The grid layout type for UI list is planned for removal in 5.0, see blender/blender#110461. In previous UI meetings, we talked about deprecating the Grid mode of the UI list, which is not actually accessible in UI and was never used. Nowadays, there is a new grid view that can be exposed in the API in the future. Initially, I wanted to remove references to layout_type in UI templates in the text editor, because a lot of add-on developers on the extensions platform base their lists on that code, and a lot of them are therefore including soon to be deprecated code in their add-ons, which I want to avoid in the future. But I thought we might as well remove it from our python scripts as well, since it's just basically redundant code that doesn't do anything. And also because many add-on developers use bundled python scripts for references as well. Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/138395
71 lines
3.1 KiB
Python
71 lines
3.1 KiB
Python
import bpy
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class MATERIAL_UL_matslots_example(bpy.types.UIList):
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# The draw_item function is called for each item of the collection that is visible in the list.
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# data is the RNA object containing the collection,
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# item is the current drawn item of the collection,
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# icon is the "computed" icon for the item (as an integer, because some objects like materials or textures
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# have custom icons ID, which are not available as enum items).
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# active_data is the RNA object containing the active property for the collection (i.e. integer pointing to the
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# active item of the collection).
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# active_propname is the name of the active property (use 'getattr(active_data, active_propname)').
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# index is index of the current item in the collection.
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# flt_flag is the result of the filtering process for this item.
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# Note: as index and flt_flag are optional arguments, you do not have to use/declare them here if you don't
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# need them.
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def draw_item(self, context, layout, data, item, icon, active_data, active_propname):
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ob = data
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slot = item
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ma = slot.material
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# You should always start your row layout by a label (icon + text), or a non-embossed text field,
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# this will also make the row easily selectable in the list! The later also enables ctrl-click rename.
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# We use icon_value of label, as our given icon is an integer value, not an enum ID.
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# Note "data" names should never be translated!
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if ma:
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layout.prop(ma, "name", text="", emboss=False, icon_value=icon)
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else:
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layout.label(text="", translate=False, icon_value=icon)
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# And now we can use this list everywhere in Blender. Here is a small example panel.
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class UIListPanelExample(bpy.types.Panel):
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"""Creates a Panel in the Object properties window"""
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bl_label = "UIList Panel"
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bl_idname = "OBJECT_PT_ui_list_example"
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bl_space_type = 'PROPERTIES'
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bl_region_type = 'WINDOW'
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bl_context = "object"
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def draw(self, context):
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layout = self.layout
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obj = context.object
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# `template_list` now takes two new arguments.
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# The first one is the identifier of the registered UIList to use (if you want only the default list,
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# with no custom draw code, use "UI_UL_list").
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layout.template_list("MATERIAL_UL_matslots_example", "", obj, "material_slots", obj, "active_material_index")
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# The second one can usually be left as an empty string.
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# It's an additional ID used to distinguish lists in case you
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# use the same list several times in a given area.
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layout.template_list(
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"MATERIAL_UL_matslots_example", "compact", obj, "material_slots",
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obj, "active_material_index", type='COMPACT',
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)
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def register():
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bpy.utils.register_class(MATERIAL_UL_matslots_example)
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bpy.utils.register_class(UIListPanelExample)
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def unregister():
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bpy.utils.unregister_class(MATERIAL_UL_matslots_example)
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bpy.utils.unregister_class(UIListPanelExample)
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if __name__ == "__main__":
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register()
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