Previously the only way to control the subtype was to remove the group
input or output and create it again. This commit adds a dropdown to
change an existing socket, for supported socket types.
Based on a patch by Angus Stanton: https://developer.blender.org/D15715
It was necessary to fix the UI code slightly; the layout's context
wasn't being used in calls to an operator's enum items callback.
Pull Request: blender/blender#105614
Popover menu buttons had their labels translated but not their
descriptions, although they were properly extracted.
This commit fixes that using the `TIP_()` macro.
A renaming of UI scale factors from names that imply a relationship to
monitor DPI to names that imply that they simply change "scale"
Pull Request: blender/blender#105750
Decorator buttons would be skipped when setting the tooltip data for all
buttons in the layout, but the duplicated data would still be marked as
used, so not freed.
After ed870f87b9, panels headers displayed inside panels had their
label duplicated when translations were enabled. This is because a
string comparison was made against the original message, instead of
the translated message.
Pull Request: blender/blender#105151
No user-visible changes expected.
Essentially, this makes it possible to use C++ types like `std::function`
inside `uiBut`. This has plenty of benefits, for example this should help
significantly reducing unsafe `void *` use (since a `std::function` can hold
arbitrary data while preserving types).
----
I wanted to use a non-trivially-constructible C++ type (`std::function`) inside
`uiBut`. But this would mean we can't use `MEM_cnew()` like allocation anymore.
Rather than writing worse code, allow non-trivial construction for `uiBut`.
Member-initializing all members is annoying since there are so many, but rather
safe than sorry. As we use more C++ types (e.g. convert callbacks to use
`std::function`), this should become less since they initialize properly on
default construction.
Also use proper C++ inheritance for `uiBut` subtypes, the old way to allocate
based on size isn't working anymore.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D17164
Reviewed by: Hans Goudey
This simplifies some memory management, ammortizes some of the many
small allocations when building UI layouts, and simplifies the code
that deals with the groups. `uiBlock` is no longer a trivial type.
In my testing this saved a few ms when drawing a large node tree.