Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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This makes it unlikely for tests to be completely obscured, which should
hopefully make things a bit more consistent and reliable, especially when
running all of the tests in parallel. It also makes things a bit less visually
confusing.
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This seems to make thing a bit more reliable, and matches what was happening
before the addition of more precise show commands.
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This collapses many functions into one, which makes the API more easily
extensible and reduces code size.
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I suspect that using the same configuration across both C and C++ is starting
to wear a bit thin, but this will do for now.
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Since upgrading to 11.6 (on an Intel Macbook), this test no longer seems to
pass. It's unfortunate to not test that small redisplay requests only result
in small exposures, but I don't think the previous strict check reflects
reality. Exposing more than the application requested, for whatever reason, is
a natural part of window environments, so I don't know if this is something
that can be reliably unit tested.
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See https://reuse.software/ for details.
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This makes things a little more clear when something goes wrong, for example if
a test hangs.
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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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Unfortunately there is no warning like Wpadded but only for internal padding,
so that can't be turned on, but if there was, after this commit the build would
be clean with it. Maybe some day...
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Not really sure why I used a web link here (maybe because it's more stable),
but this is more conventional.
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This does two things: posts the redisplay when an update event is
received (which is correct pattern for this now), and uses larger even numbers
for the redisplay region so they make it through the pixel/point conversion
process without loss.
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The previous separation between polling and dispatching was a lie, especially
on MacOS where it is impossible to only poll for events without dispatching
anything. Providing such an API is misleading, and problematic in various
other ways.
So, merge them into a single puglUpdate() function which can do the right thing
on all platforms. This also adds the behaviour of actually processing all
events in the given time interval, which is almost always what clients actually
want to do when using a positive timeout (naively doing this before caused
terrible input lag).
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Unfortunately this is an API break, but there's no reasonable way to deprecate
the old function and this is required for things to work correctly. The type
will be used in following commits to tick the main loop and dispatch events
correctly for either case.
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