Adds a toggle to the filter menu for outliner synced selection. Enabled
by default, this ensures selection is synced between objects, bones, and
sequences. An active outliner element theme color is added to indicate
which element is active.
Synced selection is controlled on the operator level. Each operator
that modifies selection for objects, bones, sequences, or outliner
elements needs to call the respective ED_outliner_select_sync_from..
function to tag outliners to be synced.
Syncing is done lazily on outliner draw.
Note that unlike some others, this is always enabled for sequencer,
since previous (2.7x) code was already deselecting everything when
clicking in an empty area...
Part of T63995.
BF-admins agree to remove header information that isn't useful,
to reduce noise.
- BEGIN/END license blocks
Developers should add non license comments as separate comment blocks.
No need for separator text.
- Contributors
This is often invalid, outdated or misleading
especially when splitting files.
It's more useful to git-blame to find out who has developed the code.
See P901 for script to perform these edits.
Terms get/set don't make much sense when casting values.
Name macros so the conversion is obvious,
use common prefix for easier completion.
- GET_INT_FROM_POINTER -> POINTER_AS_INT
- SET_INT_IN_POINTER -> POINTER_FROM_INT
- GET_UINT_FROM_POINTER -> POINTER_AS_UINT
- SET_UINT_IN_POINTER -> POINTER_FROM_UINT
Add tool options to control how select operates (add/sub/set/and/xor).
Note: edit mode armature select still needs to support all options,
this is complicated by how it handles partial end-point selection.
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.
Was possible to do Alt-RMB on a strips handle - which only make the strip active (but didn't select).
This isn't really useful, so just select the strip and its handles in this case.
Main issue in previous code was that you could not shift-alt-rmb select several
contiguous strips, result was pretty much unusable.
Also, enhanced general behavior of this selection mode, now (similar to alt-rm clicking
on handles), when you alt-rmb click on a same strip several times, you alternate between:
* Strip is selected, neighbor handles are selected;
* Strip and its handles are selected, neighbor handles are selected.
…which allows you to either grab or slide the strip.
And refactored a bit code too, linked_handle has a complete different logic
than without this option, simpler and clearer to completely separate them in code.
Initial issue reported by Leon Cheung on IRC, thanks!