Was using an edge hash for triangle -> edge lookups,
updating triangle indices for each edge-rotation.
Replace this with half-edge which can rotate edges much more simply,
writing triangles back once the solution has been calculated.
Gives ~33% speedup in own tests.
While such drivers will generally get evaluated too late to be of much
use during animations, it can still be useful to allow using drivers to
control a whole bunch of NLA strip properties (i.e. syncing NLA strip
timings via a single property/control).
Keyframe insertion however is still not allowed on these properties
(and an error message will now be displayed when trying to do so,
instead of silently failing), as it is useless.
This only applies when LIB_ID_CREATE_NO_ALLOCATE flag is used and guarantees
that non-memset-zero memory can be used (or, that same memory chunk might be
used over and over again without need to clean it from the calleer).
OUr beloved root nodetrees... Had to check again the code to undersand
why we copy them with bmain even though they are not in bmain, so this
is worth a comment. ;)
Cyclic extrapolation is implemented as an f-curve modifier, so this
technically violates abstraction separation and is something of a hack.
However without such behavior achieving smooth looping with cyclic
extrapolation is extremely cumbersome.
The new behavior is applied when the first modifier is Cyclic
extrapolation in Repeat or Repeat with Offset mode without
using influence, repeat count or range restrictions.
This change in behavior means that curve handles have to be updated
when the modifier is added, removed or its options change. Due to the
way code is structured, it seems it requires a helper link to the
containing curve from the modifier object.
Reviewers: aligorith
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2783
It seems that `typestr` does not always define the final size of the element. And it varies by operating system.
Then use the `typestr` only to know the itemtype is `float` type or not.
Border and circle select wait for input by default.
This commit uses bool properties on the operators instead of
magic number (called "gesture_mode").
Keymaps that define 'deselect' for border/circle select
begin immediately, exiting when on button release.
User count of scenes was inconsistant, screens only have 'user_one' kind
of owning over scenes, which means they shall never increment or
decrement their real user count. And usually, scenes have no real user
at all.
Would happen during panel's refresh drawing, if drawing code had to adjust
final panel position compared to the initial one computed based on the
mouse coordinates, and user had dragged the floating panel around.
Issue fixed by adjusting stored mouse coordinates once final panel
position is known, such that they would directly generate those
coordinates. that way, the basic offset applied to those stored mouse
coordinates during panel dragging is valid, and recreating panel based
on those won't make it jump in screen.
Note that panel will still jump in case user dragged it partially out of
view - we could prevent that, but imho it's better to keep that
behavior, since redraw can generate a popup of different size, which
could end up with a totally out-of-view one...
Hopefully this fix does not break anything else!