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Currently "long keyframes" are only useful for indicating where stationary
holds occur. If however you try to create a "moving hold" (where the values
are slightly different, but in terms of overall effect, it's still a hold)
then it could get tricky to keep track of where these occur.
Now it's possible to tag such keyframes (using the keyframe types - RKEY)
as being part of a moving hold. These will not only be drawn differently
from normal keyframes, but they will also result in a "long keyframe"
being drawn between each pair of them, just like if they had been completely
stationary instead.
Currently the theming/styling of these is a bit rough. They reuse the existing
theme colours for long keyframes.
To get this working the least effort, I've had to expose the helper functions
used by the lasso and circle select keyframe-test callbacks (which are generic)
and expose them for use by the GP keyframe editing code too. Hopefully in time
we clean this all up and just write the code once to operate on "keyframes"
This only works in the Action and Dopesheet modes (which operate on FCurve keyframes).
Support for Grease Pencil and Mask Keyframes though is still pending.
When in TweakMode on NLA strips that had an offset, it was not possible to select
those keyframes in the Summary Channel in the Dope Sheet.
The main gist of it is that the current code is from before the summary track was
introduced, and so could assume that ANIM_nla_mapping_get() would work for all channels
present. Thus, simply converting the clicked frame to nla-mapped time once would be
enough. However, for summary channels, nla-mapping_get() doesn't do anything, since
we can potentially include keyframes from several different objects!
When using the "Current Frame" options for these operators, the Cursor X value
will now be used instead of the current frame. Perhaps the labels could be changed
too, but for now, I guess this will be good enough.
ANIM_editkeyframes_refresh was testing handle selection as if those handles were transformed.
This is already handled by areas which need it,
so simply replace testhandles_fcurve -> calchandles_fcurve.
This was causing other bugs such as inserting a keyframe changing handles of unrelated fcurves.
This option (alongside the Ease In/Out/InOut options already available) aims to make it
easier to get an initial curve that looks closer to the one you were expecting, by
automatically picking whether Ease In or Ease Out should be used based on the type of
interpolation being used for the curve segment in question.
Notes:
* The types chosen may need some adjustments (e.g. using ease in-out instead of just ease in)
* This does break compatability with files saved in previous dev builds, but only
if you were using Bounce/Elastic/Back with "Ease In"
This commit introduces support for a number of new interpolation types
which are useful for motion-graphics work. These define a number of
"easing equations" (basically, equations which define some preset
ways that one keyframe transitions to another) which reduce the amount
of manual work (inserting and tweaking keyframes) to achieve certain
common effects. For example, snappy movements, and fake-physics such
as bouncing/springing effects.
The additional interpolation types introduced in this commit can be found
in many packages and toolkits (notably Qt and all modern web browsers).
For more info and a few live demos, see [1] and [2].
Credits:
* Dan Eicher (dna) - Original patch
* Thomas Beck (plasmasolutions) - Porting/updating patch to 2.70 codebase
* Joshua Leung (aligorith) - Code review and a few polishing tweaks
Additional Resources:
[1] http://easings.net
[2] http://www.robertpenner.com/easing/