This change gets rid of the event.Queue interface by replacing it with
input.Source values. Source provides the interface to Router necessary
to implement interface widgets.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
This matches the convention of other state update methods. While here, remove useless
dimensions return. The update doesn't draw anything, so there are no dimensions involved.
Signed-off-by: Chris Waldon <christopher.waldon.dev@gmail.com>
This commit adds methods to widget.Scrollbar that enable consuming
code to check if the scroll indicator is processing a drag gesture
or if the scroll track is currently being hovered. These accessors
enable scrollbar style types to have enough information to hide the
scroll indicator when it isn't needed, whereas currently they cannot
differentiate between a scrollbar indicator that is being dragged
but hasn't moved since the last frame and a scrollbar indicator that
is not being dragged.
Signed-off-by: Chris Waldon <christopher.waldon.dev@gmail.com>
Previously, we'd scroll so the new viewportStart corresponded to the
clicked position. This felt okay if clicking above the current
indicator, but felt jarring when clicking below it. Centering gives a
consistent behavior regardless of the scroll direction.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Honnef <dominik@honnef.co>
Before, we would set s.dragging to false on pointer.Release and then
immediately set it back to true because we were processing the event and
saw that s.dragging was false.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Honnef <dominik@honnef.co>
Once the user begins dragging, the cursor can move outside the clip
area (or even the window on at least X11), leading to events with
positions that are either negative, or larger than the clip area.
Negative values outright break the delta tracking and cause the
scrollbar to misbehave. Positive values "only" break the invariant of
Scrollbar.ScrollDistance that the returned value is in the range [-1, 1].
Signed-off-by: Dominik Honnef <dominik@honnef.co>
Pointer hit areas and paint clip areas are separate concepts, but
similar enough to warrant merging. This change replaces pointer hit
areas with clip areas, so Gio is left with just one area concept (in
package op/clip).
The reason for separating the concepts in the original Gio release was
because of my being unsure general path/stroke hit areas would ever be
implemented, let alone efficient.
This change represents a change of mind, in the sense that it's better
to have an incomplete API than two separate area concepts.
Leave the deprecated pointer.Rect, pointer.Ellipse for temporary
backwards compatibility.
This is an API change. Most existing programs should continue to build
with this change, but may have to adjust to having all clip.Ops participate
in InputOp hit areas.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
This commit is based on a patch by Elias that improved drag scrolling
on the scrollbar by locking some parameters of the math at the start
of the scroll event.
I discovered while playing with that implementation that there was
an even simpler approach within his changeset. You can actually
use no information other than the delta between the current and
previous frame's scroll position to compute the scroll distance.
By simplifying the math to rely on no other inputs, the jitter that
we've been fighting simply disappears (it came from other inputs).
Turns out my attempts to make the logic smart were the problem.
Signed-off-by: Chris Waldon <christopher.waldon.dev@gmail.com>
To use these lists instead of layout.List, callers simply need to
change declarations of layout.List to widget.List, and to change
calls to layout.List.Layout to material.List(th,&list).Layout.
So this:
var list layout.List
list.Layout(gtx, 10, func(gtx C, index int) D {
return material.Body1(th, fmt.Sprintf("%d", index)).Layout(gtx)
})
Becomes:
var list widget.List
material.List(th, &list).Layout(gtx, 10, func(gtx C, index int) D {
return material.Body1(th, fmt.Sprintf("%d", index)).Layout(gtx)
})
Naturally, the material.ListStyle type supports tweaking the scrollbar's
appearance and behavior.
Signed-off-by: Chris Waldon <christopher.waldon.dev@gmail.com>