Commit Graph

2 Commits (263037102bb64f991136c6def114721d49276914)

Author SHA1 Message Date
jp9000 c9df41c1e2 (API Change) Remove pointers from all typedefs
Typedef pointers are unsafe.  If you do:
typedef struct bla *bla_t;
then you cannot use it as a constant, such as: const bla_t, because
that constant will be to the pointer itself rather than to the
underlying data.  I admit this was a fundamental mistake that must
be corrected.

All typedefs that were pointer types will now have their pointers
removed from the type itself, and the pointers will be used when they
are actually used as variables/parameters/returns instead.

This does not break ABI though, which is pretty nice.
2014-09-25 21:48:11 -07:00
jp9000 452e0695f4 UI: Add scene editing
So, scene editing was interesting (and by interesting I mean
excruciating).  I almost implemented 'manipulator' visuals (ala 3dsmax
for example), and used 3 modes for controlling position/rotation/size,
but in a 2D editing, it felt clunky, so I defaulted back to simply
click-and-drag for movement, and then took a similar though slightly
different looking approach for handling scaling and reszing.

I also added a number of menu item helpers related to positioning,
scaling, rotating, flipping, and resetting the transform back to
default.

There is also a new 'transform' dialog (accessible via menu) which will
allow you to manually edit every single transform variable of a scene
item directly if desired.

If a scene item does not have bounds active, pulling on the sides of a
source will cause it to resize it via base scale rather than by the
bounding box system (if the source resizes that scale will apply).  If
bounds are active, it will modify the bounding box only instead.

How a source scales when a bounding box is active depends on the type of
bounds being used.  You can set it to scale to the inner bounds, the
outer bounds, scale to bounds width only, scale to bounds height only,
and a setting to stretch to bounds (which forces a source to always draw
at the bounding box size rather than be affected by its internal size).
You can also set it to be used as a 'maximum' size, so that the source
doesn't necessarily get scaled unless it extends beyond the bounds.

Like in OBS1, objects will snap to the edges unless the control key is
pressed.  However, this will now happen even if the object is rotated or
oriented in any strange way.  Snapping will also occur when stretching
or changing the bounding box size.
2014-06-15 20:33:13 -07:00