Commit Graph

52 Commits (65d0bdffdbd45e8322d759ed7bef1d196ab99b96)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ryan Pavlik 0bfbbe2bf3 Improve implementation hiding in IdList/List. NFC.
Allows distancing users from the internal "elem" member.

Add Get() and operator[].
Replace direct references to elem.
Make elem and elemsAllocated private in IdList/List.
2019-08-20 15:57:11 +00:00
Ryan Pavlik 5ada4dbd9c Add and use IdList::IsEmpty. NFC.
Removes consuming code from the implementation details, easing swap of
the underlying container, etc.
2019-08-20 15:57:11 +00:00
Ryan Pavlik 86f20cc7e5 Convert many loops to range-for or std algorithms. NFC.
Also add comments about indexing and when we don't use range-for.
2019-08-20 15:57:11 +00:00
phkahler 986da7d224 Implement helical extrusion groups. 2019-07-31 04:16:56 +00:00
Ryan Pavlik 5efb09e6d4 Use the new equality/inequality operators of handles to reduce references to .v. NFC. 2019-07-10 15:40:21 +00:00
phkahler 5df53fc59e Implement revolve groups. 2019-06-03 17:32:38 +00:00
EvilSpirit 025bb960c0 Improve performance of mesh-forced assemblies. 2018-07-12 11:47:58 +00:00
luzpaz 771b415a12 Fix various comment and UI string typos. 2018-07-12 05:05:43 +00:00
EvilSpirit 99f6ea34f1 Add an option to display areas of closed contours.
This is useful e.g. for architectural work.
2017-04-08 16:43:06 +00:00
EvilSpirit 8fd11f4886 Fix forcing NURBS to mesh in a step group when the flag is inherited.
Before this commit, if the source group of a step rotate/translate
group is forced to triangle mesh, the UI would show that the step
rotate/translate group is also forced to triangle mesh, but the group
would in fact contain NURBS surfaces.
2017-04-06 07:40:47 +00:00
EvilSpirit baf9dc0aae Remove degenerate triangles when generating triangle mesh. 2017-02-05 09:25:07 +00:00
EvilSpirit db75e06ecc Add a command to show center of mass, assuming uniform density. 2017-01-19 08:54:11 +00:00
whitequark 984f74d271 Internationalize all messages without substitutions. 2017-01-07 06:47:40 +00:00
whitequark 6fcf1bbe79 Somewhat improve rendering of transparent meshes.
After this commit, any transparent triangles are drawn last, which
causes them to not clobber the depth buffer, and so if they overlap
some opaque triangles, then these opaque triangles will be visible.

There are still issues with overlapping transparent triangles,
and with transparent triangles overlapping outlines and entities.
2016-12-05 03:11:34 +00:00
whitequark 73844f7202 Draw triangle back faces like the front, unless we draw them in red.
The configuration option "draw back faces in red" aids debugging,
in that it allows to visually identify a non-watertight mesh.
When it is disabled, or when the mesh is transparent, we used to not
draw them at all before this commit; after, they are drawn just like
the front faces.

This has two consequences:
  1. Inner surfaces of non-watertight meshes are not see-through
     anymore. That used to be the behavior in version 2.0, and it
     was accidentally broken in 2.1.
  2. Transparent meshes look *much* better.
  3. Solids made from a union of a non-transparent and a transparent
     one look sensibly at all.

This commit also updates the OpenGL 1 renderer to let it render
such meshes correctly.
2016-11-18 11:38:45 +00:00
EvilSpirit 6d2c2aecff Implement an OpenGL 2 renderer.
There are two main reasons to desire an OpenGL 2 renderer:
 1. Compatibility. The compatibility profile, ironically, does not
    offer a lot of compatibility, and our OpenGL 1 renderer will not
    run on Android, iOS, or WebGL.
 2. Performance. The immediate mode does not scale, and in fact
    becomes very slow with only a moderate amount of lines on screen,
    and only a somewhat large amount of triangles.

This commit implements a basic OpenGL 2 renderer that uses only
features from the (OpenGL 3.2) core profile. It is not yet faster
than the OpenGL 1 renderer, primarily because it uses a lot of small
draw calls.

This commit uses OpenGL 2 on Linux and Mac OS X directly (i.e. links
to the GL symbols from version 2+); on Windows this is impossible
with the default drivers, so for now OpenGL 1 is still used there.
2016-11-18 04:04:29 +00:00
EvilSpirit f8824e1fb2 Reimplement drawing of the mesh wireframe.
OpenGL 2 and newer do not have the glPolygonMode(..., GL_LINES) API,
so produce the wireframe on our side. It's somewhat slow, and draws
every line three times, but it is cached when the OpenGL 2 renderer
is used, and this should do for a debugging feature.
2016-11-18 02:40:43 +00:00
whitequark 47288e9a4c Stitch outlines before display to preserve phase of stippling.
Before this commit, the outlines are generated in an arbitrary order
from the kd-tree. This worked just fine for continuous lines, but
for stippling, especially on curves, this meant that most of
the piecewise linear edges would have the stippling phase restart
from zero, leading to a very poor appearance.
2016-10-13 22:05:32 +00:00
EvilSpirit d2c250324b Fix many rendering bugs introduced in df83ee4 and 9f97e9a. 2016-10-13 21:30:27 +00:00
EvilSpirit 6658b1fa2b Allow combining extrude, lathe, translate and rotate group as assemblies.
This significantly improves performance e.g. in case of a sketch
containing a multitude of wooden panels, as the meshes can be
merely transformed instead of being joined.
2016-10-12 22:02:38 +00:00
whitequark a5c7fc6ad9 Disable closed contour check in the test harness.
The check was actually half-broken from the beginning and
until df83ee4; the thick red line was rendered properly but
the error text was rendered with width 0, which by chance worked
on some GL implementations. That commit has fixed the underlying
bug but left the text line width at 0 to avoid test breakage.

This commit fixes the bug, turns off the check completely, and
updates the tests to account for breakage.
2016-10-11 23:32:12 +00:00
EvilSpirit df83ee4c8f Factor out Style::Stroke. 2016-10-11 23:32:05 +00:00
whitequark a8e723381c Replace convenience #defines with const auto references.
These are nicer as they are scoped, and so it's clear where they
can be used.
2016-10-10 12:34:10 +00:00
whitequark fd54e5ac27 Make translate/rotate groups inherit the "suppress solid model" option. 2016-10-09 13:27:43 +00:00
whitequark f998293760 Allow displaying outlines without any other edges.
As usual, what's displayed is what's exported.
2016-08-14 01:00:10 +00:00
whitequark 6e860fb148 Make "Show/hide hidden lines" a tri-state button instead.
The states are:
  * Draw all lines (on top of shaded mesh).
  * Draw occluded (by shaded mesh) lines as stippled.
  * Do not draw occluded (by shaded mesh) lines.

As usual, the export output follows the screen output.
2016-08-13 09:44:08 +00:00
whitequark 4f49a8a9d4 Eliminate several memory leaks.
All leaks found with valgrind while running the test suite.
This commit also clears the Cairo cache to improve SNR of Valgrind
output.
2016-08-01 05:39:18 +00:00
whitequark d0e32849b2 Fix a typo in Group::DrawFilledPaths. 2016-07-31 11:58:54 +00:00
EvilSpirit 7f411d1593 Unify displayEdges and displayOutlines.
This has the following benefits:
  * Less geometry to generate; we can do both in one pass;
  * Less geometry to draw;
  * Eliminate overdraw of outlines on top of emphasized edges;
  * In future, being able to seamlessly stitch stippled lines.

The contour edges are now also drawn before emphasized edges;
this makes intersections of contour and emphasized edges look better
as the thinner emphasized edge doesn't clobber the depth buffer.
2016-07-23 22:41:16 +00:00
whitequark e7c8c1c8f2 Abstract all (ex-OpenGL) drawing operations into a Canvas interface.
This has several desirable consequences:
  * It is now possible to port SolveSpace to a later version of
    OpenGL, such as OpenGLES 2, so that it runs on platforms that
    only have that OpenGL version;
  * The majority of geometry is now rendered without references to
    the camera in C++ code, so a renderer can now submit it to
    the video card once and re-rasterize with a different projection
    matrix every time the projection is changed, avoiding expensive
    reuploads;
  * The DOGD (draw or get distance) interface is now
    a straightforward Canvas implementation;
  * There are no more direct references to SS.GW.(projection)
    in sketch rendering code, which allows rendering to multiple
    viewports;
  * There are no more unnecessary framebuffer flips on CPU on Cocoa
    and GTK;
  * The platform-dependent GL code is now confined to rendergl1.cpp.
  * The Microsoft and Apple headers required by it that are prone to
    identifier conflicts are no longer included globally;
  * The rendergl1.cpp implementation can now be omitted from
    compilation to run SolveSpace headless or with a different
    OpenGL version.

Note these implementation details of Canvas:
  * GetCamera currently always returns a reference to the field
    `Camera camera;`. This is so that a future renderer that caches
    geometry in the video memory can define it as asserting, which
    would provide assurance against code that could accidentally
    put something projection-dependent in the cache;
  * Line and triangle rendering is specified through a level of
    indirection, hStroke and hFill. This is so that a future renderer
    that batches geometry could cheaply group identical styles.
  * DrawPixmap and DrawVectorText accept a (o,u,v) and not a matrix.
    This is so that a future renderer into an output format that
    uses 2d transforms (e.g. SVG) could easily derive those.

Some additional internal changes were required to enable this:
  * Pixmap is now always passed as std::shared_ptr<{const ,}Pixmap>.
    This is so that the renderer could cache uploaded textures
    between API calls, which requires it to capture a (weak)
    reference.
  * The PlatformPathEqual function was properly extracted into
    platform-specific code. This is so that the <windows.h> header
    could be included only where needed (in platform/w32* as well
    as rendergl1.cpp).
  * The SBsp{2,3}::DebugDraw functions were removed. They can be
    rewritten using the Canvas API if they are ever needed.

While no visual changes were originally intended, some minor fixes
happened anyway:
  * The "emphasis" yellow line from top-left corner is now correctly
    rendered much wider.
  * The marquee rectangle is now pixel grid aligned.
  * The hidden entities now do not clobber the depth buffer, removing
    some minor artifacts.
  * The workplane "tab" now scales with the font used to render
    the workplane name.
  * The workplane name font is now taken from the normals style.
  * Workplane and constraint line stipple is insignificantly
    different. This is so that it can reuse the existing stipple
    codepaths; rendering of workplanes and constraints predates
    those.

Some debug functionality was added:
  * In graphics window, an fps counter that becomes red when
    rendering under 60fps is drawn.
2016-07-23 22:31:18 +00:00
EvilSpirit 5791310bb1 Annotate constants passed as boolean function arguments.
This is to ensure that:
  * it is clear, when looking at the point of usage, what is
    the purpose of "true" or "false";
  * when refactoring, a simple search will bring up any places that
    need to be changed.

Also, argument names were synchronized between declaration and
implementation.

As an exception, these are not annotated:
  * Printf(/*halfLine=*/), to avoid pointless churn.
2016-05-26 12:43:52 +00:00
whitequark 1249f8496e Enable exhaustive switch coverage warnings as an error, and use them.
Specifically, this enables -Wswitch=error on GCC/Clang and its MSVC
equivalent; the exact way it is handled varies slightly, but what
they all have in common is that in a switch statement over an
enumeration, any enumerand that is not explicitly (via case:) or
implicitly (via default:) handled in the switch triggers an error.

Moreover, we also change the switch statements in three ways:

  * Switch statements that ought to be extended every time a new
    enumerand is added (e.g. Entity::DrawOrGetDistance(), are changed
    to explicitly list every single enumerand, and not have a
    default: branch.

    Note that the assertions are kept because it is legal for
    a enumeration to have a value unlike any of its defined
    enumerands, and we can e.g. read garbage from a file, or
    an uninitialized variable. This requires some rearranging if
    a default: branch is undesired.

  * Switch statements that ought to only ever see a few select
    enumerands, are changed to always assert in the default: branch.

  * Switch statements that do something meaningful for a few
    enumerands, and ignore everything else, are changed to do nothing
    in a default: branch, under the assumption that changing them
    every time an enumerand is added or removed would just result
    in noise and catch no bugs.

This commit also removes the {Request,Entity,Constraint}::UNKNOWN and
Entity::DATUM_POINT enumerands, as those were just fancy names for
zeroes. They mess up switch exhaustiveness checks and most of the time
were not the best way to implement what they did anyway.
2016-05-26 12:43:52 +00:00
EvilSpirit f33ddc94fb Convert all enumerations to use `enum class`.
Specifically, take the old code that looks like this:

  class Foo {
    enum { X = 1, Y = 2 };
    int kind;
  }
  ... foo.kind = Foo::X; ...

and convert it to this:

  class Foo {
    enum class Kind : uint32_t { X = 1, Y = 2 };
    Kind kind;
  }
  ... foo.kind = Foo::Kind::X;

(In some cases the enumeration would not be in the class namespace,
such as when it is generally useful.)

The benefits are as follows:
  * The type of the field gives a clear indication of intent, both
    to humans and tools (such as binding generators).
  * The compiler is able to automatically warn when a switch is not
    exhaustive; but this is currently suppressed by the
      default: ssassert(false, ...)
    idiom.
  * Integers and plain enums are weakly type checked: they implicitly
    convert into each other. This can hide bugs where type conversion
    is performed but not intended. Enum classes are strongly type
    checked.
  * Plain enums pollute parent namespaces; enum classes do not.
    Almost every defined enum we have already has a kind of ad-hoc
    namespacing via `NAMESPACE_`, which is now explicit.
  * Plain enums do not have a well-defined ABI size, which is
    important for bindings. Enum classes can have it, if specified.
    We specify the base type for all enums as uint32_t, which is
    a safe choice and allows us to not change the numeric values
    of any variants.

This commit introduces absolutely no functional change to the code,
just renaming and change of types. It handles almost all cases,
except GraphicsWindow::pending.operation, which needs minor
functional change.
2016-05-25 07:17:14 +00:00
EvilSpirit bbca4cc224 Rewrite declarations of form f(void) as f().
In C++ there is no difference and newly added functions are all
declared as f(), so this brings back consistency.
2016-05-20 12:43:20 +00:00
whitequark febe0f5282 Rename the old "Import / Assemble" feature to "Link / Assemble".
This better reflects what it does and avoids clashes with the new
DXF import feature.
2016-05-07 05:27:54 +00:00
whitequark efb9fa3d69 Actually display the "zero-length edge!" polygon error.
Before this commit, the initial state allCoplanar=false took
precedence over allNonZeroLen=false, since detecting a zero-length
edge short-circuits AssembleLoops.
2016-04-17 01:33:15 +00:00
whitequark e7057418df When there's a shell, always render solids using sharp edges solids.
Before this commit, solids in the viewport were rendered with
"emphasized edges", with the intention to highlight selectable faces.
However, selectable faces are already surrounded by entities, and
so rendering emphasized edges adds little value.

After this commit, solids in the viewport are always rendered with
"sharp edges", like they are exported.
2016-04-15 21:53:08 +00:00
EvilSpirit 24fc65a71c Allow rendering solid outlines using a distinct style.
A new button is added, "Show/hide outline of solid model".

When the outline is hidden, it is rendered using the "solid edge"
style. When the outline is shown, it is rendered using the "outline"
style.

In SolveSpace's true WYSIWYG tradition, the 2d view export follows
the rendered view exactly.

Moreover, shell edges are not rendered anymore, since there is not
much need in them anymore and not drawing them lessens the overlap
between various kinds of lines, which already includes entities,
solid edges and outlines.
2016-04-15 21:53:08 +00:00
EvilSpirit d1a2eb6d18 Allow rendering hidden solid edges using a distinct style.
Before this change, the two buttons "Show/hide shaded model" (S) and
"Show/hide hidden lines" (H) resulted in drawing the following
elements in the following styles:

  Button | Non-occluded | Non-occluded |  Occluded   |   Occluded
  state  | solid edges  |   entities   | solid edges |   entities
 --------+--------------+--------------+-------------+--------------
  !S !H  |              |              | solid-edge  | entity style
 --------+              |              +-------------+--------------
   S !H  |              |              |         invisible
 --------+  solid-edge  | entity style +-------------+--------------
  !S  H  |              |              |             |
 --------+              |              | solid-edge  | entity style
   S  H  |              |              |             |
 --------+--------------+--------------+-------------+--------------

After this change, they are drawn as follows:

  Button | Non-occluded | Non-occluded |  Occluded   |   Occluded
  state  | solid edges  |   entities   | solid edges |   entities
 --------+--------------+--------------+-------------+--------------
  !S !H  |              |              | solid-edge  | entity style
 --------+              |              +-------------+--------------
   S !H  |              |              |         invisible
 --------+  solid-edge  | entity style +-------------+--------------
  !S  H  |              |              |             |
 --------+              |              | hidden-edge |  stippled¹
   S  H  |              |              |             |
 --------+--------------+--------------+-------------+--------------

  ¹ entity style, but the stipple parameters taken from hidden-edge

In SolveSpace's true WYSIWYG tradition, the 2d view export follows
the rendered view exactly.

Also, it is now possible to edit the stipple parameters of built-in
styles, so that by changing the hidden-edge style to non-stippled
it is possible to regain the old behavior.
2016-04-15 21:53:08 +00:00
EvilSpirit 1bf7777815 Only export sharp edges of the triangle mesh.
Before this commit, "emphasized edges" were displayed as well as
exported. An "emphasized edge" is an edge between triangles that
come from different faces. They are helpful in the rendered
display because they hint at the locations of faces, but not
in the 2d export since they just clutter the drawing.

After this commit, "emphasized edges" are displayed but "sharp
edges" are exported. A "sharp edge" is an edge between triangles
where the two matching vertexes have different normals, indicating
a discontiguity in the surface. "Sharp edges" are also displayed
while post-viewing the exported geometry.
2016-04-15 21:53:08 +00:00
EvilSpirit 55e3162a05 When creating a new group, use the color of last requested solid. 2016-04-08 11:21:40 +00:00
EvilSpirit 96344c85a6 Eliminate DEFAULT_TEXT_HEIGHT from drawing code.
Instead, query the text height for constraint style.
2016-03-05 12:02:13 +00:00
whitequark c9648805ea Allow generating groups in arbitrary order. 2016-02-19 10:23:24 +00:00
EvilSpirit 6dced8052b Generate primitives for lathe groups.
The primitives that are generated are circles from points and
faces from axis-perpendicular line segments.
2016-01-13 06:45:17 +00:00
whitequark 45f056c852 Replace all ZERO and memset with C++11 brace-initialization.
This will allow us to use non-POD classes inside these objects
in future and is otherwise functionally equivalent, as well
as more concise.

Note that there are some subtleties with handling of
brace-initialization. Specifically:

On aggregates (e.g. simple C-style structures) using an empty
brace-initializer zero-initializes the aggregate, i.e. it makes
all members zero.

On non-aggregates an empty brace-initializer calls the default
constructor. And if the constructor doesn't explicitly initialize
the members (which the auto-generated constructor doesn't) then
the members will be constructed but otherwise uninitialized.

So, what is an aggregate class? To quote the C++ standard
(C++03 8.5.1 §1):

An aggregate is an array or a class (clause 9) with no
user-declared constructors (12.1), no private or protected
non-static data members (clause 11), no base classes (clause 10),
and no virtual functions (10.3).

In SolveSpace, we only have to handle the case of base classes;
Constraint and Entity have those. Thus, they had to gain a default
constructor that does nothing but initializes the members to zero.
2016-01-13 06:45:16 +00:00
whitequark 28166e6200 Use C++ std::{min,max,swap} instead of custom ones.
The main benefit is that std::swap will ensure that the type
of arguments is copy-constructible and move-constructible.
It is more concise as well.

When min and max are defined as macros, they will conflict
with STL header files included by other C++ libraries;
in this case STL will #undef any other definition.
2015-12-28 21:37:06 +08:00
whitequark 5e7c7fce7e Rename RgbColor to RgbaColor. 2015-07-10 15:59:12 +03:00
whitequark 75a3936b64 Add support for transparent solids.
Some extra code is necessary to determine that the back faces
should not be drawn in red for transparent solids. It is expected
that the user will first ensure that the shell is watertight
and then set the opacity; back faces are still drawn if
the opacity is exactly 1.

The savefile format is changed backwards-compatibly by stashing
the alpha value in uppermost byte of 4-byte hex color value
in Surface and Triangle clauses. The existing files have 00
in the high byte, so RgbColor::FromPackedInt treats that
as "opaque".
2015-07-10 15:59:12 +03:00
whitequark 2c39f259db Add a GTK2/3 port.
In principle, GTK3 is the way forward, and GTK2 is officially
deprecated, though still maintained. In practice however, GTK3
is often unbearably buggy; e.g. on my system, combo boxes
don't ever roll up in GTK3 windows. So I have added support
for both.

This required a few minor changes to the core, namely:
  * GTK wants to know beforehand whether a menu item is a check
    menu item or a regular one.
  * GTK doesn't give us an easy way to execute something after
    any event is processed, so an explicit idle timer is added.
    This is a no-op on Win32.
  * A few function signatures were const'ed, since GTK expects
    immutable strings when converting to Glib::ustring.
2015-07-10 15:59:12 +03:00
whitequark c5364fe7a8 Trim trailing whitespace. 2015-07-10 15:59:11 +03:00