ClutterActor should warn if a user tries to add or remove an actor to,
and from, itself on the scene graph.
Clutter will likely crash, or warn way down the line, but if we can make
debugging simpler then we should.
The function should return true not only if the actor is being painted
by a ClutterClone, but also if it's inside a sub-graph being painted by
a ClutterClone.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756371
When enable_paint_unmapped is disabled, we shouldn't force the
source widget to be unmapped if the constraints would keep it
mapped; in practice this shouldn't matter unless a paint handler
is messing with the map state.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745517
The commit 6cd24faaa5 (actor: Clean up
transform_stage_point()) changed the validation of the transformation
matrix to ignore the fraction part of the determinant. This caused
clutter_actor_transform_stage_point() to fail and return FALSE for
actors which scale was less than 1.
Previously the validation was ('det' being a float):
det = (RQ[0][0] * ST[0][0])
+ (RQ[0][1] * ST[0][1])
+ (RQ[0][2] * ST[0][2]);
if (!det)
return FALSE;
Semantically, the if statement expression '!det' is equivalent to
'det == 0', i.e. 'det == 0.0f'. Post cleanup patches, 'det' was turned
into a double, and the if statement was changed to:
if (CLUTTER_NEARBYINT (det) == 0)
return FALSE;
which, different from before, rounds the determinant to the nearest
integer value, meaning determinant in the range (-0.5, 0.5) would be
considered invalid.
This patch reverts this part to the old behavior, while, because of the
inexact nature of floating point arithmetics, allowing a bit more liberal
meaning of "equals to 0" than '== 0.0'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754766
When binding models to actors to map items to children we don't often
need the full control of a function; in many cases we just need to
specify the type of the child we want to construct and the properties
on both the item and the child that we want to bind.
We should provide a simple convenience function that does all this for
us.
Use double precision floats for the intermediate computations, to avoid
loss of precision, and don't convert too integer when unnecessary, to
avoid rounding errors.
It can be useful to bind the children list to set of objects inside a
GListModel implementation; the GListModel stores the objects, and every
time the model changes, a function is called that maps each object in
the model to a newly created ClutterActor, which is then added as a
child. This API, along with the property binding one inside GObject,
allows automatic creation of views based on object models that update
themselves without manual intervention.
The paint opacity for a top level is always overridden to be the full
value, since it's a composited value and we want to paint our scene.
When clearing the stage framebuffer, though, we want to use the actual
opacity, if ClutterStage:use-alpha is set.
These are just terrible API that we've been stringing along since the
0.x days. We cannot truly deprecate them, because they are, in some
cases, the only actual API to perform some operation, and porting all
the code in the world is not going to make us any friends.
For the time being, we use a deprecation notice in the documentation.
The macros are useless for language bindings, and are terribly unsafe
from C as well. There's always the option of using the GObject
properties they refer to, but it's more efficient to just have a simple
getter function.
Nobody has been compiling Clutter with profiling enabled in a long time.
UProf itself hasn't been updated in 5 years, and it still depends on
deprecated components like dbus-glib, with no port to GDBus in sight.
The profiling code was moderately useful in the past, but these days
it's probably better to profile Cogl than Clutter itself; timing
information can be extracted by the timestamp on each diagnostic message
that is now available by default in the CLUTTER_NOTE macro, and we can
add ad hoc counters where needed.
Toolkits may need to paint actors internally outside the normal tree
(for example to create a shadow shape), in which case they need to
control the opacity directly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677412
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org>
The easing state is part of the AnimationInfo structure, which is stored
inside the GObject's datalist. Each instance frees the data stored there
during finalization, so there is no point for us to restore an easing
state (which may or may not be the last one) just to have everything
cleared out once we chain up to GObject's own finalize() implementation.
And move the only private ClutterConstraint method to it.
This commit also sneaks in a change that makes sense for the debugging
of the update_allocation() method, which checks if the allocation was
effectively changed.
We want to recompute the content box when changing the content instance,
in case the preferred size is different and the content gravity uses the
preferred size; the change of content with different preferred size and
same gravity should also trigger an implicit transition.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711182
Some actors want to have a preferred size driven by their content, not
by their children or by their fixed size.
In order to achieve that, we can extend the ClutterRequestMode
enumeration so that clutter_actor_get_preferred_size() defers to the
ClutterContent's own preferred size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676326
For a variety of complicated reasons, ClutterText currently sets fields
on the PangoContext when creating a layout. This causes ClutterText to
behave somewhat erratically in certain cases, since the PangoContext is
currently shared between all actors.
GTK+ creates a PangoContext for every single GtkWidget, so it seems like
we should do the same here.
Move the private code that was previously in clutter-main.c into
clutter-actor.c and clean it up a bit. This gives every actor its own
PangoContext it can mutilate whenever it wants, at its heart's content.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739050
Just like unmapped children.
Apparently, layers above Clutter allow mapped children without an
allocation, instead of unmapping them. This means we need to ignore
them when computing the paint volume.
Patch originally by: Adel Gadllah <adel.gadllah@gmail.com>
Signed-off by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736682
We need to release the temporary reference we acquired in order for the
signal emission to work.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734761
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org>
Cogl 1.18 deprecated the global clipping API in favour of the
per-framebuffer one, but since we're using the 2.0 API internally we
don't have access to the deprecated symbols any more.
This is pretty much a mechanical port for all the places where we're
still using the old 1.x API.
Instead of asking every internal user to get the stage and get the
active framebuffer from it, we can wrap it up ourselves, and do some
sanity checks as well.
When support for implicit animation of actor position was added,
the optimization for not queueing when allocating an actor back
to the same location was lost. This optimization is important
since when we are hierarchically allocating down from the top of
the stage we constantly reallocate the actors at the top of the
hierarchy back to the same place.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719368
When the source actor potentially changes size, that shouldn't
necessarily result in the target actor being redrawn - it should
be like when a child of a container is reallocated due to changes
in its siblings or parent - it should redraw only to the extent
that it is moved and resized. Privately export an internal function
from clutter-actor.c to allow getting this right.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719367