- "... (matches pythons ...)": capitalize and use possessive ('s).
- "Layer Proxy Protection": replace proxy by override, following 2.80.
- "Enable Plane Trim": expand description.
- "Make curve path children to rotate along the path": remove "to".
- "Option for curve-deform: make deformed child to stretch along
entire path": remove "to".
- "... apply the curve radius with path following it and deforming":
rephrase unclear description.
- "Custom light falloff curve" : unrelated to lights, used in Grease
Pencil modifiers.
- "Grease Pencil layer assigned to the generated strokes": rephrase
because a GP stroke is assigned to a layer, not the other way
around.
- "Attribute domain where the attribute domain is stored in the
simulation state": remove second "domain" (typo).
Pull Request: blender/blender#107916
In some cases comments at the end of control statements were wrapped
onto new lines which made it read as if they applied to the next line
instead of the (now) previous line.
Relocate comments to the previous line or in some cases the end of the
line (before the brace) to avoid confusion.
Note that in quite a few cases these blocks didn't read well
even before MultiLine was used as comments after the brace caused
wrapping across multiple lines in a way that didn't follow
formatting used everywhere else.
Function casts hid casting between potentially incompatible type
signatures (using int instead of Py_ssize_t). As it happens this seems
not to have caused any bugs on supported platforms so this change is
mainly for correctness and to avoid problems in the future.
Use struct identifiers in comments before the value.
This has some advantages:
- The struct identifiers didn't mix well with other code-comments,
where other comments were wrapped onto the next line.
- Minor changes could re-align all other comments in the struct.
- PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT & tp_name are no longer placed on the same line.
Remove overly verbose comments copied from PyTypeObject (Python v2.x),
these aren't especially helpful and get outdated.
Also corrected some outdated names:
- PyTypeObject.tp_print -> tp_vectorcall_offset
- PyTypeObject.tp_reserved -> tp_as_async
Mathutils types were always GC tracked even when it wasn't intended.
Not having to track objects speeds up Python execution.
In an isolated benchmark created to stress test the GC
creating 4-million vectors (re-assigning them 100 times), this gives
an overall ~2.5x speedup, see: P3221.
Details:
Since [0] (which added support for sub-classed mathutils types)
tp_alloc was called which defaults to PyType_GenericAlloc which always
GC tracked the resulting object when Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC was set.
Avoid using PyType_GenericAlloc unless the type is sub-classed,
in that case the object is un-tracked.
Add asserts that the tracked state is as expected before tracking &
un-tracking, to ensure changes to object creation don't cause objects
to be tracked unintentionally.
Also assign the PyTypeObject.tp_is_gc callback so types optionally GC
track objects only do so when an object is referenced.
[0]: fbd9364944
Use a shorter/simpler license convention, stops the header taking so
much space.
Follow the SPDX license specification: https://spdx.org/licenses
- C/C++/objc/objc++
- Python
- Shell Scripts
- CMake, GNUmakefile
While most of the source tree has been included
- `./extern/` was left out.
- `./intern/cycles` & `./intern/atomic` are also excluded because they
use different header conventions.
doc/license/SPDX-license-identifiers.txt has been added to list SPDX all
used identifiers.
See P2788 for the script that automated these edits.
Reviewed By: brecht, mont29, sergey
Ref D14069
This patch fixes many minor spelling mistakes, all in comments or
console output. Mostly contractions like can't, won't, don't, its/it's,
etc.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11663
Reviewed by Harley Acheson
While `tp_print` was deprecated, Python 3.8+ uses this for
'tp_vectorcall_offset' which wasn't stated in the comment from
efd71aad4f.
Instead of suppressing clang-tidy, use preprocessor a check since
this properly represents the difference between Python versions.
This was disabled during 2.8x for smooth porting of 2.7x scripts,
Now '@' is used for matrix multiplication,
support '*' to multiple vector elements.
See T56276.