This editor's code was a bit schizophrenic, some parts considering its
nodetree usages as real refcounted ones, others, as shallow 'user one'
ones...
Editors should not be real ID users anyway, unless there are *very* good
reasons for it, so swich it to fully 'shallow' usage now.
Node input buttons (e.g. in the material properties) used to draw their
icons on the right of the buttons. However since they represent inputs,
it makes more sense conceptually to have them on the left.
Further, we might want to add the usual decorator buttons (to control
keyframes or display other states) to the material properties as well.
Having two circle icons next to each other would be confusing.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7409
Reviewed by: Brecht Van Lommel, William Reynish
For buttons representing node inputs (e.g. in the material properties)
rather than drawing some generic socket icon, the actual sockets are
drawn now. That includes color, shape and the selection outline.
This should make it easier to understand what these buttons relate to.
Screenshots: {F8469252}, {F8469248} (The left alignment will be done in
a follow-up commit.)
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7409
Reviewed by: Brecht Van Lommel, Clément Foucault, William Reynish
- Show dimmed text for the menu entries leading up to the menu item.
- Show icons between the menu text and menu item.
- Use unicode right pointing triangle instead of arrow.
Existing code for ungrouping did not correctly handle user counters:
- counter for the group was not decremented
- counters for containing nodes were not incremented
The latter resulted in losing some nodes after orphan cleaning or several save/reload cycles.
The bug did not have destructive consequences until recently,
because it was compensated by another bug (fixed in rBe993667a46c2).
Maniphest Tasks: T74665, T74682
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7332
Note this only changes cases where the variable was declared inside
the for loop. To handle it outside as well is a different challenge.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7320
The `BKE_animsys.h` and `anim_sys.c` files already had a an "AnimData
API" section. The code in that section has now been split off, and
placed into `BKE_anim_data.h` and `anim_data.c`.
All files that used to include `BKE_animsys.h` have been adjusted to
only include the animation headers they need (sometimes none).
No functional changes.
Follow up of b2ee1770d4 and 10c2254d41, part of T74432.
Now the area and region naming conventions should be less confusing.
Mostly a careful batch rename but had to do few smaller fixes.
Also ran clang-format on affected files.
This has some advantages over operator search:
- Some operators need options set to be usefully accessed.
- Shows key bindings to access menus
(for actions that don't have key bindings themselves).
- Non operator actions such as check-boxes are also shown.
- Menu items can control execution context, using invoke or execute
where appropriate so we can control how the operator runs.
Part of the design task T74157.
This can be tested using the 'Experimental' preferences section
or selected in the key-map editor.
While it might be handy to have type-less functionality which is
similar to how C++ math is implemented it can not be easily achieved
with just preprocessor in a way which does not have side-effects on
wrong usage.
There macros where often used on a non-trivial expression, and there
was at least one usage where it was causing an actual side effect/bug
on Windows (see change around square_f(sh[index++]) in studiolight.c).
For such cases it is handy to have a function which is guaranteed to
have zero side-effects. The motivation behind actually removing the
macros is that there is already a way to do similar calculation. Also,
not having such macros is a way to guarantee that its usage is not
changed in a way which have side-effects and that it's not used as an
inspiration for cases where it should not be used.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7051
The old convention was easy to confuse with ScrArea.
Part of https://developer.blender.org/T74432.
This is mostly a batch rename with some manual fixing. Only single word
variable names are changed, no prefixed/suffixed names.
Brecht van Lommel and Campbell Barton both gave me a green light for
this convention change.
Also ran clan clang format on affected files.
Currently the link limit of sockets is stored in bNodeSocket->limit.
This allows for a lot of flexibility, but is also very redundant.
In every case I've had to deal with so far, it would have "more correct"
to set the link limit per socket type and not per socket. I did not enforce
this constraint yet, because the link limit is exposed in the Python API,
which I did not want to break here.
In the future it might even make sense to only support only three kinds of link limits:
a) no links, b) at most one link, c) an arbitrary number links links. The other link
limits usually don't work well with tools (e.g. which link should be removed when a new
one is connected?) and is not used in practice. However, that is for another day.
Eventually, I would like to get rid of bNodeSocket->limit completely and replace it
either with fixed link limits or a callback in bNodeSocketType.
This patch consists of three parts:
**1. Support defining link limit in socket type**
This introduces a new `nodeSocketLinkLimit` function that serves as an indirection to
hide where the link limit of a socket is defined.
**2. Define link limits for builtin sockets on socket type**
Data sockets: one input, many outputs
Virtual sockets: one input, one output
Undefined sockets: many inputs, many outputs (to avoid that links are removed when the type of the socket is not known)
**3. Remove `bNodeSocketTemplate->limit`**
This wasn't used anymore after the second commit. Removing it simplifies socket definitions
in hundreds of places and removes a lot of redundancy.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7038
Reviewers: brecht
This node provides the ability to rotate a vector around a `center` point using either `Axis Angle` , `Single Axis` or `Euler` methods.
Reviewed By: #cycles, brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D3789
* Direction mode X, Y and Z to align with axes rather than diagonal or
spherical as previously. X is the new default, existing files will
use diagonal or spherical for compatibility.
* Phase offset to offset the wave along its direction, for purposes like
animation and distortion.
https://developer.blender.org/D6382
Custom render passes are added in the Shader AOVs panel in the view layer
settings, with a name and data type. In shader nodes, an AOV Output node
is then used to output either a value or color to the pass.
Arbitrary names can be used for these passes, as long as they don't conflict
with built-in passes that are enabled. The AOV Output node can be used in both
material and world shader nodes.
Implemented by Lukas, with tweaks by Brecht.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D4837
This is only supposed to happen when copying nodes that are part of the user
editable database, not temporary copies for the dependency graph.
The LIB_ID_COPY_LOCALIZE test was wrong because it is a combination of multiple
bitflags as pointed out by Bastien, and was actually redundant anyway since
LIB_ID_CREATE_NO_MAIN is part of it.
Modes: Linear interpolation (default), stepped linear, smoothstep and smootherstep.
This also includes an additional option for the **Clamp node** to switch between **Min Max** (default) and **Range** mode.
This was needed to allow clamping when **To Max** is less than **To Min**.
Reviewed By: JacquesLucke, brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D5827
Adds a `text` parameter to `bpy.types.uiLayout.template_ID()` which
causes a label to be added, as usual. Adding the label also makes the
template respect the `bpy.types.uiLayout.use_property_split` option.
Also fixes wrong layout being used in the template-ID, although I think
that didn't cause issues in practice.
Sergey requested this for usage in the Movie Clip Editor.
Adds a check when starting blender if your platform is supported. We use a blacklist
as drivers are updated more regular then blender (stable releases).
The mechanism detects if the support level changed or has been validated by the user previously.
Changes can happen due to users updating their drivers, but also when we change the support
level in our code base.
When the user has seen the limited support level message it is saved in the user config.
It would be better to have a system specific config section, but currently not clear
what could benefit from that.
When the platform is unsupported or has limited support a dialog box will appear including a link
to our user manual describing what to do.
**Windows**
Windows uses the MessageBox that is provided by the windows kernel.
**X11**
We use a very lowlevel messagebox for X11. It is very limited in use and can be fine tuned when needed.
**SDL/APPLE**
There is no implementation for SDL or APPLE at this moment as the platform support feature targets mostly Windows users.
Reviewed By: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D5955