mirror of https://github.com/GNOME/gimp.git
508 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
508 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
Creating new PDB procedures
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===========================
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Barak Itkin <lightningismyname@gmail.com>
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version 1.0, August 2010
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////
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This document is an asciidoc document. It can be read as is, or you can
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print it as a formatted HTML page by running
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asciidoc README_NEW_PDB_PROC
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This will generate the file README_NEW_PDB_PROC.html.
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Note that inline code parts are marked with + signs around them.
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////
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This tutorial will show you the basics of creating a new procedure and
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adding it to GIMP's PDB.
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Introduction
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------------
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What are PDB procedures?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A *PDB procedure* is a process which is registered in the Procedure
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Data-Base. Procedures registered in the database are available to all
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the GIMP plugins/scripts.
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What should I want to add to the PDB?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Let's say a new feature was added to GIMP, and your plugin/script wants
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to use it. In order to do so, this function should be publicly available
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(most functions are only available to GIMP's core, and in order to
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expose them externally we have to add them to the PDB).
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Anything I should know before continuing this tutorial?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Yes. You should know
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_%28programming_language%29[C Programming]
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(C is the language in which GIMP is coded), know a bit of
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https://library.gnome.org/devel/glib/stable/[Glib] (the library which
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GIMP uses for many of it's data-structures). In addition, you should
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know enough about the GIMP core for implementing your function (this is
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not a programming tutorial, this is only a technical tutorial) or at
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least have the intuition to understand enough from the code you see, to
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copy paste and modify the parts you need (In fact, this is how I made my
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first addition to the PDB :D However in most cases it's better to know
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what you are doing).
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The basics of PDB procedures
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----------------------------
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Since adding a function to the PDB can be tedious (you would need to
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modify 3 or more different source files), a scripting framework was
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developed to add functions to the PDB by writing them once. To see how
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function are implemented in the PDB, take a look in
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/pdb/groups[pdb/groups].
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You can see many files with the .pdb suffix - these are special template
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files which include the actual source of the PDB functions. Let's take a
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quick look at one of these - text_layer_get_text in
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/pdb/groups/text_layer.pdb[pdb/groups/text_layer.pdb].
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[source,perl]
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----
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sub text_layer_get_text {
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$blurb = 'Get the text from a text layer as string.';
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$help = <<'HELP';
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This procedure returns the text from a text layer as a string.
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HELP
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&marcus_pdb_misc('2008', '2.6');
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@inargs = (
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{ name => 'layer', type => 'layer',
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desc => 'The text layer' }
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);
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@outargs = (
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{ name => 'text', type => 'string',
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desc => 'The text from the specified text layer.' }
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);
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%invoke = (
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code => <<'CODE'
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{
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if (gimp_pdb_layer_is_text_layer (layer, FALSE, error))
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{
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g_object_get (gimp_text_layer_get_text (GIMP_TEXT_LAYER (layer)),
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"text", &text,
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NULL);
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}
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else
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{
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success = FALSE;
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}
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}
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CODE
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);
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}
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----
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As you can see, all the function is wrapped inside the following wrapper:
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[source,perl]
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----
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sub text_layer_get_text {
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...
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}
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----
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That's the first line, declaring the name of the new PDB function (it
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will be renamed to +gimp_text_layer_get_text+ automatically), and
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opening the braces for it's content.
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Description of the procedure
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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At the beginning of the PDB function, you'll find lines similar to these:
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[source,perl]
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----
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$blurb = 'Get the text from a text layer as string.';
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$help = <<'HELP';
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This procedure returns the text from a text layer as a string.
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HELP
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----
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Every procedure has a blurb string and a help string. A blurb is a short
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string summarizing what the function does, and the help is a longer
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string in which you describe your function in more depth.
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A one line string can be specified by simply putting it between braces
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(like the blurb string). A longer string, which can possibly spread over
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several lines, must be written in a special way:
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[source,perl]
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----
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<<'HELP';
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This procedure returns the text from a text layer as a string.
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HELP
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----
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The +<<'*HELP*'+ practically mean that the content of the string will be
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specified in the next lines and it will continue until reaching a line
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which has the content +HELP+ in it (without any spaces before/after it,
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and without anything else in that line).
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Now, the next line is:
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[source,perl]
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----
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&marcus_pdb_misc('2008', '2.6');
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----
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If you contribute a function to the GIMP PDB, you credit yourself in the
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source code. The above line is for an author which contributed many
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functions and he now has a simple macro to credit him. For us regular
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users, if we want to specify the credit to ourself we should replace the
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above line with the following lines:
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[source,perl]
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----
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$author = 'Elvis Presley <the_king@rock.com>';
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$copyright = 'Elvis Presley';
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$date = '2010';
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$since = '2.8';
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----
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Replace the values of +$author+ and +$copyright+ with your own name and
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email, replace the value of +$date+ with the date in which you wrote the
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function (most functions only specify the year, so try to keep with this
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standard instead of adding a full date). And finally, replace the value
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of +$since+ with the version of GIMP which will be the first to include
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this function. For example, if GIMP 2.6 was released, and 2.8 wasn't
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released yet. then new functionality will be added in 2.8 (new
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functionality is only added inside new major version releases) and you
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should specify 2.8.
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In and Out Arguments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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After the header of the function which contains it's description, you'll
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find these lines:
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[source,perl]
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----
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@inargs = (
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{ name => 'layer', type => 'layer',
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desc => 'The text layer' }
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);
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@outargs = (
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{ name => 'text', type => 'string',
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desc => 'The text from the specified text layer.' }
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);
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----
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Here we specify the input arguments of this procedure, together with the
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returned arguments. As you can see, each argument has a name, a type and
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a description. The name will be used later in our code and it should be
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meaningful and be a valid name for a variable in C.
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The type is one of the types listed in
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/pdb/pdb.pl[pdb/pdb.pl]
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inside the +%arg_types+ array. In
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/pdb/pdb.pl[pdb/pdb.pl]
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you can see the corresponding C type for each of the types we specify.
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For example, +layer+ type (inside the .pdb file) becomes a variable with
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the C type of +GimpLayer *+, and +string+ becomes +gchar *+.
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If I want to add another input variable to the function, it'll look like this:
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[source,perl]
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----
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@inargs = (
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{ name => 'layer', type => 'layer',
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desc => 'The text layer' },
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{ name => 'temp', type => 'int32',
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desc => 'My silly number' }
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);
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@outargs = (
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{ name => 'text', type => 'string',
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desc => 'The text from the specified text layer.' }
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);
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----
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Don't forget to add comma between arguments!
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The actual code
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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After specifying the arguments we will specify the actual code of the
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function inside the following wrapper:
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[source,perl]
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----
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%invoke = (
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code => <<'CODE'
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...
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CODE
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);
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----
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Now finally, let's take a look at the actual code:
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[source,c]
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----
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{
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if (gimp_pdb_layer_is_text_layer (layer, FALSE, error))
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{
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g_object_get (gimp_text_layer_get_text (GIMP_TEXT_LAYER (layer)),
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"text", &text,
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NULL);
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}
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else
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{
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success = FALSE;
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}
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}
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----
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This is a simple code in C - nothing fancy. However, this code uses
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functions from inside GIMP's core (hacking on the GIMP core will be the
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content for a different guide). The variables +text+ and +layer+, inside
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the C code, correspond to the variables we specified in the input/output
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arguments (since they have exactly the same name):
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[source,c]
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----
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@inargs = (
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{ name => 'layer', type => 'layer',
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desc => 'The text layer' }
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);
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@outargs = (
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{ name => 'text', type => 'string',
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desc => 'The text from the specified text layer.' }
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);
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----
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If for some reason, our function can fail (for example, in the code
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above the second line checks if the passed parameter is indeed a text
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layer and not just any layer) then we should add an indication that it
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failed by setting the variable +success+ to have the value +FALSE+.
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Now, we need to do two more things to finish our function: add it to
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the function list, and configure the includes correctly.
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Registering the function inside the PDB file
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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At the end of the PDB file, you should find the following segments:
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[source,perl]
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----
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@headers = qw("libgimpbase/gimpbase.h"
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"core/gimpcontext.h"
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"text/gimptext.h"
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"text/gimptextlayer.h"
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"gimppdb-utils.h"
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"gimppdberror.h"
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"gimp-intl.h");
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@procs = qw(text_layer_new
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text_layer_get_text
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text_layer_set_text
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...
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);
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----
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Inside the +@headers+ there is a list of various header files from the
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gimp source. If your code requires a header which is not specified, add
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it there.
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Inside the +@procs+ there is a list of the procedures which are exported
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by the file. *Make sure you add your procedure to the list!*
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Advanced details
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----------------
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enum arguments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In some cases you would like to have arguments which have a value from
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an enum (enumeration). Instead of just declaring these as integer values
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and telling in your description which value corresponds to which number,
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this can be done automatically for you if the desired enum is one of the
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enums which are already used by GIMP.
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To make it clearer, let's take a look at +layer_get_mode+ in
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/pdb/groups/layer.pdb[pdb/groups/layer.pdb]:
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[source,perl]
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----
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@outargs = (
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{ name => 'mode', type => 'enum GimpLayerModeEffects',
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desc => 'The layer combination mode' }
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);
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----
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If we take a look at the same procedure as it shows up in the procedure
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browser (+gimp_layer_get_mode+), we will see the following return values:
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[options="header",cols="1,1,11"]
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|=======================================================================
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|Name |Type |Description
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|mode |INT32 |
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The layer combination mode { NORMAL-MODE (0), DISSOLVE-MODE (1),
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BEHIND-MODE (2), MULTIPLY-MODE (3), SCREEN-MODE (4), OVERLAY-MODE (5),
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DIFFERENCE-MODE (6), ADDITION-MODE (7), SUBTRACT-MODE (8),
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DARKEN-ONLY-MODE (9), LIGHTEN-ONLY-MODE (10), HUE-MODE (11),
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SATURATION-MODE (12), COLOR-MODE (13), VALUE-MODE (14),
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DIVIDE-MODE (15), DODGE-MODE (16), BURN-MODE (17), HARDLIGHT-MODE (18),
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SOFTLIGHT-MODE (19), GRAIN-EXTRACT-MODE (20), GRAIN-MERGE-MODE (21),
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COLOR-ERASE-MODE (22), ERASE-MODE (23), REPLACE-MODE (24),
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ANTI-ERASE-MODE (25) }
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|=======================================================================
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As you can see, all the values of the enum were listed (the source file
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containing this enum is
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/app/base/base-enums.h[app/base/base-enums.h])
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in it's description, and the type for this argument was declared as an
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integer value (reminder: enumeration values in C are actually mapped to
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numbers, unlike languages such as Java where enumeration values are
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indeed a new type in the language).
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Limiting the range of numerical arguments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In some cases you would like to limit the range of numerical values
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passed as parameters for your PDB function. For example, the width of
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newly created images should be limited to be at least 1 (since images
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with 0 width don't make sense...) and it also should be limited to some
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maximal width (so that it won't be bigger than the maximal size GIMP
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supports).
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We can add this sort of range limitations inside the declaration of the
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function, and by that we can make sure it won't be called with values
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out of range (GIMP will make sure the values are inside the specified
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range before it calls our function). To see an example, let's take look
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at the procedure image_new from
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/pdb/groups/image.pdb[pdb/groups/image.pdb]:
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[source,perl]
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----
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@inargs = (
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{ name => 'width', type => '1 <= int32 <= GIMP_MAX_IMAGE_SIZE',
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desc => 'The width of the image' },
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{ name => 'height', type => '1 <= int32 <= GIMP_MAX_IMAGE_SIZE',
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desc => 'The height of the image' },
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{ name => 'type', type => 'enum GimpImageBaseType',
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desc => 'The type of image' }
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);
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----
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As you can see, inside the +*type*+ field of the first two parameters,
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we added a limitation on the range of the parameter. The lower
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limitation is a simple number, and the upper limitation is a constant
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macro (+GIMP_MAX_IMAGE_SIZE+) defined in
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/libgimpbase/gimplimits.h[libgimpbase/gimplimits.h].
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In order to make sure this constand will indeed be defined when parsing
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this function, the file
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/libgimpbase/gimpbase.h[libgimpbase/gimpbase.h]
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(which includes
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/libgimpbase/gimplimits.h[libgimpbase/gimplimits.h])
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was added to the +@headers+ section of the pdb file.
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Now, if you take a look at the code part of this function you won't see
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any check that the value is indeed inside the specified range. As we
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said, GIMP takes care of this automatically for us so we don't need to
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add the check ourselves. Inside the procedure browser, this procedure
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would show up like this:
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[options="header",cols="1,1,11"]
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|=======================================================================
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|Name |Type |Description
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|width |INT32 |The width of the image (1 \<= width \<= 262144)
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|height |INT32 |The height of the image (1 \<= height \<= 262144)
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|type |INT32 |The type of image { RGB (0), GRAY (1), INDEXED (2) }
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|=======================================================================
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Array arguments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In some cases you will want a function which returns an array or a
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function which receives an array. Array arguments are specified in a
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special way which is a bit different than the other arguments. To see
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how array arguments are specified, let's take a look at the +@outargs+
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of +vectors_stroke_get_points+ from
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/pdb/groups/vectors.pdb[pdb/groups/vectors.pdb]:
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[source,perl]
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----
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@outargs = (
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{ name => 'type', type => 'enum GimpVectorsStrokeType',
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desc => 'type of the stroke (always GIMP_VECTORS_STROKE_TYPE_BEZIER for now).' },
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{ name => 'controlpoints', type => 'floatarray',
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desc => 'List of the control points for the stroke (x0, y0, x1, y1, ...).',
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array => { name => 'num_points',
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desc => 'The number of floats returned.' } },
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{ name => 'closed', type => 'boolean',
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desc => 'Whether the stroke is closed or not.' }
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);
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----
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As you can see, the second argument which is of type +floatarray+ is
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specified in a different way than the other arguments; In addition to
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+name+, +type+ and +desc+, it also has an +*array*+ part. This part
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will declare another parameter for this function which will hold the
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length of the array (Reminder: in C you need the length of an array
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since unlike languages such as python, the length of an array isn't kept
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by default).
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As a result of this declaration, two arguments will be created (in this
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order):
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--
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. +*num_points*+ - a parameter of type +gint32+ which will hold the
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length of the array.
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. +*controlpoints*+ - a parameter of type +gdouble*+ which will point to
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the first element in the array.
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--
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Like all the other arguments which are declared in the +@outargs+ and
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+@intargs+ parts, their name value will be the name of the variable in
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the code part. If you'll look at the code part of this function,
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you'll be able to find these lines:
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[source,c]
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----
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num_points = points_array->len;
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controlpoints = g_new (gdouble, num_points * 2);
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----
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As you can see from the code above, the +controlpoints+ argument starts
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just as a pointer to a double (array) - you have to do the allocation of
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the array yourself. However, if we would specify an array as an input
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argument, then the pointer will point to its beginning.
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Summary
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-------
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Hey! Now what - how do I see my function?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Compile GIMP again from the source, and pass the flag --with-pdbgen to
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the configure script (or to the autogen script if using the autogen
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script).
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Conclusions
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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Now that you know how a PDB function looks like, you should be able to
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add new ones of your own if GIMP needs them (ask on the development list
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before working on a new function like this, since you need to see if the
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developers agree that it's needed!).
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Don't forget to include the functions inside the right files! Under
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https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/tree/master/pdb/groups[pdb/groups]
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you can see many files (fonts.pdb, brush.pdb, layer.pdb, etc.) - *make
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sure you add your function in the place which logically suites it!*
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