Gio UI may be overlaid on top of custom graphics such as in the glfw example.
That will only work if Gio doesn't clear the screen (to white).
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
The target of FocusOp is too subtle; be explicit instead and remove
any doubt.
Multiple SoftKeyboardOp in a single frame is rare, but if they do occur,
they should behave as if they were from separate frames: the last one
applies.
As a side-effect the key event router can be much simplified.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
The glTexStorage2D is part of OpenGL ES 3, but wasn't its function
pointer wasn't initialized on iOS.
Fixes a crash on startup on iOS devices and simulators.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
It turns out restoring all operation state from the moment Defer
is executed is too much; for example, a right-click pop-up needs
the transformation, but not the current clip.
Change Defer to only restore the transformation, and reset all
other state.
Other combinations may be needed in future; we'll deal with them then,
possibly by exposing the load state mask.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Egon Elbre convinced me commit 01d5e72291 was incorrect, because
in the NRGBA colorspace the alpha value is linear, not gamma adjusted.
Updates gio#192
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Tweak a test color to avoid an off-by-1 rounding error after changing
the conversion formula.
Fixes gio#192
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
The semantics were relaxed in a previous commit; this change renames
to operations accordingly.
API change. Use gofmt to adjust your code accordingly:
gofmt -r 'op.Push(a).Pop() -> op.Save(a).Load()'
gofmt -r 'op.Push(a) -> op.Save(a)'
gofmt -r 'v.Pop() -> v.Load()'
gofmt -r 'op.StackOp -> op.StateOp'
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Push/Pop only allows saving and restoring operation state in a
stack-like manner. We're going to need restoring arbitrary state
for implementing deferred operations.
Generalize state save/restore and implement Push and Pop on top of
that.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
This PR implements an image comparison algorithm in the NTSC YIQ color
space, as described in:
Measuring perceived color difference using YIQ NTSC
transmission color space in mobile applications.
Yuriy Kotsarenko, Fernando Ramos.
An electronic version is available at:
- http://www.progmat.uaem.mx:8080/artVol2Num2/Articulo3Vol2Num2.pdf
This should allow the image comparison to be a tad more robust than
comparing plain uint8 pixel values.
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Binet <s@sbinet.org>
The old renderer is still the default, so the new compute renderer will only be
used in the rare case the old renderer is not supported but the new is. That
happens on the Samsung J2 Prime and Moto C Android phones. Or set the
GIORENDERER environment variable to "forcecompute" to disable the old renderer:
$ GIORENDERER=forcecompute go run ...
Missing features:
- Gradients are not supported yet, and render as a solid color.
- Draw timers are not added, and profile.Events are not emitted.
- Stroked paths may in some cases appear corrupted because their clip
outlines are not continuous when generated by Gio. Sebastien is
working on a fix.
- The new renderer shares most CPU-side logic with the old renderer,
resulting in several inefficient conversion steps between the old
operations representation and the new. This is slower, but minimizes
divergence in features and bugs between the two renderers.
Roadmap:
- The compute renderer supports features that Gio does not yet
exploit: stroked paths with round caps, transformations, lines,
cubic beziér curves.
- More stroke styles and maybe dashed strokes natively in shaders.
- Metal and Direct3D ports.
The most important feature is porting the renderer to run on the CPU. A
CPU renderer will both support Gio on devices with insufficient GPU
support, and allow us to remove the old renderer. Two renderers is twice
the maintenance but the feature set of the weakest implementation.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Modern graphics APIs have immutable objects, with mutable data. For example,
a texture's dimensions are immutable, while the texture contents is not.
Change the GPU API abstraction to match.
Clearing a Texture is convenient to do with a plain []byte. Generalize
Texture.Upload to take a plain byte slice and introduce a helper function for
uploading *image.RGBA data.
Add TextureFormatRGBA8, a format for the linear RGB colorspace.
Add OpenGL ES 3.1 functions for compute programs.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Modern graphics APIs have immutable objects, with mutable data. For example,
a texture's dimensions are immutable, while the texture contents is not.
Change the GPU API abstraction to match.
Clearing a Texture is convenient to do with a plain []byte. Generalize
Texture.Upload to take a plain byte slice and introduce a helper function for
uploading *image.RGBA data.
Add TextureFormatRGBA8 a format for the linear RGB colorspace.
Add OpenGL ES 3.1 functions for compute programs.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Before this change, the entire byte buffer would be passed to WebGL, even
though its size may be (much) larger than the source data.
Remakably, this hasn't resulted in any problems until the use of
glBufferSubData, which require the passed data fits the buffer size.
As a bonus, this fix should speed up the wasm port by virtue of passing
much less data across the wasm<->js barrier.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
The Mesa software OpenGL implementation strays enough from the
reference values that tests fail. Relax the tests to make them
pass again.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
This CL introduces 2 new path builders:
- Outline which takes a PathSpec to be outlined
- Stroke which takes a PathSpec and a stroke style, to stroke a path.
typically, code like this:
var p clip.Path
...
p.Outline().Add(o)
should be replaced with:
var p clip.Path
...
clip.Outline{Path: p.End()}.Op().Add(o)
similarly, stroking should be modified from:
var p clip.Path
...
p.Stroke(width, clip.StrokeStyle{...}).Add(o)
to:
var p clip.Path
...
clip.Stroke{Path: p.End(), Style: clip.StrokeStyle{Width:...}}.Op().Add(o)
here are tentative 'rf' scripts (see rsc.io/rf for more details):
```
ex {
import "gioui.org/op";
import "gioui.org/op/clip";
var p clip.Path;
var o *op.Ops;
p.Outline().Add(o) -> clip.Outline{Path:p.End()}.Op().Add(o);
}
ex {
import "gioui.org/op";
import "gioui.org/op/clip";
var o *op.Ops;
var p clip.Path;
var sty clip.StrokeStyle;
var width float32;
p.Stroke(width, sty).Add(o) -> \
clip.Stroke{ \
Path:p.End(), \
Style: clip.StrokeStyle{ \
Width: width, \
}}.Op().Add(o);
}
```
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Binet <s@sbinet.org>
Previously, the only way to manipulate the clipboard (read or write) is
using the `app.Window`.
The new `clipboard.ReadOp` and `clipboard.WriteOp`makes possible to
read/write from the widget.
Signed-off-by: Inkeliz <inkeliz@inkeliz.com>
As a consequence, most API is gone from gpu/gl, and embedding Gio in
foreign frameworks don't need to provide an OpenGL implementation.
The next change simplifies the GLFW embedding example accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
The existing implementation cannot remove the focus of some widget,
doesn't have an option to focus without display the on-screen keyboard
and it automatically focuses the first InputOp, aggressively.
That change aims to make possible: remove focus from any widget. Add
focus without displaying the on-screen-keyboard/soft keyboard. Don't
automatically focus any widget. Don't recover focus when the widget is
visible again.
Fixes gio#180.
Signed-off-by: Inkeliz <inkeliz@inkeliz.com>
Currently BCE is unable to understand that the accesses in the code are
safe. Added an explicit slice to make the length bounds obvious.
Signed-off-by: Egon Elbre <egonelbre@gmail.com>
Using delta position with Line and Quad can drift over successive calls.
Also, in some cases it's much more convenient to use absolute
coordinates rather than relative.
Signed-off-by: Egon Elbre <egonelbre@gmail.com>
color.RGBA has two problems with regards to using it.
First the color values need to be premultiplied, whereas most APIs
have non-premultiplied values. This is mainly to preserve color components
with low alpha values.
Second there are two ways to premultiply with sRGB. One is to premultiply
after sRGB conversion, the other is before. This makes using the API more
confusing.
Using color.NRGBA in sRGB makes it align with CSS.e
Signed-off-by: Egon Elbre <egonelbre@gmail.com>
I don't know why the 1/2 factor is there, but it leads to images being
rendered with a 0.5 pixel offset.
Remove the other useless checks while here: clipping 1px images shouldn't
be a problem and the destination rectangle is always non-zero (otherwise
it wouldn't be rendered).
Update the reference images that are subtly changed because of this fix.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Flat and Square caps are implemented.
Bevel joins are implemented.
Round caps, Round joins and Miter joins are left for another PR.
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Binet <s@sbinet.org>
PaintOp.Rect is the wrong abstraction; it implies a clip operation
better handled by package clip, and not all paints need it (colors).
Furthermore, it's awkward to specify a PaintOp that fills up the
current clip area, regardless of its size.
Redefine PathOp to mean "fill current clip area".
API change. Replace uses of PaintOp.Rect with a TransformOp applied
before the PaintOp.
Leave a TODO for the PathOp infinity area.
Fixes gio#167
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
We're about to remove PaintOp.Rect. Replacing PaintOps with Fill or
FillShape where possible will ease the transition.
Using Fill in tests exposed a problem with the infinity in paint.Fill.
Adjust it for now; it will be removed later.
Updates gio#167
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
This is effectively a revert of commit gioui.org/commit/69dfd2e3a5541.
ImageOp.Rect is the wrong abstraction; it implies a clipping operation that is
better handled by package clip.
API change. Uses of ImageOp.Rect should apply a clip.Rect before the PaintOp,
or use image.RGBA.SubImage (or similar).
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Egon Elbre pointed out that a difference of 20 means a 10% difference.
Lowering the tolerance to 5 didn't work on my setup; leave it at 10.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
Package material's ad-hoc mulAlpha didn't take the sRGB color-space
into account, which meant that alpha-scaled colors were subtly wrong.
Introduce f32color.MulAlpha and convert all uses to it.
Thanks to René Post for finding and debugging the issue.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>