Several types functions were using the wording "float" historically to
mean double-precision, e.g. the float array type (which was in fact a
double array). Or the scanner function gimp_scanner_parse_float() was in
fact returning a double value. What if we wanted someday to actually add
float (usually this naming means in C the single-precision IEEE 754
floating point representation) support? How would we name this?
Now technically it's not entirely wrong (a double is still a floating
point). So I've been wondering if that is because maybe we never planned
to have float and double precision may be good enough for all usage in a
plug-in API (which doesn't have to be as generic so the higher precision
is enough)? But how can we be sure? Also we already had some functions
using the wording double (e.g. gimp_procedure_add_double_argument()), so
let's just go the safe route and use the accurate wording.
The additional change in PDB is internal, but there too, I was also
finding very confusing that we were naming double-precision float as
'float' type. So I took the opportunity to update this. It doesn't
change any signature.
In fact the whole commit doesn't change any type or code logic, only
naming, except for one bug fix in the middle which I encountered while
renaming: in gimp_scanner_parse_deprecated_color(), I discovered a
hidden bug in scanning (color-hsv*) values, which was mistakenly using a
double type for an array of float.
This fixes all our GObject Introspection issues with GimpUnit which was
both an enum and an int-derived type of user-defined units *completing*
the enum values. GIR clearly didn't like this!
Now GimpUnit is a proper class and units are unique objects, allowing to
compare them with an identity test (i.e. `unit == gimp_unit_pixel ()`
tells us if unit is the pixel unit or not), which makes it easy to use,
just like with int, yet adding also methods, making for nicer
introspected API.
As an aside, this also fixes#10738, by having all the built-in units
retrievable even if libgimpbase had not been properly initialized with
gimp_base_init().
I haven't checked in details how GIR works to introspect, but it looks
like it loads the library to inspect and runs functions, hence
triggering some CRITICALS because virtual methods (supposed to be
initialized with gimp_base_init() run by libgimp) are not set. This new
code won't trigger any critical because the vtable method are now not
necessary, at least for all built-in units.
Note that GimpUnit is still in libgimpbase. It could have been moved to
libgimp in order to avoid any virtual method table (since we need to
keep core and libgimp side's units in sync, PDB is required), but too
many libgimpwidgets widgets were already using GimpUnit. And technically
most of GimpUnit logic doesn't require PDB (only the creation/sync
part). This is one of the reasons why user-created GimpUnit list is
handled and stored differently from other types of objects.
Globally this simplifies the code a lot too and we don't need separate
implementations of various utils for core and libgimp, which means less
prone to errors.
Resolves#10992.
GimpTextLayer's color attribute was
updated from GimpRGB to GeglColor,
but gimp-text-layer-set-color still passed
in GimpRGB. This patch updates the PDB
call to match the property type.
One of the big improvement in this commit is that text layers are now much
better at space accuracy. They were already space-aware, yet rendered as sRGB u8
only before being converted to the image's space. It means that text layers had
the following limitations:
* Any color out of sRGB gamut were trimmed.
* Precision was always 8-bit (even if the image was high-bit depth).
Now GimpTextLayout keeps track of its source space (for RGB and CMYK only, this
won't be as easy when we will support more backend, since Cairo has only RGB
support for image data) and the image TRC (in case it bypasses the color space's
TRB) and it draws within this gamut and space.
It means first that we are not limited to sRGB colors; we will draw text main
color in the full image gamut, with still 2 remaining limitations:
* Unbounded colors are impossible because Pango format (to color text) uses
hexadecimal (so even with half/float images, you can't draw out-of-gamut text
unfortunately).
* Main color precision is still 8-bit, yet a tiny bit better than before as we
at least follow TRC (so we avoid some of the precision loss when converting,
even though the bit-depth is still the biggest loss).
The outline color on the other hand is drawn through Cairo API entirely, in
float. This means that the outline color will now be without any precision loss.
Note that this depends on CAIRO_FORMAT_RGBA128F which is only available since
Cairo 1.17.2 which is not in Debian bookworm (our current baseline for GIMP
3.0). It means that the old precision will still happen with older Cairo
version, as determined by #if code at compilation.
This function is not perfect and in particular doesn't seem usable with binding
because of GimpUnit being some weird mix between an enum and some kind of class.
So this will have to be fixed too. See #8900.
… function gimp_font_get_pango_font_description().
Also updating file-pdf-save which is the only plug-in using these right now.
Note that I am not fully happy with the new function
gimp_font_get_pango_font_description() because I experienced some weird behavior
in file-pdf-save which is that some fonts were wrong if this is called after
pango_cairo_font_map_set_resolution().
But let's say this is a first step looking for improvements.
Now text layers are proper types, which means that the binding API will also be
nicer (e.g. `txt_layer.set_text('hello world')` in Python).
This commit also adds the param specs allowing to create plug-in procedures with
text layer parameters.
Finally it fixes the few calls in file-pdf-save (apparently the only plug-in
using specific text layer API right now) with explicit type conversion.
After re-reading #534, I realized I missed the discussion about unsupported
markup by the tool. Then I tested and confirmed what Ian Munsie initially said
in a comment: unsupported markups are properly rendered in the text layer, yet
are simply dropped when editing with the text tool.
This is actually the ideal behavior as it means that with the API, you can even
go further than what is currently possible with the GUI. So it gives nice powers
to people who can script GIMP. We still need some warning in the function
documentation to tell developers about this weakness in the tool GUI.
This complements the existing text_layer_get_markup function and allows
scripts to create and modify complex text layers.
It adds the <markup> root tag if it was not supplied and will run the
markup through pango_parse_markup() to check for errors.
Reviewer's (Jehan) note: this is a mostly untouched patch contributed in #534,
except that code moved around. I also fixed the header set in the .pdb, a link
to pango markup docs and added the meson changes.
Fix the dependency by making the stamp an actual (yet empty/no-op)
header file which is included by all generated source file. This way, we
ensure that meson rebuild .o files when the .pdb sources are changed.
This is the second solution proposed by eli-schwartz here:
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/10196#issuecomment-1080053413
Turn all ID param specs into object param specs (e.g. GimpParamImageID
becomes GimpParamImage) and convert between IDs and objects in
gimpgpparams.c directly above the the wire protocol, so all of app/,
libgimp/ and plug-ins/ can deal directly with objects down to the
lowest level and not care about IDs.
Use the actual object param specs for procedure arguments and return
values again instead of a plain g_param_spec_object() and bring back
the none_ok parameter.
This implies changing the PDB type checking functions to work on pure
integers instead of IDs (one can't check whether object creation is
possible if performing that check requires the object to already
exist).
For example gimp_foo_is_valid() becomes gimp_foo_id_is_valid() and is
not involved in automatic object creation magic at the protocol
level. Added wrappers which still say gimp_foo_is_valid() and take the
respective objects.
Adapted all code, and it all becomes nicer and less convoluted, even
the generated PDB wrappers in app/ and libgimp/.
This means that all functions which were returning or taking as
parameter an image id (as gint32) are now taking a GimpImage object
instead.
The PDB is still passing around an id only over the wire. But we create
an object for plug-ins to work on.
This is quite a huge API break, but is probably the best bet for the
future quality. It will make nicer API instrospection (and nicer API in
binding), will fix the issues with pspec on GimpImageID in Python
bindings (which makes the current Python API unusable as soon as we need
to work on images, which is most of our plug-ins!), etc.
Also it will allow to use signals on images, which will be a great asset
when we will finally have bi-directionnal communications (i.e. plug-ins
would be able to connect to image changes, destructions, and whatnot).
So a value array can now we created like this:
array = gimp_value_array_new_from_types (&error_msg,
G_TYPE_STRING, "foo",
G_TYPE_INT, 23,
G_TYPE_NONE);
Change PDB generation to use this, which makes for much nicer code in
the libgimp wrappers, and only set arrays separately instead of all
values.
Also generate comments like "Must be freed with g_free()" for all
return values instead of manually and inconsistently having them on
some return values only.
This reverts commit 833666d462.
The _pdb files are an implementation detail and we do not want
separate doc sections for them, the conflicts need so be resolved in
another way.
Otherwise we get a few duplicate sections since some of the non-PDB
files are named similarly.
Fix this GObject introspection warning and other similar warnings:
> libgimp/gimp_pdb.c:28: Warning: Gimp: multiple comment blocks
> documenting 'SECTION:gimp:' identifier (already seen at gimp.c:129).
All foo_pdb.c functions in libgimp regenerated. I have reviewed this a
dozen times, but please have a look, there might well be glitches and
our public API is sortof important...
Don't unconditionally overwrite all the proc's description, author
etc. Instead, try to preserve them and append the "Deprecated" notes
to the help texts and generated comments.
Only affects one procedure because we killed the meta info of all
other deprecated procs so far, but now we don't have to do that any
longer.
because it confuses gtk-doc and breaks some links. Also change the
"Index of new symbols in GIMP 2.x" sections to be what seems to be the
modern standard (looked at the GLib and GTK+ docs), and update some
other stuff.
2009-03-31 Sven Neumann <sven@gimp.org>
Bug 568479 – add PDB procedures to manipulate size of text box
* tools/pdbgen/pdb/text_layer.pdb: add gimp-text-layer-resize,
based on a patch from Barak Itkin.
* app/pdb/internal-procs.c
* app/pdb/text-layer-cmds.c
* libgimp/gimptextlayer_pdb.[ch]: regenerated.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=28235
2009-01-17 Michael Natterer <mitch@gimp.org>
* all files with a GPL header and all COPYING files:
Change licence to GPLv3 (and to LGPLv3 for libgimp).
Cleaned up some copyright headers and regenerated the parsers in
the ImageMap plugin.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=27913
2008-10-27 Sven Neumann <sven@gimp.org>
* libgimpbase/gimpbaseenums.[ch]: added new enum
GimpTextHintStyle.
* libgimp/gimpenums.c.tail
* tools/pdbgen/enums.pl: regenerated.
* app/text/gimptext.[ch]: added new property "hint-style".
Removed
"autohint" property and mapped the boolean property "hinting" to
the new enum property "hint-style".
* app/text/gimptextlayout-render.c
(gimp_text_layout_render_flags):
use "hint-style".
* app/tools/gimptextoptions.[ch]: changed tool options
accordingly.
* tools/pdbgen/pdb/text_layer.pdb: deprecated the "hinting" API
and introduced getters and setters for "hint-style".
* app/pdb/text-layer-cmds.c
* app/pdb/internal-procs.c
* libgimp/gimptextlayer_pdb.[ch]: regenerated.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=27432