Browsing the user's wallpaper directory will simply add no new files
to the list of wallpapers available if the directory doesn't exist.
WallpaperDialog::exec doesn't need to care about that.
Because wallpapers are files, not directories, also don't return
directories in the result. The code that makes the wallpapers list
calls FileLister::getFiles and ignores directories anyway.
Browsing the user's translations directory will simply add no new files
to the list of translations available if the directory doesn't exist.
GMenu2X::showSettings() doesn't need to care about that.
Because translations are files, not directories, also don't return
directories in the result. The code that makes the translations list
calls FileLister::getFiles and ignores directories anyway.
A file existence check is already performed, atomically with respect to
the filesystem, by ifstream's constructor. The result of this check is
available using ifstream::is_open().
0 is the default clock value, which doesn't get written to link files
if it's not changed. The clock was previously uninitialised before
reading link files, so it would get written with a random value if
there was none before.
When scanning multiple directories in succession, it's possible that
in some of them no matches are found. Avoid moving all pre-existing
entries back and forth in that case.
Also use move instead of copy for transferring the pre-existing
entries from the vector to the set.
The special case is not necessary for correctness. It would help
performance in theory, but it seems very unlikely that any code would
request a directory scan when it interested in neither the subdirs nor
the files in that directory.
Instead of splitting the filter for every file in FileLister::browse,
the filter is split immediately in FileLister::setFilter, improving
performance.
getFilter is removed because it was unused. This also removes the need
to update the return type to 'const std::vector&' in the method and
rewrite its callers.
Configuration of the FileLister is now left to the subclasses of
BrowseDialog, as the construction of a FileLister and its configuration
(to show or hide directories and files) have been separated.
This allows deleting the destructors of BrowseDialog's subclasses,
which existed solely to delete a FileLister object constructed by
each subclass.
The allocation of a BrowseDialog now also implies allocating enough
space for its FileLister, so remove the check for fl being nullptr in
BrowseDialog::exec().
The constructor now has zero arguments. showDirectories and showFiles
are now set using setter methods.
FileLister::browse is now the sole way to start a scan for files and
directories, replacing the initial path in the constructor and the
setPath method. It allows merging results from multiple directories
as before.
This is all to make explicit how many times the costly task of browsing
a directory is actually carried out.
Instead of showing 'R:', 'G:', 'B:' and 'A:', which take up a lot of space
and can overlap in standard fonts, the selection rectangle surrounding the
number is red, green, blue or gray, and the text is shorter.
This will allow the labels for the skin colors to be longer for translations
as well, given that their values are shown less wide.
Instead of checking which input configuration file exists among 2
choices, then asking InputManager to load that file, InputManager
itself now performs the resolution based on whether ifstream::is_open
returns true for each choice.
The existence of modifications to the skin configuration in the home
directory is now checked with ifstream::is_open, and the system's skin
configuration is used if that returns false.
A file existence check is already performed, atomically with respect to
the filesystem, by ifstream's constructor. The result of this check is
available using ifstream::is_open().
This operation is not so slow that it really needs caching. Also
reducing the delay before showing a directory will have more impact
on the user experience than a slightly faster paint.
The way the caching was implemented was rather problematic. Also I'm
not convinced caching is useful at all. So I removed it. If at some
point we decide that caching is a good idea, it would be best to
re-implement it from scratch, so nothing of value is lost by removing
the existing caching code.
One problem was that the prepare method would check the existence of
a screenshot file for every file in the directory, which adds to the
noticable delay before showing a directory which holds many files.
Another problem is there was no upper limit to the number of
screenshots that would be cached. On directories with many screenshots
the memory use could rise to several hundred megabytes, which can be
problematic on some of the systems we want to support.
Also there was a rather nasty hack present to ensure screenshots were
loaded without an alpha channel.
My main doubt about the usefulness of screenshot caching is that
caching will only speed up the showing of an image from the second
time onwards. In typical use, the average screenshot is displayed at
most once. If the image load time is long enough to annoy the user,
any real solution would have to work also for the first showing.
For example, background (asynchronous) loading could be implemented.
All calls to this method are in GMenu2X::initMenu() and they will only
pass valid indices, so the range check was redundant. Also the return
value was never used.
Added an assert to spot any invalid indices from future code.
There are a few exclusive operations for each type. Also we no longer
need the freeWhenDone flag since the class now determines whether the
surface should be freed or not.
In theory a font could be so large that no full row would fit on the
allotted space; in that case showing a partial row is better than
nothing and will avoid bugs where -1 wraps around on unsigned exprs.
Nebuleon spotted a bug in TextManualDialog where the unsigned value
'pages[page].text.size() - rowsPerPage' could wrap around at 0 for
short chapters. I decided to change a bit more than just fixing the
bug though.
This is the convention that most classes stick to. The likely reason
why Dialog didn't stick to the convention was to be able to provide
a default value for this argument, but that feature wasn't very useful
since every caller already had access to the default surface.
Applications with this flag will not have their stdout/stderr
redirected to a log file when logging is enabled. That is a useful
feature also on platforms where we don't micromanage the console.
Currently the launched application is exec-ed from deep within the menu
code. This means a lot of destructors are never run and as a result
for example file descriptors from the menu remain open in the launched
process.
This is a first step to move the launch invocation from a deep call
stack to the top level.
If a text file ends in a newline, the previous line splitting code
would append an empty line at the end, which looked odd. So now we
explicitly check that a newline is only inserted if more characters
follow.
Setting values are now displayed 10 pixels to the right of setting names, as
passed to MenuSetting::draw.
This commit also contains the following cleanups:
* The height of a row is passed to MenuSetting's draw and touchscreen methods.
* MenuSettingRGBA's magic constant (36) to separate the text for a color's
four components is now a named constant.
* MenuSettingRGBA's color preview squares are now rowHeight - 2 pixels tall,
and have a white border surrounded by a black border to help view the color
it contains in both light and dark themes.
* The rectangle behind the selected setting's name is now drawn by that
setting's drawSelected method.
Setting descriptions and help prompts now appear fully even if they are longer
than the screen allows. Translations do not need to worry about allowed text
being wider than the screen in some fonts anymore.
Instead of reading the file line by line and then concatenating those
lines, just load the entire thing in one go. And pay more attention to
error conditions.
The constructors of those classes now accept a string to be wrapped, instead
of a vector to be modified with split lines inserted into its middle.
Along with this conversion, manuals for applications stored in OPK packages
are now transferred into a string without garbage at the end.
This implementation is based on the implementation in TextDialog::preProcess,
with one major difference: it works on the entire input string, copies it much
less as part of its function, and tries to quickly establish a small search
space for the length of the beginning split of each line.
With most standard fonts and sizes, this means up to 9 computations of metrics
per output line.
Multi-line message boxes had the incorrect height.
I also took the opportunity to make named constants out of magic numbers
making up the various message box dimensions.