shade : 0,
col[2] - shade > 0 ? col[2] - shade : 0);
2009-04-27 13:44:11 +00:00
}
void ui_draw_but_CURVE(ARegion *ar, uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *wcol, rcti *rect)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
{
CurveMapping *cumap;
CurveMap *cuma;
CurveMapPoint *cmp;
float fx, fy, fac[2], zoomx, zoomy, offsx, offsy;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
GLint scissor[4];
rcti scissor_new;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
int a;
if (but->editcumap) {
cumap = but->editcumap;
}
else {
cumap = (CurveMapping *)but->poin;
}
cuma = &cumap->cm[cumap->cur];
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* need scissor test, curve can draw outside of boundary */
glGetIntegerv(GL_VIEWPORT, scissor);
scissor_new.xmin = ar->winrct.xmin + rect->xmin;
scissor_new.ymin = ar->winrct.ymin + rect->ymin;
scissor_new.xmax = ar->winrct.xmin + rect->xmax;
scissor_new.ymax = ar->winrct.ymin + rect->ymax;
BLI_rcti_isect(&scissor_new, &ar->winrct, &scissor_new);
glScissor(scissor_new.xmin,
scissor_new.ymin,
BLI_rcti_size_x(&scissor_new),
BLI_rcti_size_y(&scissor_new));
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* calculate offset and zoom */
zoomx = (BLI_rcti_size_x(rect) - 2.0f * but->aspect) / BLI_rctf_size_x(&cumap->curr);
zoomy = (BLI_rcti_size_y(rect) - 2.0f * but->aspect) / BLI_rctf_size_y(&cumap->curr);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
offsx = cumap->curr.xmin - but->aspect / zoomx;
offsy = cumap->curr.ymin - but->aspect / zoomy;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* backdrop */
if (but->a1 == UI_GRAD_H) {
/* magic trigger for curve backgrounds */
rcti grid;
float col[3] = {0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f}; /* dummy arg */
grid.xmin = rect->xmin + zoomx * (-offsx);
grid.xmax = rect->xmax + zoomx * (-offsx);
grid.ymin = rect->ymin + zoomy * (-offsy);
grid.ymax = rect->ymax + zoomy * (-offsy);
ui_draw_gradient(&grid, col, UI_GRAD_H, 1.0f);
/* grid, hsv uses different grid */
2012-06-25 19:42:10 +00:00
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, 48);
ui_draw_but_curve_grid(rect, zoomx, zoomy, offsx, offsy, 0.1666666f);
2012-06-25 19:42:10 +00:00
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
else {
if (cumap->flag & CUMA_DO_CLIP) {
gl_shaded_color((unsigned char *)wcol->inner, -20);
glRectf(rect->xmin, rect->ymin, rect->xmax, rect->ymax);
glColor3ubv((unsigned char *)wcol->inner);
glRectf(rect->xmin + zoomx * (cumap->clipr.xmin - offsx),
rect->ymin + zoomy * (cumap->clipr.ymin - offsy),
rect->xmin + zoomx * (cumap->clipr.xmax - offsx),
rect->ymin + zoomy * (cumap->clipr.ymax - offsy));
}
else {
glColor3ubv((unsigned char *)wcol->inner);
glRectf(rect->xmin, rect->ymin, rect->xmax, rect->ymax);
}
/* grid, every 0.25 step */
gl_shaded_color((unsigned char *)wcol->inner, -16);
ui_draw_but_curve_grid(rect, zoomx, zoomy, offsx, offsy, 0.25f);
/* grid, every 1.0 step */
gl_shaded_color((unsigned char *)wcol->inner, -24);
ui_draw_but_curve_grid(rect, zoomx, zoomy, offsx, offsy, 1.0f);
/* axes */
gl_shaded_color((unsigned char *)wcol->inner, -50);
glBegin(GL_LINES);
glVertex2f(rect->xmin, rect->ymin + zoomy * (-offsy));
glVertex2f(rect->xmax, rect->ymin + zoomy * (-offsy));
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (-offsx), rect->ymin);
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (-offsx), rect->ymax);
glEnd();
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* cfra option */
/* XXX 2.48 */
#if 0
if (cumap->flag & CUMA_DRAW_CFRA) {
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glColor3ub(0x60, 0xc0, 0x40);
glBegin(GL_LINES);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (cumap->sample[0] - offsx), rect->ymin);
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (cumap->sample[0] - offsx), rect->ymax);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glEnd();
}
#endif
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* sample option */
if (cumap->flag & CUMA_DRAW_SAMPLE) {
if (but->a1 == UI_GRAD_H) {
float tsample[3];
float hsv[3];
linearrgb_to_srgb_v3_v3(tsample, cumap->sample);
rgb_to_hsv_v(tsample, hsv);
glColor3ub(240, 240, 240);
glBegin(GL_LINES);
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (hsv[0] - offsx), rect->ymin);
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (hsv[0] - offsx), rect->ymax);
glEnd();
}
else if (cumap->cur == 3) {
float lum = rgb_to_bw(cumap->sample);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glColor3ub(240, 240, 240);
glBegin(GL_LINES);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (lum - offsx), rect->ymin);
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (lum - offsx), rect->ymax);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glEnd();
}
else {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
if (cumap->cur == 0)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glColor3ub(240, 100, 100);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
else if (cumap->cur == 1)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glColor3ub(100, 240, 100);
else
glColor3ub(100, 100, 240);
glBegin(GL_LINES);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (cumap->sample[cumap->cur] - offsx), rect->ymin);
glVertex2f(rect->xmin + zoomx * (cumap->sample[cumap->cur] - offsx), rect->ymax);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glEnd();
}
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* the curve */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glColor3ubv((unsigned char *)wcol->item);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
if (cuma->table == NULL)
curvemapping_changed(cumap, FALSE);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
cmp = cuma->table;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* first point */
if ((cuma->flag & CUMA_EXTEND_EXTRAPOLATE) == 0) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(rect->xmin, rect->ymin + zoomy * (cmp[0].y - offsy));
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
else {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
fx = rect->xmin + zoomx * (cmp[0].x - offsx + cuma->ext_in[0]);
fy = rect->ymin + zoomy * (cmp[0].y - offsy + cuma->ext_in[1]);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glVertex2f(fx, fy);
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a <= CM_TABLE; a++) {
fx = rect->xmin + zoomx * (cmp[a].x - offsx);
fy = rect->ymin + zoomy * (cmp[a].y - offsy);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glVertex2f(fx, fy);
}
/* last point */
if ((cuma->flag & CUMA_EXTEND_EXTRAPOLATE) == 0) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(rect->xmax, rect->ymin + zoomy * (cmp[CM_TABLE].y - offsy));
}
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
else {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
fx = rect->xmin + zoomx * (cmp[CM_TABLE].x - offsx - cuma->ext_out[0]);
fy = rect->ymin + zoomy * (cmp[CM_TABLE].y - offsy - cuma->ext_out[1]);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glVertex2f(fx, fy);
}
glEnd();
glDisable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
/* the points, use aspect to make them visible on edges */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
cmp = cuma->curve;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glPointSize(3.0f);
bglBegin(GL_POINTS);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < cuma->totpoint; a++) {
if (cmp[a].flag & CUMA_SELECT)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
UI_ThemeColor(TH_TEXT_HI);
else
UI_ThemeColor(TH_TEXT);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
fac[0] = rect->xmin + zoomx * (cmp[a].x - offsx);
fac[1] = rect->ymin + zoomy * (cmp[a].y - offsy);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
bglVertex2fv(fac);
}
bglEnd();
glPointSize(1.0f);
/* restore scissortest */
glScissor(scissor[0], scissor[1], scissor[2], scissor[3]);
/* outline */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glColor3ubv((unsigned char *)wcol->outline);
fdrawbox(rect->xmin, rect->ymin, rect->xmax, rect->ymax);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
void ui_draw_but_TRACKPREVIEW(ARegion *ar, uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *UNUSED(wcol), rcti *recti)
{
rctf rect;
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
int ok = 0, width, height;
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
GLint scissor[4];
MovieClipScopes *scopes = (MovieClipScopes *)but->poin;
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
rect.xmin = (float)recti->xmin + 1;
rect.xmax = (float)recti->xmax - 1;
rect.ymin = (float)recti->ymin + SCOPE_RESIZE_PAD + 2;
rect.ymax = (float)recti->ymax - 1;
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
width = BLI_rctf_size_x(&rect) + 1;
height = BLI_rctf_size_y(&rect);
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
/* need scissor test, preview image can draw outside of boundary */
glGetIntegerv(GL_VIEWPORT, scissor);
glScissor(ar->winrct.xmin + (rect.xmin - 1),
ar->winrct.ymin + (rect.ymin - 1),
(rect.xmax + 1) - (rect.xmin - 1),
(rect.ymax + 1) - (rect.ymin - 1));
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
if (scopes->track_disabled) {
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
glColor4f(0.7f, 0.3f, 0.3f, 0.3f);
uiSetRoundBox(UI_CNR_ALL);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
uiDrawBox(GL_POLYGON, rect.xmin - 1, rect.ymin, rect.xmax + 1, rect.ymax + 1, 3.0f);
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
ok = 1;
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
}
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
else if ((scopes->track_search) &&
((!scopes->track_preview) ||
2012-06-10 19:59:02 +00:00
(scopes->track_preview->x != width || scopes->track_preview->y != height)))
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
{
ImBuf *tmpibuf;
if (scopes->track_preview)
IMB_freeImBuf(scopes->track_preview);
tmpibuf = BKE_tracking_sample_pattern(scopes->frame_width, scopes->frame_height,
scopes->track_search, scopes->track,
&scopes->undist_marker, TRUE, scopes->use_track_mask,
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
width, height, scopes->track_pos);
if (tmpibuf) {
if (tmpibuf->rect_float)
IMB_rect_from_float(tmpibuf);
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
if (tmpibuf->rect)
scopes->track_preview = tmpibuf;
else
IMB_freeImBuf(tmpibuf);
}
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
}
if (!ok && scopes->track_preview) {
float track_pos[2];
int a;
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
ImBuf *drawibuf;
glPushMatrix();
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
track_pos[0] = scopes->track_pos[0];
track_pos[1] = scopes->track_pos[1];
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
/* draw content of pattern area */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glScissor(ar->winrct.xmin + rect.xmin, ar->winrct.ymin + rect.ymin, scissor[2], scissor[3]);
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
if (width > 0 && height > 0) {
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
drawibuf = scopes->track_preview;
if (scopes->use_track_mask) {
glColor4f(0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.3f);
uiSetRoundBox(UI_CNR_ALL);
uiDrawBox(GL_POLYGON, rect.xmin - 1, rect.ymin, rect.xmax + 1, rect.ymax + 1, 3.0f);
}
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glaDrawPixelsSafe(rect.xmin, rect.ymin + 1, drawibuf->x, drawibuf->y,
drawibuf->x, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, drawibuf->rect);
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
/* draw cross for pizel position */
Planar tracking support for motion tracking =========================================== Major list of changes done in tomato branch: - Add a planar tracking implementation to libmv This adds a new planar tracking implementation to libmv. The tracker is based on Ceres[1], the new nonlinear minimizer that myself and Sameer released from Google as open source. Since the motion model is more involved, the interface is different than the RegionTracker interface used previously in Blender. The start of a C API in libmv-capi.{cpp,h} is also included. - Migrate from pat_{min,max} for markers to 4 corners representation Convert markers in the movie clip editor / 2D tracker from using pat_min and pat_max notation to using the a more general, 4-corner representation. There is still considerable porting work to do; in particular sliding from preview widget does not work correct for rotated markers. All other areas should be ported to new representation: * Added support of sliding individual corners. LMB slide + Ctrl would scale the whole pattern * S would scale the whole marker, S-S would scale pattern only * Added support of marker's rotation which is currently rotates only patterns around their centers or all markers around median, Rotation or other non-translation/scaling transformation of search area doesn't make sense. * Track Preview widget would display transformed pattern which libmv actually operates with. - "Efficient Second-order Minimization" for the planar tracker This implements the "Efficient Second-order Minimization" scheme, as supported by the existing translation tracker. This increases the amount of per-iteration work, but decreases the number of iterations required to converge and also increases the size of the basin of attraction for the optimization. - Remove the use of the legacy RegionTracker API from Blender, and replaces it with the new TrackRegion API. This also adds several features to the planar tracker in libmv: * Do a brute-force initialization of tracking similar to "Hybrid" mode in the stable release, but using all floats. This is slower but more accurate. It is still necessary to evaluate if the performance loss is worth it. In particular, this change is necessary to support high bit depth imagery. * Add support for masks over the search window. This is a step towards supporting user-defined tracker masks. The tracker masks will make it easy for users to make a mask for e.g. a ball. Not exposed into interface yet/ * Add Pearson product moment correlation coefficient checking (aka "Correlation" in the UI. This causes tracking failure if the tracked patch is not linearly related to the template. * Add support for warping a few points in addition to the supplied points. This is useful because the tracking code deliberately does not expose the underlying warp representation. Instead, warps are specified in an aparametric way via the correspondences. - Replace the old style tracker configuration panel with the new planar tracking panel. From a users perspective, this means: * The old "tracking algorithm" picker is gone. There is only 1 algorithm now. We may revisit this later, but I would much prefer to have only 1 algorithm. So far no optimization work has been done so the speed is not there yet. * There is now a dropdown to select the motion model. Choices: * Translation * Translation, rotation * Translation, scale * Translation, rotation, scale * Affine * Perspective * The old "Hybrid" mode is gone; instead there is a toggle to enable or disable translation-only tracker initialization. This is the equivalent of the hyrbid mode before, but rewritten to work with the new planar tracking modes. * The pyramid levels setting is gone. At a future date, the planar tracker will decide to use pyramids or not automatically. The pyramid setting was ultimately a mistake; with the brute force initialization it is unnecessary. - Add light-normalized tracking Added the ability to normalize patterns by their average value while tracking, to make them invariant to global illumination changes. Additional details could be found at wiki page [2] [1] http://code.google.com/p/ceres-solver [2] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Motion_Tracker
2012-06-10 15:28:19 +00:00
glTranslatef(rect.xmin + track_pos[0], rect.ymin + track_pos[1], 0.f);
glScissor(ar->winrct.xmin + rect.xmin,
ar->winrct.ymin + rect.ymin,
BLI_rctf_size_x(&rect),
BLI_rctf_size_y(&rect));
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (a = 0; a < 2; a++) {
if (a == 1) {
glLineStipple(3, 0xaaaa);
glEnable(GL_LINE_STIPPLE);
UI_ThemeColor(TH_SEL_MARKER);
}
else {
UI_ThemeColor(TH_MARKER_OUTLINE);
}
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
glBegin(GL_LINES);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(-10.0f, 0.0f);
glVertex2f(10.0f, 0.0f);
glVertex2f(0.0f, -10.0f);
glVertex2f(0.0f, 10.0f);
glEnd();
}
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
}
glDisable(GL_LINE_STIPPLE);
glPopMatrix();
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
ok = 1;
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
}
if (!ok) {
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
glColor4f(0.f, 0.f, 0.f, 0.3f);
uiSetRoundBox(UI_CNR_ALL);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
uiDrawBox(GL_POLYGON, rect.xmin - 1, rect.ymin, rect.xmax + 1, rect.ymax + 1, 3.0f);
Camera tracking integration =========================== Commiting camera tracking integration gsoc project into trunk. This commit includes: - Bundled version of libmv library (with some changes against official repo, re-sync with libmv repo a bit later) - New datatype ID called MovieClip which is optimized to work with movie clips (both of movie files and image sequences) and doing camera/motion tracking operations. - New editor called Clip Editor which is currently used for motion/tracking stuff only, but which can be easily extended to work with masks too. This editor supports: * Loading movie files/image sequences * Build proxies with different size for loaded movie clip, also supports building undistorted proxies to increase speed of playback in undistorted mode. * Manual lens distortion mode calibration using grid and grease pencil * Supervised 2D tracking using two different algorithms KLT and SAD. * Basic algorithm for feature detection * Camera motion solving. scene orientation - New constraints to "link" scene objects with solved motions from clip: * Follow Track (make object follow 2D motion of track with given name or parent object to reconstructed 3D position of track) * Camera Solver to make camera moving in the same way as reconstructed camera This commit NOT includes changes from tomato branch: - New nodes (they'll be commited as separated patch) - Automatic image offset guessing for image input node and image editor (need to do more tests and gather more feedback) - Code cleanup in libmv-capi. It's not so critical cleanup, just increasing readability and understanadability of code. Better to make this chaneg when Keir will finish his current patch. More details about this project can be found on this page: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Nazg-gul/GSoC-2011 Further development of small features would be done in trunk, bigger/experimental features would first be implemented in tomato branch.
2011-11-07 12:55:18 +00:00
}
/* outline, scale gripper */
draw_scope_end(&rect, scissor);
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
}
2009-01-04 00:05:40 +00:00
Merge of the PyNodes branch (aka "custom nodes") into trunk. PyNodes opens up the node system in Blender to scripters and adds a number of UI-level improvements. === Dynamic node type registration === Node types can now be added at runtime, using the RNA registration mechanism from python. This enables addons such as render engines to create a complete user interface with nodes. Examples of how such nodes can be defined can be found in my personal wiki docs atm [1] and as a script template in release/scripts/templates_py/custom_nodes.py [2]. === Node group improvements === Each node editor now has a tree history of edited node groups, which allows opening and editing nested node groups. The node editor also supports pinning now, so that different spaces can be used to edit different node groups simultaneously. For more ramblings and rationale see (really old) blog post on code.blender.org [3]. The interface of node groups has been overhauled. Sockets of a node group are no longer displayed in columns on either side, but instead special input/output nodes are used to mirror group sockets inside a node tree. This solves the problem of long node lines in groups and allows more adaptable node layout. Internal sockets can be exposed from a group by either connecting to the extension sockets in input/output nodes (shown as empty circle) or by adding sockets from the node property bar in the "Interface" panel. Further details such as the socket name can also be changed there. [1] http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Phonybone/Python_Nodes [2] http://projects.blender.org/scm/viewvc.php/trunk/blender/release/scripts/templates_py/custom_nodes.py?view=markup&root=bf-blender [3] http://code.blender.org/index.php/2012/01/improving-node-group-interface-editing/
2013-03-18 16:34:57 +00:00
void ui_draw_but_NODESOCKET(ARegion *ar, uiBut *but, uiWidgetColors *UNUSED(wcol), rcti *recti)
{
static const float size = 5.0f;
/* 16 values of sin function */
static float si[16] = {
0.00000000f, 0.39435585f, 0.72479278f, 0.93775213f,
0.99871650f, 0.89780453f, 0.65137248f, 0.29936312f,
-0.10116832f, -0.48530196f, -0.79077573f, -0.96807711f,
-0.98846832f, -0.84864425f, -0.57126821f, -0.20129852f
};
/* 16 values of cos function */
static float co[16] = {
1.00000000f, 0.91895781f, 0.68896691f, 0.34730525f,
-0.05064916f, -0.44039415f, -0.75875812f, -0.95413925f,
-0.99486932f, -0.87434661f, -0.61210598f, -0.25065253f,
0.15142777f, 0.52896401f, 0.82076344f, 0.97952994f,
};
unsigned char *col = but->col;
int a;
GLint scissor[4];
rcti scissor_new;
float x, y;
x = 0.5f * (recti->xmin + recti->xmax);
y = 0.5f * (recti->ymin + recti->ymax);
/* need scissor test, can draw outside of boundary */
glGetIntegerv(GL_VIEWPORT, scissor);
scissor_new.xmin = ar->winrct.xmin + recti->xmin;
scissor_new.ymin = ar->winrct.ymin + recti->ymin;
scissor_new.xmax = ar->winrct.xmin + recti->xmax;
scissor_new.ymax = ar->winrct.ymin + recti->ymax;
BLI_rcti_isect(&scissor_new, &ar->winrct, &scissor_new);
glScissor(scissor_new.xmin,
scissor_new.ymin,
BLI_rcti_size_x(&scissor_new),
BLI_rcti_size_y(&scissor_new));
glColor4ubv(col);
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
glBegin(GL_POLYGON);
for (a = 0; a < 16; a++)
glVertex2f(x + size * si[a], y + size * co[a]);
glEnd();
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, 150);
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glBegin(GL_LINE_LOOP);
for (a = 0; a < 16; a++)
glVertex2f(x + size * si[a], y + size * co[a]);
glEnd();
glDisable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
glLineWidth(1.0f);
/* restore scissortest */
glScissor(scissor[0], scissor[1], scissor[2], scissor[3]);
}
/* ****************************************************** */
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
static void ui_shadowbox(float minx, float miny, float maxx, float maxy, float shadsize, unsigned char alpha)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
{
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
glShadeModel(GL_SMOOTH);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* right quad */
glBegin(GL_POLYGON);
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, alpha);
glVertex2f(maxx, miny);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx, maxy - 0.3f * shadsize);
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, 0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx + shadsize, maxy - 0.75f * shadsize);
glVertex2f(maxx + shadsize, miny);
glEnd();
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* corner shape */
glBegin(GL_POLYGON);
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, alpha);
glVertex2f(maxx, miny);
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, 0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx + shadsize, miny);
glVertex2f(maxx + 0.7f * shadsize, miny - 0.7f * shadsize);
glVertex2f(maxx, miny - shadsize);
glEnd();
/* bottom quad */
glBegin(GL_POLYGON);
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, alpha);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(minx + 0.3f * shadsize, miny);
glVertex2f(maxx, miny);
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, 0);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glVertex2f(maxx, miny - shadsize);
glVertex2f(minx + 0.5f * shadsize, miny - shadsize);
glEnd();
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
glShadeModel(GL_FLAT);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
void uiDrawBoxShadow(unsigned char alpha, float minx, float miny, float maxx, float maxy)
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
{
/* accumulated outline boxes to make shade not linear, is more pleasant */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
ui_shadowbox(minx, miny, maxx, maxy, 11.0, (20 * alpha) >> 8);
ui_shadowbox(minx, miny, maxx, maxy, 7.0, (40 * alpha) >> 8);
ui_shadowbox(minx, miny, maxx, maxy, 5.0, (80 * alpha) >> 8);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
void ui_dropshadow(const rctf *rct, float radius, float aspect, float alpha, int UNUSED(select))
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
{
int i;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
float rad;
float a;
2012-06-10 19:59:02 +00:00
float dalpha = alpha * 2.0f / 255.0f, calpha;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
if (radius > (BLI_rctf_size_y(rct) - 10.0f) / 2.0f)
rad = (BLI_rctf_size_y(rct) - 10.0f) / 2.0f;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
else
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
rad = radius;
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
i = 12;
#if 0
if (select) {
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
a = i * aspect; /* same as below */
}
else
#endif
{
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
a = i * aspect;
}
calpha = dalpha;
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
for (; i--; a -= aspect) {
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
/* alpha ranges from 2 to 20 or so */
glColor4f(0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, calpha);
calpha += dalpha;
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
uiDrawBox(GL_POLYGON, rct->xmin - a, rct->ymin - a, rct->xmax + a, rct->ymax - 10.0f + a, rad + a);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
}
/* outline emphasis */
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glColor4ub(0, 0, 0, 100);
2012-03-30 01:51:25 +00:00
uiDrawBox(GL_LINE_LOOP, rct->xmin - 0.5f, rct->ymin - 0.5f, rct->xmax + 0.5f, rct->ymax + 0.5f, radius + 0.5f);
glDisable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);
Port of part of the Interface code to 2.50. This is based on the current trunk version, so these files should not need merges. There's two things (clipboard and intptr_t) that are missing in 2.50 and commented out with XXX 2.48, these can be enabled again once trunk is merged into this branch. Further this is not all interface code, there are many parts commented out: * interface.c: nearly all button types, missing: links, chartab, keyevent. * interface_draw.c: almost all code, with some small exceptions. * interface_ops.c: this replaces ui_do_but and uiDoBlocks with two operators, making it non-blocking. * interface_regions: this is a part of interface.c, split off, contains code to create regions for tooltips, menus, pupmenu (that one is crashing currently), color chooser, basically regions with buttons which is fairly independent of core interface code. * interface_panel.c and interface_icons.c: not ported over, so no panels and icons yet. Panels should probably become (free floating) regions? * text.c: (formerly language.c) for drawing text and translation. this works but is using bad globals still and could be cleaned up. Header Files: * ED_datafiles.h now has declarations for datatoc_ files, so those extern declarations can be #included instead of repeated. * The user interface code is in UI_interface.h and other UI_* files. Core: * The API for creating blocks, buttons, etc is nearly the same still. Blocks are now created per region instead of per area. * The code was made non-blocking, which means that any changes and redraws should be possible while editing a button. That means though that we need some sort of persistence even though the blender model is to recreate buttons for each redraw. So when a new block is created, some matching happens to find out which buttons correspond to buttons in the previously created block, and for activated buttons some data is then copied over to the new button. * Added UI_init/UI_init_userdef/UI_exit functions that should initialize code in this module, instead of multiple function calls in the windowmanager. * Removed most static/globals from interface.c. * Removed UIafterfunc_ I don't think it's needed anymore, and not sure how it would integrate here? * Currently only full window redraws are used, this should become per region and maybe per button later. Operators: * Events are currently handled through two operators: button activate and menu handle. Operators may not be the best way to implement this, since there are currently some issues with events being missed, but they can become a special handler type instead, this should not be a big change. * The button activate operator runs as long as a button is active, and will handle all interaction with that button until the button is not activated anymore. This means clicking, text editing, number dragging, opening menu blocks, etc. * Since this operator has to be non-blocking, the ui_do_but code needed to made non-blocking. That means variables that were previously on the stack, now need to be stored away in a struct such that they can be accessed again when the operator receives more events. * Additionally the place in the ui_do_but code indicated the state, now that needs to be set explicit in order to handle the right events in the right state. So an activated button can be in one of these states: init, highlight, wait_flash, wait_release, wait_key_event, num_editing, text_editing, text_selecting, block_open, exit. * For each button type an ui_apply_but_* function has also been separated out from ui_do_but. This makes it possible to continuously apply the button as text is being typed for example, and there is an option in the code to enable this. Since the code non-blocking and can deal with the button being deleted even, it should be safe to do this. * When editing text, dragging numbers, etc, the actual data (but->poin) is not being edited, since that would mean data is being edited without correct updates happening, while some other part of blender may be accessing that data in the meantime. So data values, strings, vectors are written to a temporary location and only flush in the apply function. Regions: * Menus, color chooser, tooltips etc all create screen level regions. Such menu blocks give a handle to the button that creates it, which will contain the results of the menu block once a MESSAGE event is received from that menu block. * For this type of menu block the coordinates used to be in window space. They are still created that way and ui_positionblock still works with window coordinates, but after that the block and buttons are brought back to region coordinates since these are now contained in a region. * The flush/overdraw frontbuffer drawing code was removed, the windowmanager should have enough information with these screen level regions to have full control over what gets drawn when and to then do correct compositing. Testing: * The header in the time space currently has some buttons to test the UI code.
2008-11-11 18:31:32 +00:00
glDisable(GL_BLEND);
}