Make better subvision, as well as ruler steps, based on what seems to be
the common trends for rulers of these 3 units (inch, foot and yard), but
also based on common conversion needs.
Main changes are:
- Always subdivide inches by 2, down to 1/256, and get rid of the gap
where inches division jumped from 1/16 to 1/192 (which is not even a
multiple of 2).
- Add the 72 steps to inch ruler (1 fathom).
- Replace the 2 feet by a 3 feet (1 yard) step.
- Use base-10 steps for yard (there don't seem to be bigger units in the
imperial/US measurement system which needs specific steps).
- Add the 1/36 yard (= 1 inch) division.
- Below 1/12 feet and 1/36 yard, divide by multiples of 2 (inch-style).
Add a new Offset filter tool, as a front-end to gimp:offset. The
tool replaces, and provides the same interface as, the drawable-
offset dialog, while also providing live preview and on-canvas
interaction.
Note that we don't simply use a custom propgui constructor for
gimp:offset, since we need a little more control.
When the "wrap" property of a GimpSpinButton is TRUE, wrap-around
out-of-range values entered through the spin-button's text entry,
instead of clamping them. Since we're using GimpSpinButton
everywhere since last commit, this applies to all our angle-entry
spin buttons (including spin scales).
This allows to force a GimpColorArea to display as out-of-gamut color.
Current code was only considering the generic RGB case (outside of [0-1]
range), and in particular not grayscale or indexed images.
Ideally the GimpColorArea widget could be (optionally) made to follow a
context, so that for instance it could update its representation when
the context image changes, or when this image's type changes. Yet since
it is a libgimpwidgets widget, it cannot get such update. Instead I add
a new API function to display the color box with the out-of-gamut
triangle. The decision code for this will have to be done elsewhere.
Use this new API for GimpColorHistory to display non-gray colors in the
history as out-of-gamut on grayscale images, or colors absent of the
palette on indexed images.
In GimpChainButton, emit the "toggled" signal whenever the chain
button's "active" property changes, either due to user interaction,
or programatically. Previously, it would only get emitted when the
button was actually clicked.
In particular, this fixes an issue where the aspect ratio of a
coordinates size-entry won't get updated when its chain button got
toggled programatically, as can happen with the scale tool.
We were doing it all the wrong way, fixing one combo box object at a
time. So this commit basically reverses commits 68a33ab5bd, 6dfca83c2a
and a9a979b2d0 and instead runs the same code in the class code. This
way, all objects based on these base classes will have the fix from
scratch.
These improved various other drop-down lists (I found some of them, and
probably not all) as I fixed all GIMP custom widgets based on
GtkComboBox.
Note that it has to be run after filling the list apparently (I had the
problem especially with GimpIntComboBox if running in the _init() code,
then the list widget showed wrong).
...palette views despite selected color being in the currently
selected pallette
As suggested by Massimo, changing the color comparison EPSILON in
gimppalette.c from 1e-10 to 1e-6 fixes this, and is really small
enough.
Also, generally clean up color comparison epsilons:
- use a #define, not hardcoded values for all uses of
gimp_rgb[a]_distance()
- call the #defines RGB_EPSILON and RGBA_EPSILON
- make them all 1e-6 or larger
This was my initial choice, but the more I think about it, the less I am
sure this was the right choice. There was some common code (as I was
making a common composite bucket fill once the line art was generated),
but there is also a lot of different code and the functions were filled
of exception when we were doing a line art fill. Also though there is a
bit of color works (the way we decide whether a pixel is part of a
stroke or not, though currently this is basic grayscale threshold), this
is really not the same as other criterions. In particular this was made
obvious on the Select by Color tool where the line art criterion was
completely meaningless and would have had to be opted-out!
This commit split a bit the code. Instead of finding the line art in the
criterion list, I add a third choice to the "Fill whole selection"/"Fill
similar colors" radio. In turn I create a new GimpBucketFillArea type
with the 3 choices, and remove line art value from GimpSelectCriterion.
I am not fully happy yet of this code, as it creates a bit of duplicate
code, and I would appreciate to move some code away from gimpdrawable-*
and gimppickable-* files. This may happen later. I break the work in
pieces to not get too messy.
Also this removes access to the smart colorization from the API, but
that's probably ok as I prefer to not freeze options too early in the
process since API needs to be stable. Probably we should get a concept
of experimental API.
This commit implements part of the research paper "A Fast and Efficient
Semi-guided Algorithm for Flat Coloring Line-arts" from the GREYC (the
people from G'Mic). It is meant to select regions from drawn sketchs in
a "smart" way, in particular it tries to close non-perfectly closed
regions, which is a common headache for digital painters and colorists.
The implementation is not finished as it needs some watersheding as well
so that the selected area does not leave "holes" near stroke borders.
The research paper proposes a new watersheding algorithm, but I may not
have to implement it, as it is more focused on automatic colorization
with prepared spots (instead of bucket fill-type interaction).
This will be used in particular with the fuzzy select and bucket fill
tools.
Note that this first version is a bit slow once we get to big images,
but I hope to be able to optimize this.
Also no options from the algorithm are made available in the GUI yet.
... as I would like it to.
Use GimpSpinButton, added in the previous commit, in GimpSizeEntry,
instead of GtkSpinButton. This avoids updating the spin-buttons'
adjustment values when they lose focus, truncating the value if it
can't be accurately displayed using the corresponding spin-button's
digit count. Since size-entries can have multiple spin-buttons
using different units, this prevents the value from changing when
entring a value using one unit, and then shifting the focus to, but
not changing, another unit.
GimpSpinButton is a drop-in replacement for (and a subclass of)
GtkSpinButton. Unlike GtkSpinButton, it avoids updating the
adjustment value when losing focus, unless the entry text has
changed. This prevents accidental loss of precision, when the
adjustment value can't be accurately displayed in the entry.
... and G_TYPE_INSTANCE_GET_PRIVATE()
g_type_class_add_private() and G_TYPE_INSTANCE_GET_PRIVATE() were
deprecated in GLib 2.58. Instead, use
G_DEFINE_[ABSTRACT_]TYPE_WITH_PRIVATE(), and
G_ADD_PRIVATE[_DYNAMIC](), and the implictly-defined
foo_get_instance_private() functions, all of which are available in
the GLib versions we depend on.
This commit only covers types registered using one of the
G_DEFINE_FOO() macros (i.e., most types), but not types with a
custom registration function, of which we still have a few -- GLib
currently only provides a (non-deprecated) public API for adding a
private struct using the G_DEFINE_FOO() macros.
Note that this commit was 99% auto-generated (because I'm not
*that* crazy :), so if there are any style mismatches... we'll have
to live with them for now.
This fixes 2 CRITICALs when creating a GimpFrame without a child. There
are reasons to create empty frames (for instance to conditionnally add
contents later, and use it as a label only otherwise).
Add an option to record a performance log through the dashboard.
The log contains a series of samples of the dashboard variables, as
well as the full program backtrace, when available. As such, it
essentially acts as a built-in profiler, which allows us to
correlate program execution with the information available through
the dashboard. It is meant to be used for creating logs to
accompany perofrmance-related bug reports, as well as for profiling
GIMP during development.
The sample frequency defaults to 10 samples per second, but can be
overridden using the GIMP_PERFORMANCE_LOG_SAMPLE_FREQUENCY
environment variable. Backtraces are included by default when
available, but can be suppressed using the
GIMP_PERFORMANCE_LOG_NO_BACKTRACE environment variable.
Logs are created through the new "record" button at the bottom of
the dashboard dialog. When pressed, a file dialog is opened to
select the log file, and, once confirmed, data is being recorded to
the selected file. Recording is stopped by pressing the "record"
button again (we use a highlight to indicate that recording is
active.)
While recording, the "reset" button is replaced with an "add marker"
button, which can be used to add event markers to the log. These
can be used to mark events of interest, such as "started painting"
and "stopped painting", which then appear in the log as part of the
sample stream. Markers are numbered sequentually, and the number
of the next (to-be-added) marker appears on the button. Shift-
clicking the button adds an empty (description-less) marker, which
is only identified by its number; this can be used when markers
need to be added quickly.
The log is an XML file, containing some extra information (such as
the output of "$ gimp -v", and symbol information) in addition to
the samples. The data in the file is delta-encoded to reduce the
file size, meaning that samples (as well as some other elements)
only specify the changes since the previous sample. This adds a
necessary decoding step before data can be processed; the next
commit adds a tool that does that.
There are currently no tools to actually analyze the data -- that's
still TBD -- but at least we can start gathering it.
AM_PATH_GLIB_2_0 m4 macro actually computes this value using
$PKG_CONFIG. Yet $PKG_CONFIG variable is the pkg-config tool looking for
target libraries (not host), hence it would return the executable
`glib-compile-resources` built for the target.
Also using the same variable name invalidates our test: our own
AC_PATH_PROG was never run as the variable was already set. And no
environment variable could override this test anymore either. This is
why I rename the test variable to HOST_GLIB_COMPILE_RESOURCES.
(cherry picked from commit d1d9eb17e5)
... GimpCellRendererToggle into "icon-size".
In particular making it a pixel size instead of a GtkIconSize. This enum
is limited to a few presets (registering new values is deprecated since
GTK+ 3.10), with names completely semantically wrong. It is better to
specify icon sizes (before scaling) in pixels directly, which goes also
with named icons instead of stock ones.
Squashed commit of the following:
commit ee1ff7d502658cfa1248a13a3f0348495db07eda
Author: ONO Yoshio <ohtsuka.yoshio@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Jul 29 00:31:47 2018 +0900
Fixed that gimp-text-dir-ttb-* icons are lacked in Symbolic.
commit d87d012d697628da28fe90199cc04b95b72ba8ef
Author: ONO Yoshio <ohtsuka.yoshio@gmail.com>
Date: Sat Jul 28 16:23:10 2018 +0900
Fix a typo.
commit cf0238bf7df56c384cdf3b7ec69557d14740f853
Author: ONO Yoshio <ohtsuka.yoshio@gmail.com>
Date: Sat Jul 28 15:50:57 2018 +0900
Fixed seg fault error.
commit b07f60d06f
Author: ONO Yoshio <ohtsuka.yoshio@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Jul 27 17:15:34 2018 +0900
Add support for vertical text writing.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/issues/641
In subdirs containing a generated foomarshal.h header, add the
generated sources to BUILT_SOURCES, so that they're generated
before the rest of the source files are built. Otherwise, since
there is no rule specifying the dependency between the rest of the
source files and foomarshal.h, and since foomarshal.h is not
checked into git (and hence doesn't exist when doing a clean
build), compilation of the said source files may fail if they're
built before foomarshal.h is generated.
The old hack doesn't work any longer, there is only one cell layout in
GTK+ 3.x, not separate ones for the button and the popup. Switch back
to recreating the cells in notify::popup-shown.
Also simplify the code, we only need to remember one cell renderer in
our struct, and remove manual resizing code that was only needed in
older GTK+ 2.x vrsions.
... GimpMemsizeEntry.
A GtkAdjustment is a GInitiallyUnowned, which means it is created as a
floating reference. GtkSpinButton assumes its ownership by calling
g_object_ref_sink() in gtk_spin_button_new() implementation. Thus it
will take care of freeing it and when we try to unref it in finalize(),
the object already doesn't exist.
Alternatively we could keep another ref (by calling g_object_ref_sink()
ourselves) but since the spin button is a child of the entry, it will
live all the way until the entry is freed. There is no need to increment
the references. So instead, simplify the code, and don't try to free an
object we don't own anymore.
This fixes CRITICAL assertions:
> g_object_unref: assertion 'G_IS_OBJECT (object)' failed
- remove redundant frames, 3d-frames are gone anyway, so no need to
keep double out/in frames around
- give all color selector classes CSS names
- add/fix some theme CSS styles
Set the tooltip in GimpColorHexEntry itself and remove all other
tooltip setting. This just moves the translatable string sround in
libgimpwidgets/, and even removes it from app/.
- derive it from GtkScale not GtkRange so we get the keybindings again
- remove scroll_event() implementation, the parent class does the right
thing now
- remove lots of magic size calculation code about focus and borders
and whatnot
- instead, style its CSS nodes using a hardcoded CSS provider and simply
"know" the size of the slider in draw(), did this in code instead of
the theme CSS because we do pretty evil things here and we don't want
theme authors to think they can change much about it
Treat the gimp-core-pixbufs and gimp-icon-pixbufs resources like we
changed the cursor resources before, and clean out a lot of cruft from
icons/ (there is no need to generate stuff in all icon themes when we
include only one fallback icon from one theme).
Also remove all traces of it from the plug-in protocol and raise the
protocol version to 0x0100 (we now allow features and therefore
version bumps in stable, and the master protocol version should always
be higher). Fix the code that aborts plug-in startup on protocol
version mismatch, we can't use gimp_message() because we have no
protocol.
Add support for exponentiation (using the ^ operator) to eevl.
This is occasionally useful, e.g., in geometrically-derived
quantities involving square roots.
gtk_window_set_default_icon_name() apparently isn't able to properly
fallback to symbolic or non-symbolic variant. So let's test both.
There is also gtk_window_set_icon_list() but it takes a list of pixbuf,
so I really doubt it is the best solution either. The proposed solution
is working ok for now, even though I feel it is again a bit hackish.
This commit makes 2 improvements to this renderer. First it will allow
it to find symbolic variants of icons. Second it properly renders icons
when the display is scaled, by producing pixbuf size double to logical
drawing size and making cairo rendering it at the expected logical size.
GimpBusyBox is used to show a message indicating an operation is in
progress. It's basically just a spinner and a label, with some
styling.
We're going to use it both in app/ and in a plug-in.
...Generate .h files instead.
Generate proper .c and .h files for color-picker and tool cursors in
the directories where they are built, and stop including them in other
.c files.
by simply drawing the buffer with cairo_mask() and a stipple pattern
so we get the same effect as before, but without rendering the
widget's background color into the buffer ourselves.
- Fix gimp_scroll_adjustment_values() for smooth scroll events
- Set GDK_SMOOTH_SCROLL_MASK on all widgets where we set GDK_SCROLL_MASK
- Add GIMP_ZOOM_SMOOTH to enum GimpZoomType
- Add "gdouble delta" to gimp_zoom_model_step()
- Change the meaning of the "scale" parameter to "scale or delta" in
all functions that take GimpZoomType and a scale factor.
and use it in GimpScrolledPreview. It supports smooth scrolling and
does roughly the same as a whole lot of magic code in GtkScrolledWindow
and GtkRange, resulting in the same scrolling behavior as in stock
GTK+ widgets.
Since we don't know yet what to do about this, let's not spam the
build with distracting warnings in the meantime.
gimp_dialog_set_alternative_button_order
gimp_dialog_set_alternative_button_order_from_array
are macros which just call the deprecated GtkDialog functions, but
wrap them in G_GNUC_BEGIN,END_IGNORE_DEPRECATIONS.
even if we don't have private members (yet). Also make class padding 8
pointers in all headers. This commit moves nothing to private, it just
makes all headers consistent and adjusts .c files accordigly.
Add CSS names using gtk_widget_class_set_css_name(), remove styling in
code and instead do it properly in CSS, so far in the System theme.
All horribly incomplete but a start.