doodle/pkg/level/chunk.go

345 lines
8.4 KiB
Go
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Implement Chunk System for Pixel Data Starts the implementation of the chunk-based pixel storage system for levels and drawings. Previously the levels had a Pixels structure which was just an array of X,Y and palette index triplets. The new chunk system divides the map up into square chunks, and lets each chunk manage its own memory layout. The "MapAccessor" layout is implemented first which is a map of X,Y coordinates to their Swatches (pointer to an index of the palette). When serialized the MapAccessor maps the "X,Y": "index" similarly to the old Pixels array. The object hierarchy for the chunk system is like: * Chunker: the manager of the chunks who keeps track of the ChunkSize and a map of "chunk coordinates" to the chunk in charge of it. * Chunk: a part of the drawing ChunkSize length square. A chunk has a Type (of how it stores its data, 0 being a map[Point]Swatch and 1 being a [][]Swatch 2D array), and the chunk has an Accessor which implements the underlying type. * Accessor: an interface for a Chunk to provide access to its pixels. * MapAccessor: a "sparse map" of coordinates to their Swatches. * GridAccessor: TBD, will be a "dense" 2D grid of Swatches. The JSON files are loaded in two passes: 1. The chunks only load their swatch indexes from disk. 2. With the palette also loaded, the chunks are "inflated" and linked to their swatch pointers. Misc changes: * The `level.Canvas` UI widget switches from the old Grid data type to being able to directly use a `level.Chunker` * The Chunker is a shared data type between the on-disk level format and the actual renderer (level.Canvas), so saving the level is easy because you can just pull the Chunker out from the canvas. * ChunkSize is stored inside the level file and the default value is at balance/numbers.go: 1000
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package level
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
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"image"
"math"
Implement Chunk System for Pixel Data Starts the implementation of the chunk-based pixel storage system for levels and drawings. Previously the levels had a Pixels structure which was just an array of X,Y and palette index triplets. The new chunk system divides the map up into square chunks, and lets each chunk manage its own memory layout. The "MapAccessor" layout is implemented first which is a map of X,Y coordinates to their Swatches (pointer to an index of the palette). When serialized the MapAccessor maps the "X,Y": "index" similarly to the old Pixels array. The object hierarchy for the chunk system is like: * Chunker: the manager of the chunks who keeps track of the ChunkSize and a map of "chunk coordinates" to the chunk in charge of it. * Chunk: a part of the drawing ChunkSize length square. A chunk has a Type (of how it stores its data, 0 being a map[Point]Swatch and 1 being a [][]Swatch 2D array), and the chunk has an Accessor which implements the underlying type. * Accessor: an interface for a Chunk to provide access to its pixels. * MapAccessor: a "sparse map" of coordinates to their Swatches. * GridAccessor: TBD, will be a "dense" 2D grid of Swatches. The JSON files are loaded in two passes: 1. The chunks only load their swatch indexes from disk. 2. With the palette also loaded, the chunks are "inflated" and linked to their swatch pointers. Misc changes: * The `level.Canvas` UI widget switches from the old Grid data type to being able to directly use a `level.Chunker` * The Chunker is a shared data type between the on-disk level format and the actual renderer (level.Canvas), so saving the level is easy because you can just pull the Chunker out from the canvas. * ChunkSize is stored inside the level file and the default value is at balance/numbers.go: 1000
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"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/balance"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/log"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/shmem"
"git.kirsle.net/go/render"
"github.com/google/uuid"
"github.com/vmihailenco/msgpack"
Implement Chunk System for Pixel Data Starts the implementation of the chunk-based pixel storage system for levels and drawings. Previously the levels had a Pixels structure which was just an array of X,Y and palette index triplets. The new chunk system divides the map up into square chunks, and lets each chunk manage its own memory layout. The "MapAccessor" layout is implemented first which is a map of X,Y coordinates to their Swatches (pointer to an index of the palette). When serialized the MapAccessor maps the "X,Y": "index" similarly to the old Pixels array. The object hierarchy for the chunk system is like: * Chunker: the manager of the chunks who keeps track of the ChunkSize and a map of "chunk coordinates" to the chunk in charge of it. * Chunk: a part of the drawing ChunkSize length square. A chunk has a Type (of how it stores its data, 0 being a map[Point]Swatch and 1 being a [][]Swatch 2D array), and the chunk has an Accessor which implements the underlying type. * Accessor: an interface for a Chunk to provide access to its pixels. * MapAccessor: a "sparse map" of coordinates to their Swatches. * GridAccessor: TBD, will be a "dense" 2D grid of Swatches. The JSON files are loaded in two passes: 1. The chunks only load their swatch indexes from disk. 2. With the palette also loaded, the chunks are "inflated" and linked to their swatch pointers. Misc changes: * The `level.Canvas` UI widget switches from the old Grid data type to being able to directly use a `level.Chunker` * The Chunker is a shared data type between the on-disk level format and the actual renderer (level.Canvas), so saving the level is easy because you can just pull the Chunker out from the canvas. * ChunkSize is stored inside the level file and the default value is at balance/numbers.go: 1000
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)
// Types of chunks.
const (
MapType int = iota
GridType
)
// Chunk holds a single portion of the pixel canvas.
type Chunk struct {
Type int // map vs. 2D array.
Accessor
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
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// Values told to it from higher up, not stored in JSON.
Point render.Point
Size int
// Texture cache properties so we don't redraw pixel-by-pixel every frame.
uuid uuid.UUID
texture render.Texturer
textureMasked render.Texturer
textureMaskedColor render.Color
dirty bool
Implement Chunk System for Pixel Data Starts the implementation of the chunk-based pixel storage system for levels and drawings. Previously the levels had a Pixels structure which was just an array of X,Y and palette index triplets. The new chunk system divides the map up into square chunks, and lets each chunk manage its own memory layout. The "MapAccessor" layout is implemented first which is a map of X,Y coordinates to their Swatches (pointer to an index of the palette). When serialized the MapAccessor maps the "X,Y": "index" similarly to the old Pixels array. The object hierarchy for the chunk system is like: * Chunker: the manager of the chunks who keeps track of the ChunkSize and a map of "chunk coordinates" to the chunk in charge of it. * Chunk: a part of the drawing ChunkSize length square. A chunk has a Type (of how it stores its data, 0 being a map[Point]Swatch and 1 being a [][]Swatch 2D array), and the chunk has an Accessor which implements the underlying type. * Accessor: an interface for a Chunk to provide access to its pixels. * MapAccessor: a "sparse map" of coordinates to their Swatches. * GridAccessor: TBD, will be a "dense" 2D grid of Swatches. The JSON files are loaded in two passes: 1. The chunks only load their swatch indexes from disk. 2. With the palette also loaded, the chunks are "inflated" and linked to their swatch pointers. Misc changes: * The `level.Canvas` UI widget switches from the old Grid data type to being able to directly use a `level.Chunker` * The Chunker is a shared data type between the on-disk level format and the actual renderer (level.Canvas), so saving the level is easy because you can just pull the Chunker out from the canvas. * ChunkSize is stored inside the level file and the default value is at balance/numbers.go: 1000
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}
// JSONChunk holds a lightweight (interface-free) copy of the Chunk for
// unmarshalling JSON files from disk.
type JSONChunk struct {
Type int `json:"type" msgpack:"0"`
Data json.RawMessage `json:"data" msgpack:"-"`
BinData interface{} `json:"-" msgpack:"1"`
Implement Chunk System for Pixel Data Starts the implementation of the chunk-based pixel storage system for levels and drawings. Previously the levels had a Pixels structure which was just an array of X,Y and palette index triplets. The new chunk system divides the map up into square chunks, and lets each chunk manage its own memory layout. The "MapAccessor" layout is implemented first which is a map of X,Y coordinates to their Swatches (pointer to an index of the palette). When serialized the MapAccessor maps the "X,Y": "index" similarly to the old Pixels array. The object hierarchy for the chunk system is like: * Chunker: the manager of the chunks who keeps track of the ChunkSize and a map of "chunk coordinates" to the chunk in charge of it. * Chunk: a part of the drawing ChunkSize length square. A chunk has a Type (of how it stores its data, 0 being a map[Point]Swatch and 1 being a [][]Swatch 2D array), and the chunk has an Accessor which implements the underlying type. * Accessor: an interface for a Chunk to provide access to its pixels. * MapAccessor: a "sparse map" of coordinates to their Swatches. * GridAccessor: TBD, will be a "dense" 2D grid of Swatches. The JSON files are loaded in two passes: 1. The chunks only load their swatch indexes from disk. 2. With the palette also loaded, the chunks are "inflated" and linked to their swatch pointers. Misc changes: * The `level.Canvas` UI widget switches from the old Grid data type to being able to directly use a `level.Chunker` * The Chunker is a shared data type between the on-disk level format and the actual renderer (level.Canvas), so saving the level is easy because you can just pull the Chunker out from the canvas. * ChunkSize is stored inside the level file and the default value is at balance/numbers.go: 1000
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}
// Accessor provides a high-level API to interact with absolute pixel coordinates
// while abstracting away the details of how they're stored.
type Accessor interface {
Inflate(*Palette) error
Iter() <-chan Pixel
IterViewport(viewport render.Rect) <-chan Pixel
Get(render.Point) (*Swatch, error)
Set(render.Point, *Swatch) error
Delete(render.Point) error
Len() int
MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error)
UnmarshalJSON([]byte) error
// MarshalMsgpack() ([]byte, error)
// UnmarshalMsgpack([]byte) error
// Serialize() interface{}
Implement Chunk System for Pixel Data Starts the implementation of the chunk-based pixel storage system for levels and drawings. Previously the levels had a Pixels structure which was just an array of X,Y and palette index triplets. The new chunk system divides the map up into square chunks, and lets each chunk manage its own memory layout. The "MapAccessor" layout is implemented first which is a map of X,Y coordinates to their Swatches (pointer to an index of the palette). When serialized the MapAccessor maps the "X,Y": "index" similarly to the old Pixels array. The object hierarchy for the chunk system is like: * Chunker: the manager of the chunks who keeps track of the ChunkSize and a map of "chunk coordinates" to the chunk in charge of it. * Chunk: a part of the drawing ChunkSize length square. A chunk has a Type (of how it stores its data, 0 being a map[Point]Swatch and 1 being a [][]Swatch 2D array), and the chunk has an Accessor which implements the underlying type. * Accessor: an interface for a Chunk to provide access to its pixels. * MapAccessor: a "sparse map" of coordinates to their Swatches. * GridAccessor: TBD, will be a "dense" 2D grid of Swatches. The JSON files are loaded in two passes: 1. The chunks only load their swatch indexes from disk. 2. With the palette also loaded, the chunks are "inflated" and linked to their swatch pointers. Misc changes: * The `level.Canvas` UI widget switches from the old Grid data type to being able to directly use a `level.Chunker` * The Chunker is a shared data type between the on-disk level format and the actual renderer (level.Canvas), so saving the level is easy because you can just pull the Chunker out from the canvas. * ChunkSize is stored inside the level file and the default value is at balance/numbers.go: 1000
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}
// NewChunk creates a new chunk.
func NewChunk() *Chunk {
return &Chunk{
Type: MapType,
Accessor: NewMapAccessor(),
}
}
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
// Texture will return a cached texture for the rendering engine for this
// chunk's pixel data. If the cache is dirty it will be rebuilt in this func.
//
// Texture cache can be disabled with balance.DisableChunkTextureCache=true.
func (c *Chunk) Texture(e render.Engine) render.Texturer {
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
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if c.texture == nil || c.dirty {
// Generate the normal bitmap and one with a color mask if applicable.
tex, err := c.toBitmap(render.Invisible)
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
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if err != nil {
log.Error("Texture: %s", err)
}
c.texture = tex
c.textureMasked = nil // invalidate until next call
c.dirty = false
}
return c.texture
}
// TextureMasked returns a cached texture with the ColorMask applied.
func (c *Chunk) TextureMasked(e render.Engine, mask render.Color) render.Texturer {
if c.textureMasked == nil || c.textureMaskedColor != mask {
// Generate the normal bitmap and one with a color mask if applicable.
tex, err := c.toBitmap(mask)
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
if err != nil {
log.Error("Texture: %s", err)
}
c.textureMasked = tex
c.textureMaskedColor = mask
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
}
return c.textureMasked
}
// SetDirty sets the `dirty` flag to true and forces the texture to be
// re-computed next frame.
func (c *Chunk) SetDirty() {
c.dirty = true
}
// toBitmap puts the texture in a well named bitmap path in the cache folder.
func (c *Chunk) toBitmap(mask render.Color) (render.Texturer, error) {
// Generate a unique name for this chunk cache.
var name string
if c.uuid == uuid.Nil {
c.uuid = uuid.Must(uuid.NewRandom())
}
name = c.uuid.String()
if mask != render.Invisible {
name += fmt.Sprintf("-%02x%02x%02x%02x",
mask.Red, mask.Green, mask.Blue, mask.Alpha,
)
}
// Get the temp bitmap image.
return c.ToBitmap(name, mask)
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
}
// ToBitmap exports the chunk's pixels as a bitmap image.
func (c *Chunk) ToBitmap(filename string, mask render.Color) (render.Texturer, error) {
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
canvas := c.SizePositive()
imgSize := image.Rectangle{
Min: image.Point{},
Max: image.Point{
X: c.Size,
Y: c.Size,
},
}
if imgSize.Max.X == 0 {
imgSize.Max.X = int(canvas.W)
}
if imgSize.Max.Y == 0 {
imgSize.Max.Y = int(canvas.H)
}
img := image.NewRGBA(imgSize)
// Blank out the pixels.
for x := 0; x < img.Bounds().Max.X; x++ {
for y := 0; y < img.Bounds().Max.Y; y++ {
img.Set(x, y, balance.DebugChunkBitmapBackground.ToColor())
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
}
}
// Pixel coordinate offset to map the Chunk World Position to the
// smaller image boundaries.
pointOffset := render.Point{
X: c.Point.X * c.Size,
Y: c.Point.Y * c.Size,
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
}
// Blot all the pixels onto it.
for px := range c.Iter() {
var color = px.Swatch.Color
if mask != render.Invisible {
// A semi-transparent mask will overlay on top of the actual color.
if mask.Alpha < 255 {
color = color.AddColor(mask)
} else {
color = mask
}
}
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
img.Set(
px.X-pointOffset.X,
px.Y-pointOffset.Y,
color.ToColor(),
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
)
}
// Cache the texture data with the current renderer.
tex, err := shmem.CurrentRenderEngine.StoreTexture(filename, img)
return tex, err
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
}
// Set proxies to the accessor and flags the texture as dirty.
func (c *Chunk) Set(p render.Point, sw *Swatch) error {
c.dirty = true
return c.Accessor.Set(p, sw)
}
// Delete proxies to the accessor and flags the texture as dirty.
func (c *Chunk) Delete(p render.Point) error {
c.dirty = true
return c.Accessor.Delete(p)
}
// Rect returns the bounding coordinates that the Chunk has pixels for.
func (c *Chunk) Rect() render.Rect {
// Lowest and highest chunks.
var (
lowest render.Point
highest render.Point
)
for coord := range c.Iter() {
if coord.X < lowest.X {
lowest.X = coord.X
}
if coord.Y < lowest.Y {
lowest.Y = coord.Y
}
if coord.X > highest.X {
highest.X = coord.X
}
if coord.Y > highest.Y {
highest.Y = coord.Y
}
}
return render.Rect{
X: lowest.X,
Y: lowest.Y,
W: highest.X,
H: highest.Y,
}
}
// SizePositive returns the Size anchored to 0,0 with only positive
// coordinates.
func (c *Chunk) SizePositive() render.Rect {
S := c.Rect()
return render.Rect{
W: int(math.Abs(float64(S.X))) + S.W,
H: int(math.Abs(float64(S.Y))) + S.H,
WIP Texture Caching NOTICE: Chunk size set to 100 for visual testing! NOTICE: guitest references a bmp file that isn't checked in! BUGS REMAINING: - When scrolling the level in Edit Mode, some of the chunks will pop out of existence randomly. - When clicking-dragging to draw in Edit Mode, if the scroll position is not at 0,0 then the pixels drawn will be offset from the cursor. - These are to do with the Scroll position and chunk coordinate calc functions probably. Implements a texture caching interface to stop redrawing everything pixel by pixel on every frame. The texture caching workflow is briefly: - The uix.Canvas widget's Present() function iterates over the list of Chunk Coordinates that are visible inside of the current viewport (i.e. viewable on screen) - For each Chunk: - Make it render and/or return its cached Texture object. - Work out how much of the Chunk will be visible and how to crop the boxes for the Copy() - Copy the cached Texture instead of drawing all the pixels every time like we were doing before. - The Chunk.Texture() function that returns said Texture: - It calls Chunk.ToBitmap() to save a bitmap on disk. - It calls Engine.NewBitmap() to get a Texture it can hang onto. - It hangs onto the Texture and returns it on future calls. - Any call to Set() or Delete() a pixel will invalidate the cache (mark the Chunk "dirty") and Texture() will rebuild next call. The interface `render.Texturer` provides a way for rendering backends (SDL2, OpenGL) to transport a "texture" of their own kind without exposing the type details to the user. The interface `render.Engine` adds two new methods: * NewBitmap(filename string) (Texturer, error) * Copy(t Texturer, src, dst Rect) NewBitmap should open a bitmap image on disk and return it wrapped in a Texturer (really it's an SDL2 Texture). This is for caching purposes. Next the Copy() function blits the texture onto the screen renderer using the source and destination rectangles. The uix.Canvas widget orchestrates the caching for the drawing it's responsible for. It queries which chunks are viewable in the Canvas viewport (scroll and bounding boxes), has each chunk render out their entire bitmap image to then cache them as SDL textures and then only _those_ need to be copied out to the renderer each frame. The frame rate now sits at a decent 60 FPS even when the drawing gets messy and full of lines. Each unique version of each chunk needs to render only one time and then it's a fast copy operation for future ticks. Other changes: - Chunker now assigns each Chunk what their coordinate and size are, so that the chunk can self reference that information. This info is considered read-only but that isn't really enforced. - Add Chunker.IterViewportChunks() that returns a channel of Chunk Coordinates that are visible in your viewport, rather than iterating over all of the pixels in all of those chunks. - Add Chunk.ToBitmap(filename) that causes a Chunk to render its pixels to a bitmap image on disk. SDL2 can natively speak Bitmaps for texture caching. Currently these go to files in /tmp but will soon go into your $XDG_CACHE_FOLDER instead. - Add Chunk.Texture() that causes a Chunk to render and then return a cached bitmap texture of the pixels it's responsible for. The texture is cached until the Chunk is next modified with Set() or Delete(). - UI: add an Image widget that currently just shows a bitmap image. It was the first test for caching bitmap images for efficiency. Can show any *.bmp file on disk! - Editor UI: make the StatusBar boxes dynamically build from an array of string pointers to make it SUPER EASY to add/remove labels.
2018-10-18 03:52:14 +00:00
}
}
Implement Chunk System for Pixel Data Starts the implementation of the chunk-based pixel storage system for levels and drawings. Previously the levels had a Pixels structure which was just an array of X,Y and palette index triplets. The new chunk system divides the map up into square chunks, and lets each chunk manage its own memory layout. The "MapAccessor" layout is implemented first which is a map of X,Y coordinates to their Swatches (pointer to an index of the palette). When serialized the MapAccessor maps the "X,Y": "index" similarly to the old Pixels array. The object hierarchy for the chunk system is like: * Chunker: the manager of the chunks who keeps track of the ChunkSize and a map of "chunk coordinates" to the chunk in charge of it. * Chunk: a part of the drawing ChunkSize length square. A chunk has a Type (of how it stores its data, 0 being a map[Point]Swatch and 1 being a [][]Swatch 2D array), and the chunk has an Accessor which implements the underlying type. * Accessor: an interface for a Chunk to provide access to its pixels. * MapAccessor: a "sparse map" of coordinates to their Swatches. * GridAccessor: TBD, will be a "dense" 2D grid of Swatches. The JSON files are loaded in two passes: 1. The chunks only load their swatch indexes from disk. 2. With the palette also loaded, the chunks are "inflated" and linked to their swatch pointers. Misc changes: * The `level.Canvas` UI widget switches from the old Grid data type to being able to directly use a `level.Chunker` * The Chunker is a shared data type between the on-disk level format and the actual renderer (level.Canvas), so saving the level is easy because you can just pull the Chunker out from the canvas. * ChunkSize is stored inside the level file and the default value is at balance/numbers.go: 1000
2018-09-23 22:20:45 +00:00
// Usage returns the percent of free space vs. allocated pixels in the chunk.
func (c *Chunk) Usage(size int) float64 {
return float64(c.Len()) / float64(size)
}
// MarshalJSON writes the chunk to JSON.
func (c *Chunk) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error) {
data, err := c.Accessor.MarshalJSON()
if err != nil {
return []byte{}, err
}
generic := &JSONChunk{
Type: c.Type,
Data: data,
}
b, err := json.Marshal(generic)
return b, err
}
// UnmarshalJSON loads the chunk from JSON and uses the correct accessor to
// parse the inner details.
func (c *Chunk) UnmarshalJSON(b []byte) error {
// Parse it generically so we can hand off the inner "data" object to the
// right accessor for unmarshalling.
generic := &JSONChunk{}
err := json.Unmarshal(b, generic)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("Chunk.UnmarshalJSON: failed to unmarshal into generic JSONChunk type: %s", err)
}
switch c.Type {
case MapType:
c.Accessor = NewMapAccessor()
return c.Accessor.UnmarshalJSON(generic.Data)
default:
return fmt.Errorf("Chunk.UnmarshalJSON: unsupported chunk type '%d'", c.Type)
}
}
func (c *Chunk) EncodeMsgpack(enc *msgpack.Encoder) error {
data := c.Accessor
generic := &JSONChunk{
Type: c.Type,
BinData: data,
}
return enc.Encode(generic)
}
func (c *Chunk) DecodeMsgpack(dec *msgpack.Decoder) error {
generic := &JSONChunk{}
err := dec.Decode(generic)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("Chunk.DecodeMsgpack: %s", err)
}
switch c.Type {
case MapType:
c.Accessor = generic.BinData.(MapAccessor)
default:
return fmt.Errorf("Chunk.DecodeMsgpack: unsupported chunk type '%d'", c.Type)
}
return nil
}
// // MarshalMsgpack writes the chunk to msgpack format.
// func (c *Chunk) MarshalMsgpack() ([]byte, error) {
// // data, err := c.Accessor.MarshalMsgpack()
// // if err != nil {
// // return []byte{}, err
// // }
// data := c.Accessor
//
// generic := &JSONChunk{
// Type: c.Type,
// BinData: data,
// }
// b, err := msgpack.Marshal(generic)
// return b, err
// }
//
// // UnmarshalMsgpack loads the chunk from msgpack format.
// func (c *Chunk) UnmarshalMsgpack(b []byte) error {
// // Parse it generically so we can hand off the inner "data" object to the
// // right accessor for unmarshalling.
// generic := &JSONChunk{}
// err := msgpack.Unmarshal(b, generic)
// if err != nil {
// return fmt.Errorf("Chunk.UnmarshalMsgpack: failed to unmarshal into generic JSONChunk type: %s", err)
// }
//
// switch c.Type {
// case MapType:
// c.Accessor = NewMapAccessor()
// return c.Accessor.UnmarshalMsgpack(generic.Data)
// default:
// return fmt.Errorf("Chunk.UnmarshalMsgpack: unsupported chunk type '%d'", c.Type)
// }
// }