With the demo that a long-press in presentation mode will bring up the context menu for switching between using the pointer for draw-on-slide vs normal slide navigation.
Thursday, 26 March 2015
gtk3 vclplug, some more gesture support
With the demo that a long-press in presentation mode will bring up the context menu for switching between using the pointer for draw-on-slide vs normal slide navigation.
gtk3 vclplug, basic gesture support
gtk3's gesture support is the functionality I'm actually interested in, so now that presentations work in full-screen mode, I've added basic GtkGestureSwipe support to LibreOffice (for gtk3 >= 3.14) and hooked it up the slideshow, so now swiping towards the left advances to the next slide,
to the right for the the previous slide.
Monday, 23 March 2015
gtk3 vclplug, full-screen presentation canvas mode
Newly added simple support to the gtk3 vclplug for "canvas" support which is the thing we draw onto for presentations. Which means the gtk3 vclplug now supports full screen presentations. Which required a whole massive pile of reorganization of the existing canvas backends to move them from their own per-platform concept in canvas to the per-desktop concept in vcl.
So now rather than having only one cairo canvas backend based on the xlib apis which is for "Linux" we have a cairo canvas for each vcl plug. The old school xlib one is moved from inside its #ifdef LINUX in canvas to the shared base of the gtk2, kde, etc backends in vcl, and there is now a new one for gtk3
Presumably there are lots of performance gains to be made to the new canvas backend seeing as I'm just invalidating the whole slide window when the canvas declares that it's flush time but slides appear to appear instantaneously for me and fly ins and move around a patch effects are smooth even in -O0 debug mode so I'll hold back on any optimizations efforts for now.
So now rather than having only one cairo canvas backend based on the xlib apis which is for "Linux" we have a cairo canvas for each vcl plug. The old school xlib one is moved from inside its #ifdef LINUX in canvas to the shared base of the gtk2, kde, etc backends in vcl, and there is now a new one for gtk3
Presumably there are lots of performance gains to be made to the new canvas backend seeing as I'm just invalidating the whole slide window when the canvas declares that it's flush time but slides appear to appear instantaneously for me and fly ins and move around a patch effects are smooth even in -O0 debug mode so I'll hold back on any optimizations efforts for now.
Thursday, 12 March 2015
gtk3 vclplug,
Here's today's effort. Correct UI font, scrolling just works, mouse-wheel functional, no bit droppings.
After making it possible to render with cairo to our basebmp surface initially for the purposes of rendering text, I tweaked things so that instead of re-rendering everything in the affected area on a "draw" signal we do our initial render into the underlying basebmp surface on resize events and then trust that our internally triggered paints will keep that basebmp up to date and gtk_widget_queue_draw_area those areas as they are modified in basebmp and just blit that basebmp to the gtk3 cairo surface on the resulting gtk_widget_queue_draw_area- triggered "draw". This is pretty much what we do for the MacOSX backend.
The basebmp is now cairo-compatible so the actual LibreOffice->Gtk3 draw becomes a trivial direct paint to the requested area in the gtk surface from our basebmp surface
With our cairo-compatible basebmp surface the gtk3 native rendering stuff for drawing the buttons and menus etc can then render directly into that basebmp at the desired locations removing a pile of temporary surfaces, conversion code and bounds-checking hackery.
Further under the hood however the headless svp plug that the gtk3 inherits from had a pair of major ultra-frustrating bugs which meant that while it looked good in theory, in practice it still was epically failing wrt bit dropping in practice. Now solved are the two underlying clipping-related bugs. One where an optimization effort would trigger creating an overly clipped region, and another where attempts to copy from the surface were clipped out by the clip region.
Still got some glitches in the impress sidebar and of course the above theming engine is still missing a pile of stuff and slide-show/canvas mode needs implementing, but I'm heartened. Its not complete, but its now less traffic accident and more building site.
Monday, 2 March 2015
gtk3 vclplug, text rendering via cairo
The LibreOffice gtk3 vclplug is currently basically rendering everything via the "svp" plugin code which renders to basebmp surfaces and then blits the result of all this onto the cairo surface belonging to the toplevel gtk3 widget
So the text is rendered with the svp freetype based text rendering and looks like this...
With some hacking I've unkinked a few places and allowed the basebmp backend to take the same stride and same same rgbx format as cairo, so we can now create a 24bit cairo surface from basebmp backing data which allows us to avoid conversions on basebmp->cairo and allows us to render onto a basebmp with cairo drawing routines, especially the text drawing ones. So with my in-gerrit-build-queue modifications it renders the same as the rest of the gtk3 desktop.
So the text is rendered with the svp freetype based text rendering and looks like this...
With some hacking I've unkinked a few places and allowed the basebmp backend to take the same stride and same same rgbx format as cairo, so we can now create a 24bit cairo surface from basebmp backing data which allows us to avoid conversions on basebmp->cairo and allows us to render onto a basebmp with cairo drawing routines, especially the text drawing ones. So with my in-gerrit-build-queue modifications it renders the same as the rest of the gtk3 desktop.