Reports from the internal operator weren't forwarded to the Python
operator, they were printed in the console instead.
Resolve by moving the operator to C++, use a utility function
to launch the external editor instead of an operator.
Without this it was necessary to convert pasted text into spaces
for them to display properly.
Since tabs are a valid part of a string, it's incorrect to assume
tabs can always be expanded to spaces.
Pasted text and console output now display tabs properly,
the tab still uses spaces for indenting though.
This makes it clearer other "safe" functions should be used in
combination with the resulting offsets.
Also correct doc-string which wasn't updated from the "or_error()"
version of this function.
There were enough cases of callers ignoring a potential the error value,
using the column width for e.g. to calculate pixel sizes, or the size in
bytes to calculate buffer offsets.
Since text fields & labels can include characters that return an error
from BLI_str_utf8_as_unicode, add the suffix to make this explicit.
- Moving the cursor to the beginning/end of the line didn't work
with word-wrap enabled.
- Moving the cursor up/down without word-wrap enabled
didn't maintain the column.
Resolve using column conversion functions with tab support.
The cursor & selection weren't updated after converting between tabs
& spaces, meaning they could be invalid (in the middle of a UTF8 byte
sequence or out of bounds).
Resolve by storing the column and restoring it afterwards.
Strings that include Latin1 encoding or corrupt UTF8 byte sequences
could read past the buffer bounds (stepping over the null terminator).
Resolve by passing in the string length.
Other changes to support non-UTF8 byte sequences:
- BLI_str_utf8_offset_{to/from}_index were accumulating
the UTF8 offset without accounting for non-UTF8 characters
which could cause a buffer underflow or enter an eternal loop.
- BLI_str_utf8_offset_to_index would read past the buffer bounds if the
offset passed in if it was in the middle of a UTF8 byte sequence.
Characters with an unknown width (control characters for e.g.)
caused word wrap not to work properly, the text cursor was out of sync
with the displayed text.
Use BLI_str_utf8_char_width_safe which is the convention for the
text editor.
- Restore the selection if auto-closing a selection fails.
- Simplify auto-close selection by ordering the selection.
- Call text_update_line_edited on the selection when auto-closing
a selection to ensure formatting is recalculated for the region.
- Internal changes needed to support multi-byte auto-closing
although this is still limited to ASCII at the moment.
Entering non ascii characters would truncate the code-point to char
when passing it to text_closing_character_pair_get(), which could then
match bracket values. Resolve by checking the characters are ascii.
When the auto-close preference is enabled & brackets or quotes are
entered with a selection, the selection is surrounded by those
characters - instead of replacing the selection.
Match functionality from visual-studio code.
Ref !111900.
There are a couple of functions that create rna pointers. For example
`RNA_main_pointer_create` and `RNA_pointer_create`. Currently, those
take an output parameter `r_ptr` as last argument. This patch changes
it so that the functions actually return a` PointerRNA` instead of using
the output parameters.
This has a few benefits:
* Output parameters should only be used when there is an actual benefit.
Otherwise, one should default to returning the value.
* It's simpler to use the API in the large majority of cases (note that this
patch reduces the number of lines of code).
* It allows the `PointerRNA` to be const on the call-site, if that is desired.
No performance regression has been measured in production files.
If one of these functions happened to be called in a hot loop where
there is a regression, the solution should be to use an inline function
there which allows the compiler to optimize it even better.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/111976
The `lib_link` callback cannot always be fully replaced/removed, as in
some case it is also doing some validation checks, or data editing based
on the result of lib_linking internal ID pointers.
The callback has been renamed for that purpose, from `read_lib` to
`read_after_liblink`. It is now called after all ID pointers have been
fully lib-linked for the current ID, but still before the call to
`do_versions_after_linking`.
This change should not have any behavioral effect. Although in theory
the side-effect of this commit (to split lib linking itself, and the
validation/further processing code) into two completely separated steps
could have some effects, in practice none are expected, and tests did
not show any changes in behavior either..
Part of implementing #105134: Removal of readfile's lib_link & expand code.
Crash occurs when calling with `EXEC_DEFAULT` context.
In this case `text->filepath` might be `nullptr` and cause a crash.
Fix by raising a Python error message in this case.
Listing the "Blender Foundation" as copyright holder implied the Blender
Foundation holds copyright to files which may include work from many
developers.
While keeping copyright on headers makes sense for isolated libraries,
Blender's own code may be refactored or moved between files in a way
that makes the per file copyright holders less meaningful.
Copyright references to the "Blender Foundation" have been replaced with
"Blender Authors", with the exception of `./extern/` since these this
contains libraries which are more isolated, any changed to license
headers there can be handled on a case-by-case basis.
Some directories in `./intern/` have also been excluded:
- `./intern/cycles/` it's own `AUTHORS` file is planned.
- `./intern/opensubdiv/`.
An "AUTHORS" file has been added, using the chromium projects authors
file as a template.
Design task: #110784
Ref !110783.
Using ClangBuildAnalyzer on the whole Blender build, it was pointing
out that BLI_math.h is the heaviest "header hub" (i.e. non tiny file
that is included a lot).
However, there's very little (actually zero) source files in Blender
that need "all the math" (base, colors, vectors, matrices,
quaternions, intersection, interpolation, statistics, solvers and
time). A common use case is source files needing just vectors, or
just vectors & matrices, or just colors etc. Actually, 181 files
were including the whole math thing without needing it at all.
This change removes BLI_math.h completely, and instead in all the
places that need it, includes BLI_math_vector.h or BLI_math_color.h
and so on.
Change from that:
- BLI_math_color.h was included 1399 times -> now 408 (took 114.0sec
to parse -> now 36.3sec)
- BLI_simd.h 1403 -> 418 (109.7sec -> 34.9sec).
Full rebuild of Blender (Apple M1, Xcode, RelWithDebInfo) is not
affected much (342sec -> 334sec). Most of benefit would be when
someone's changing BLI_simd.h or BLI_math_color.h or similar files,
that now there's 3x fewer files result in a recompile.
Pull Request #110944
The cleanup of blenkernel last weeks , caused the house of cards to
collapse on top of bf_gpu's shader_builder, which is off by default
but used on a daily basis by the rendering team.
Given the fixes forward in #110394 ran into a ODR violation in OSL that
was hiding there for years, I don't see another way forward without
impeding the rendering teams productivity for "quite a while" as there
is no guarantee the OSL issue would be the end of it.
the only way forward appears to be back.
this reverts :
19422044eda670b53abe0f541db97cbe516e8c813e88a2f44c4e64b772f59547e7a31707fe6c5a57
The problematic commit was 07fe6c5a57
as blenkernel links most of blender, it's a bit of a link order issue
magnet. Given all these commits stack, it's near impossible to revert
just that one without spending a significant amount of time resolving
merge conflicts. 99% of that work was automated, so easier to just
revert all of them, and re-do the work, than it is to deal with the
merge conflicts.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/110438
Word ordering for wmTimer API wasn't consistent.
- Use "WM_event_timer_" / "WM_event_timers_" prefix.
- Rename "wm_window_timer" to "wm_window_timers_process"
because it wasn't clear what the function did from its name.
- Rename "wm_window_process_events" to "wm_window_events_process"
for consistency with "wm_window_timers_process".
There's quite a few libraries that depend on dna_type_offsets.h
but had gotten to it by just adding the folder that contains it to
their includes INC section without declaring a dependency to
bf_dna in the LIB section.
which occasionally lead to the lib building before bf_dna and the
header being missing, while this generally gets fixed in CMake by
adding bf_dna to the LIB section of the lib, however until last
week all libraries in the LIB section were linked as INTERFACE so
adding it in there did not resolve the build issue.
To make things still build, we sprinkled add_dependencies wherever
we needed it to force a build order.
This diff :
Declares public include folders for the bf_dna target so there's
no more fudging the INC section required to get to them.
Removes all dna related paths from the INC section for all
libraries.
Adds an alias target bf:dna to signify it has been updated to
modern cmake
Declares a dependency on bf::dna for all libraries that require it
Removes (almost) all calls to add_dependencies for bf_dna
Future work:
Because of the manual dependency management that was done, there is
now some "clutter" with libs depending on bf_dna that realistically
don't. Example bf_intern_opencolorio itself has no dependency on
bf_dna at all, doesn't need it, doesn't use it. However the
dna include folder had been added to it in the past since bf_blenlib
uses dna headers in some of its public headers and
bf_intern_opencolorio does use those blenlib headers.
Given bf_blenlib now correctly declares the dependency on bf_dna
as public bf_intern_opencolorio will get the dna header directory
automatically from CMake, hence some cleanup could be done for
bf_intern_opencolorio
Because 99% of the changes in this diff have been automated, this diff
does not seek to address these issues as there is no easy way to
determine why a certain dependency is in place. A developer will have
to make a pass a this at some later point in time. As I'd rather not
mix automated and manual labour.
There are a few libraries that could not be automatically processed
(ie bf_blendthumb) that also will need this manual look-over.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109835
Replace `typedef struct X {} X;` with `struct X {};`
In some cases the first and last name didn't match although this
is rarely useful, even a typo in some cases, e.g. TrachPathPoint.
Since 3f26bdf840, `text_format_string_literal_find` is used to get the
length of the string literal. This can return -1 though and this can
lead to accessing negative index in the string afterwards.
Now, let `text_format_string_literal_find` return 0 (instead of -1) since 0
is never going to be a valid string length anyways.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109441