doodle/editor_ui.go

518 lines
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Go
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package doodle
import (
"fmt"
"strconv"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/balance"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/doodads"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/enum"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/events"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/level"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/render"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/ui"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/uix"
)
// EditorUI manages the user interface for the Editor Scene.
type EditorUI struct {
d *Doodle
Scene *EditorScene
// Variables
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
StatusBoxes []*string
StatusMouseText string
StatusPaletteText string
StatusFilenameText string
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
StatusScrollText string
selectedSwatch string // name of selected swatch in palette
selectedDoodad string
// Widgets
Supervisor *ui.Supervisor
Canvas *uix.Canvas
Workspace *ui.Frame
MenuBar *ui.Frame
StatusBar *ui.Frame
// Palette window.
Palette *ui.Window
PaletteTab *ui.Frame
DoodadTab *ui.Frame
// Palette variables.
paletteTab string // selected tab, Palette or Doodads
}
// NewEditorUI initializes the Editor UI.
func NewEditorUI(d *Doodle, s *EditorScene) *EditorUI {
u := &EditorUI{
d: d,
Scene: s,
Supervisor: ui.NewSupervisor(),
StatusMouseText: "Cursor: (waiting)",
StatusPaletteText: "Swatch: <none>",
StatusFilenameText: "Filename: <none>",
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
StatusScrollText: "Hello world",
}
// Bind the StatusBoxes arrays to the text variables.
u.StatusBoxes = []*string{
&u.StatusMouseText,
&u.StatusPaletteText,
&u.StatusFilenameText,
&u.StatusScrollText,
}
u.Canvas = u.SetupCanvas(d)
u.MenuBar = u.SetupMenuBar(d)
u.StatusBar = u.SetupStatusBar(d)
u.Palette = u.SetupPalette(d)
u.Workspace = u.SetupWorkspace(d) // important that this is last!
// Position the Canvas inside the frame.
u.Workspace.Pack(u.Canvas, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.N,
})
u.Workspace.Compute(d.Engine)
u.ExpandCanvas(d.Engine)
// Select the first swatch of the palette.
if u.Canvas.Palette != nil && u.Canvas.Palette.ActiveSwatch != nil {
u.selectedSwatch = u.Canvas.Palette.ActiveSwatch.Name
}
return u
}
// Loop to process events and update the UI.
func (u *EditorUI) Loop(ev *events.State) {
u.Supervisor.Loop(ev)
u.StatusMouseText = fmt.Sprintf("Mouse: (%d,%d)",
ev.CursorX.Now,
ev.CursorY.Now,
)
u.StatusPaletteText = fmt.Sprintf("Swatch: %s",
u.Canvas.Palette.ActiveSwatch,
)
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
u.StatusScrollText = fmt.Sprintf("Scroll: %s Viewport: %s",
u.Canvas.Scroll,
u.Canvas.Viewport(),
)
// Statusbar filename label.
filename := "untitled.map"
fileType := "Level"
if u.Scene.filename != "" {
filename = u.Scene.filename
}
if u.Scene.DrawingType == enum.DoodadDrawing {
fileType = "Doodad"
}
u.StatusFilenameText = fmt.Sprintf("Filename: %s (%s)",
filename,
fileType,
)
u.MenuBar.Compute(u.d.Engine)
u.StatusBar.Compute(u.d.Engine)
u.Palette.Compute(u.d.Engine)
u.Canvas.Loop(ev)
}
// Present the UI to the screen.
func (u *EditorUI) Present(e render.Engine) {
// TODO: if I don't Compute() the palette window, then, whenever the dev console
// is open the window will blank out its contents leaving only the outermost Frame.
// The title bar and borders are gone. But other UI widgets don't do this.
// FIXME: Scene interface should have a separate ComputeUI() from Loop()?
u.Palette.Compute(u.d.Engine)
u.Palette.Present(e, u.Palette.Point())
u.MenuBar.Present(e, u.MenuBar.Point())
u.StatusBar.Present(e, u.StatusBar.Point())
u.Workspace.Present(e, u.Workspace.Point())
}
// SetupWorkspace configures the main Workspace frame that takes up the full
// window apart from toolbars. The Workspace has a single child element, the
// Canvas, so it can easily full-screen it or center it for Doodad editing.
func (u *EditorUI) SetupWorkspace(d *Doodle) *ui.Frame {
frame := ui.NewFrame("Workspace")
// Position and size the frame around the other main widgets.
frame.MoveTo(render.NewPoint(
0,
u.MenuBar.Size().H,
))
frame.Resize(render.NewRect(
d.width-u.Palette.Size().W,
d.height-u.MenuBar.Size().H-u.StatusBar.Size().H,
))
frame.Compute(d.Engine)
return frame
}
// SetupCanvas configures the main drawing canvas in the editor.
func (u *EditorUI) SetupCanvas(d *Doodle) *uix.Canvas {
drawing := uix.NewCanvas(balance.ChunkSize, true)
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
drawing.Name = "edit-canvas"
drawing.Palette = level.DefaultPalette()
if len(drawing.Palette.Swatches) > 0 {
drawing.SetSwatch(drawing.Palette.Swatches[0])
}
return drawing
}
// ExpandCanvas manually expands the Canvas to fill the frame, to work around
// UI packing bugs. Ideally I would use `Expand: true` when packing the Canvas
// in its frame, but that would artificially expand the Canvas also when it
// _wanted_ to be smaller, as in Doodad Editing Mode.
func (u *EditorUI) ExpandCanvas(e render.Engine) {
u.Canvas.Resize(u.Workspace.Size())
u.Workspace.Compute(e)
}
// SetupMenuBar sets up the menu bar.
func (u *EditorUI) SetupMenuBar(d *Doodle) *ui.Frame {
frame := ui.NewFrame("MenuBar")
frame.Configure(ui.Config{
Width: d.width,
Background: render.Black,
})
type menuButton struct {
Text string
Click func(render.Point)
}
buttons := []menuButton{
menuButton{
Text: "New Level",
Click: func(render.Point) {
d.NewMap()
},
},
menuButton{
Text: "New Doodad",
Click: func(render.Point) {
d.Prompt("Doodad size [100]>", func(answer string) {
size := balance.DoodadSize
if answer != "" {
i, err := strconv.Atoi(answer)
if err != nil {
d.Flash("Error: Doodad size must be a number.")
return
}
size = i
}
d.NewDoodad(size)
})
},
},
menuButton{
Text: "Save",
Click: func(render.Point) {
var saveFunc func(filename string)
switch u.Scene.DrawingType {
case enum.LevelDrawing:
saveFunc = func(filename string) {
if err := u.Scene.SaveLevel(filename); err != nil {
d.Flash("Error: %s", err)
} else {
d.Flash("Saved level: %s", filename)
}
}
case enum.DoodadDrawing:
saveFunc = func(filename string) {
if err := u.Scene.SaveDoodad(filename); err != nil {
d.Flash("Error: %s", err)
} else {
d.Flash("Saved doodad: %s", filename)
}
}
default:
d.Flash("Error: Scene.DrawingType is not a valid type")
}
if u.Scene.filename != "" {
saveFunc(u.Scene.filename)
} else {
d.Prompt("Save filename>", func(answer string) {
if answer != "" {
saveFunc(answer)
}
})
}
},
},
menuButton{
Text: "Save as...",
Click: func(render.Point) {
d.Prompt("Save as filename>", func(answer string) {
if answer != "" {
u.Scene.SaveLevel("./maps/" + answer) // TODO: maps path
d.Flash("Saved: %s", answer)
}
})
},
},
menuButton{
Text: "Load",
Click: func(render.Point) {
d.Prompt("Open filename>", func(answer string) {
if answer != "" {
u.d.EditDrawing("./maps/" + answer) // TODO: maps path
}
})
},
},
}
for _, btn := range buttons {
w := ui.NewButton(btn.Text, ui.NewLabel(ui.Label{
Text: btn.Text,
Font: balance.MenuFont,
}))
w.Configure(ui.Config{
BorderSize: 1,
OutlineSize: 0,
})
w.Handle(ui.MouseUp, btn.Click)
u.Supervisor.Add(w)
frame.Pack(w, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.W,
PadX: 1,
})
}
frame.Compute(d.Engine)
return frame
}
// SetupPalette sets up the palette panel.
func (u *EditorUI) SetupPalette(d *Doodle) *ui.Window {
var paletteWidth int32 = 150
window := ui.NewWindow("Palette")
window.ConfigureTitle(balance.TitleConfig)
window.TitleBar().Font = balance.TitleFont
window.Configure(ui.Config{
Width: paletteWidth,
Height: u.d.height - u.StatusBar.Size().H,
Background: balance.WindowBackground,
BorderColor: balance.WindowBorder,
})
window.MoveTo(render.NewPoint(
u.d.width-window.BoxSize().W,
u.MenuBar.BoxSize().H,
))
// Frame that holds the tab buttons in Level Edit mode.
tabFrame := ui.NewFrame("Palette Tabs")
if u.Scene.DrawingType != enum.LevelDrawing {
// Don't show the tab bar except in Level Edit mode.
tabFrame.Hide()
}
for _, name := range []string{"Palette", "Doodads"} {
if u.paletteTab == "" {
u.paletteTab = name
}
tab := ui.NewRadioButton("Palette Tab", &u.paletteTab, name, ui.NewLabel(ui.Label{
Text: name,
}))
tab.Handle(ui.Click, func(p render.Point) {
if u.paletteTab == "Palette" {
u.PaletteTab.Show()
u.DoodadTab.Hide()
} else {
u.PaletteTab.Hide()
u.DoodadTab.Show()
}
window.Compute(d.Engine)
})
u.Supervisor.Add(tab)
tabFrame.Pack(tab, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.W,
Fill: true,
Expand: true,
})
}
window.Pack(tabFrame, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.N,
Fill: true,
PadY: 4,
})
// Doodad frame.
{
u.DoodadTab = ui.NewFrame("Doodad Tab")
u.DoodadTab.Hide()
window.Pack(u.DoodadTab, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.N,
Fill: true,
})
doodadsAvailable, err := ListDoodads()
if err != nil {
d.Flash("ListDoodads: %s", err)
}
var buttonSize = (paletteWidth - window.BoxThickness(2)) / 2
// Draw the doodad buttons in a grid 2 wide.
var row *ui.Frame
for i, filename := range doodadsAvailable {
si := fmt.Sprintf("%d", i)
if row == nil || i%2 == 0 {
row = ui.NewFrame("Doodad Row " + si)
row.SetBackground(balance.WindowBackground)
u.DoodadTab.Pack(row, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.N,
Fill: true,
// Expand: true,
})
}
doodad, err := doodads.LoadJSON(DoodadPath(filename))
if err != nil {
log.Error(err.Error())
doodad = doodads.New(balance.DoodadSize)
}
can := uix.NewCanvas(int(buttonSize), true)
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
can.Name = filename
can.LoadDoodad(doodad)
btn := ui.NewRadioButton(filename, &u.selectedDoodad, si, can)
btn.Resize(render.NewRect(
buttonSize-2, // TODO: without the -2 the button border
buttonSize-2, // rests on top of the window border.
))
u.Supervisor.Add(btn)
row.Pack(btn, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.W,
})
// Resize the canvas to fill the button interior.
btnSize := btn.Size()
can.Resize(render.NewRect(
btnSize.W-btn.BoxThickness(2),
btnSize.H-btn.BoxThickness(2),
))
btn.Compute(d.Engine)
}
}
// Color Palette Frame.
{
u.PaletteTab = ui.NewFrame("Palette Tab")
u.PaletteTab.SetBackground(balance.WindowBackground)
window.Pack(u.PaletteTab, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.N,
Fill: true,
})
// Handler function for the radio buttons being clicked.
onClick := func(p render.Point) {
name := u.selectedSwatch
swatch, ok := u.Canvas.Palette.Get(name)
if !ok {
log.Error("Palette onClick: couldn't get swatch named '%s' from palette", name)
return
}
log.Info("Set swatch: %s", swatch)
u.Canvas.SetSwatch(swatch)
}
// Draw the radio buttons for the palette.
if u.Canvas != nil && u.Canvas.Palette != nil {
for _, swatch := range u.Canvas.Palette.Swatches {
label := ui.NewLabel(ui.Label{
Text: swatch.Name,
Font: balance.StatusFont,
})
label.Font.Color = swatch.Color.Darken(40)
btn := ui.NewRadioButton("palette", &u.selectedSwatch, swatch.Name, label)
btn.Handle(ui.Click, onClick)
u.Supervisor.Add(btn)
u.PaletteTab.Pack(btn, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.N,
Fill: true,
PadY: 4,
})
}
}
}
return window
}
// SetupStatusBar sets up the status bar widget along the bottom of the window.
func (u *EditorUI) SetupStatusBar(d *Doodle) *ui.Frame {
frame := ui.NewFrame("Status Bar")
frame.Configure(ui.Config{
BorderStyle: ui.BorderRaised,
Background: render.Grey,
BorderSize: 2,
Width: d.width,
})
style := ui.Config{
Background: render.Grey,
BorderStyle: ui.BorderSunken,
BorderColor: render.Grey,
BorderSize: 1,
}
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
var labelHeight int32
for _, variable := range u.StatusBoxes {
label := ui.NewLabel(ui.Label{
TextVariable: variable,
Font: balance.StatusFont,
})
label.Configure(style)
label.Compute(d.Engine)
frame.Pack(label, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.W,
PadX: 1,
})
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 labelHeight == 0 {
labelHeight = label.BoxSize().H
}
}
// TODO: right-aligned labels clip out of bounds
extraLabel := ui.NewLabel(ui.Label{
Text: "blah",
Font: balance.StatusFont,
})
extraLabel.Configure(ui.Config{
Background: render.Grey,
BorderStyle: ui.BorderSunken,
BorderColor: render.Grey,
BorderSize: 1,
})
extraLabel.Compute(d.Engine)
frame.Pack(extraLabel, ui.Pack{
Anchor: ui.E,
})
frame.Resize(render.Rect{
W: d.width,
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
H: labelHeight + frame.BoxThickness(1),
})
frame.Compute(d.Engine)
frame.MoveTo(render.Point{
X: 0,
Y: d.height - frame.Size().H,
})
return frame
}