Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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See https://reuse.software/ for details.
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There's no universal consensus on how buttons are numbered. Left, right,
middle as 0, 1, 2 seems to be the most common convention on modern vaguely
similar libraries, so I've gone with that.
The switch to zero-based indices will obviously break all current client code.
Particularly since now is the time to finish any breaking changes before a
stable release, I think that is better than only changing the middle and right
numbers, which would likely go unnoticed.
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This is really a mistake in user code, but things shouldn't crash in general.
So, this commit fixes the crash and adds some documentation so that developers
hopefully don't try to grab focus before it makes sense.
The case that was previously a crash will now gracefully fail, that is, the
focus will not be (and can not be) grabbed.
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Aside from reading more naturally, this avoids clashes with types that are not
events, like PuglEventFlags. This is also more consistent with the C++
bindings, where "EventExpose" would be quite strange, for example.
Apologies for the noise. Aliases to the old names will be preserved in the
deprecated API like other things for a short while.
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Just a convenience macro to make declarations a little more readable.
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We'll need identifiers for these to refer to them in the Sphinx documentation.
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This will not be used in Sphinx.
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These will not be used in the Sphinx documentation, and most were
self-explanatory and only there to make the Doxygen index look nice anyway.
Where there was actually useful information, it has been preserved as regular
comments.
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This causes some annoying typesetting issues it's simpler to just avoid.
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These names were confusing because a view is not necessarily a window. Since
there's no room for ambiguity here, simply drop the superfluous word.
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These only do anything for OpenGL, and it seems unlikely that they will ever be
used for anything else. So, move them to the GL headers to remove clutter from
the core API, and ensure that they are only used in GL applications that
include the appropriate headers and link with a GL backend.
Also add missing C++ bindings.
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This allows puglCreateSurface() to be used with some other loader, or when
linking to Vulkan at compile time.
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These libc-specific warnings are a new level, even for LLVM. Using an opt-out
style for this is probably not going to last.
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It's a nightmare trying to get this thing to check everything.
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This was missing from the C++ bindings and barely used anyway, so just remove
it for now in the interests of simplicity and finalizing a stable API.
The information previously logged in the X11 GL backend is now available
programatically, so applications can print the same information portably if
they like.
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Include them in pugl_gl.h instead, to simplify things and unclutter the include
directory.
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This seemed messy and potentially misleading for what is fundamentally a C++
library. It also makes it possible to set separate clang-tidy and clang-format
settings for each to avoid "tainting" the C settings, though currently the
headers use the same checks.
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I think this attempt to be optionally header-only was misguided, particularly
installing source code to the system include path. Typically anyone vendoring
code just includes the repository and builds from there anyway.
This commit moves all the implementation code to a typical src directory (Don't
Be Weird).
I still think there is some value in simple "inline" deployment, but that would
be better achieved another way, like producing a single-file amalgamation that
builds anywhere, ala sqlite.
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This allows the application to control how recursive loops are handled rather
than have Pugl impose behavior which can get in the way. For example, an
application may not want to continuously animate while being resized, or set up
its rendering differently in this situation. For example, with Vulkan, setting
up a different swapchain can be necessary for smooth performance while live
resizing on Windows, and Pugl has no ability to do this.
I think it was a mistake to add this timer to Pugl itself, because it was
always a bit of a leaky abstraction, and not very appropriate for a library
that is supposed to be a thin abstraction layer. Though it almost seemed like
things ran as usual while resizing on Windows and MacOS, the main event loop
being stalled can be confusing, and there was no way to detect this. This way,
applications must explicitly handle this situation and can implement the
behavior they want without Pugl getting in the way.
This also simplifies the Pugl implementation a bit, which is always nice.
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Even though loading is now better handled with create events, there are still
situations with OpenGL where it's difficult to avoid explicitly entering and
leaving the context. So, resurrect these functions, but remove the drawing
parameter to make it clear that they must never be used for drawing.
This breaks the deprecated API since the drawing parameter would be
inappropriate for the stable API, and a decent alternative name isn't
available.
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