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.
Use common prefix as this collided with existing API's (eg BLI_voronoi).
Also expand some non-obvious abbreviations:
- 'g' -> 'generic'
- 'vl' -> 'variable_lacunarity'
- 'V' -> 'v3'
We have our own assert implementation, `BLI_assert()` that is prefered over the
C standard library one. Its output is more consistent across compilers and
makes termination on assert failure optional (through `WITH_ASSERT_ABORT`).
In many places we'd include the C library header without ever accessing it.
This is for design task T67744, Boolean Redesign.
It adds a choice of solver to the Boolean modifier and the
Intersect (Boolean) and Intersect (Knife) tools.
The 'Fast' choice is the current Bmesh boolean.
The new 'Exact' choice is a more advanced algorithm that supports
overlapping geometry and uses more robust calculations, but is
slower than the Fast choice.
The default with this commit is set to 'Exact'. We can decide before
the 2.91 release whether or not this is the right choice, but this
choice now will get us more testing and feedback on the new code.
Functions `mesh_create_eval_final_view()` and
`mesh_create_eval_final_render()` were doing the exact same thing,
except for a hack introduced in d3eb9dddd6 (2012-10-08, Better fix for
T32846: dupligroup messes up particle instancing on rendering) that
appears to be no longer necessary. Besides that, these functions had
confusing names. Their functionality changed over time, and whether to
do for-render or for-viewport evaluation is now actually determined by
the depsgraph evaluation mode. This means that the `..._render` function
could evaluate a mesh with viewport settings, and vice versa.
The functions are now merged into `mesh_create_eval_final()`, and the
hack has been removed. The `OB_NO_PSYS_UPDATE` flag has been removed
entirely (instead of keeping it around as deprecated flag), because it
was always only temporarily set on objects during mesh evaluation and
thus not saved to the blend file.
No expected functional changes as far as users are concerned.
The problem is caused by a lack of prediction in the `isect_line_segment_tri_v3`
that incorrectly confirms some intersections of coplanar segments to the triangle.
The solution is to use another algorithm to detect intersections.
This also resulted in a slight improvement in the performance:
- 1min 17sec to 1min 6sec in my test file
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8500
This replaces header include guards with `#pragma once`.
A couple of include guards are not removed yet (e.g. `__RNA_TYPES_H__`),
because they are used in other places.
This patch has been generated by P1561 followed by `make format`.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8466
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.
While it might be handy to have type-less functionality which is
similar to how C++ math is implemented it can not be easily achieved
with just preprocessor in a way which does not have side-effects on
wrong usage.
There macros where often used on a non-trivial expression, and there
was at least one usage where it was causing an actual side effect/bug
on Windows (see change around square_f(sh[index++]) in studiolight.c).
For such cases it is handy to have a function which is guaranteed to
have zero side-effects. The motivation behind actually removing the
macros is that there is already a way to do similar calculation. Also,
not having such macros is a way to guarantee that its usage is not
changed in a way which have side-effects and that it's not used as an
inspiration for cases where it should not be used.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7051
The 'random' unit tests and some examples from the new boolean code
triggered asserts and crashes. This fixes those.
There is a new flag in the input that optionally disables a pass
over input to snap segment edges to other segments.